Image: Tung Tran San Jacinto Wildlife Reuge |
This is a favourite scenic spot for many who come to visit the San Jacinto Wildlife Refuge. Those hills in the background are what is believed to be the hills on the western side of the Mystic Lake where the Anza Expedition camped on both back to back expeditions. It certainly would be the easiest region to cross over the San Jacinto River as the waters flatten out into shallow pools just down stream of Mystic Lake itself which would be the largest and deepest. The current of the river also would have been far less swift at this location. While the area does have a few pockets of riparian forest woodlands, it is mostly sedges, rushes, cattails and other tall tule grasses. Below is a closer up view of the same image above.
Image: SoCalHunt Gear http://socalhunt.wordpress.com/2010/12/ |
Believe it or not, the area is supported by Duck Hunting Clubs and is kept recharged through agreements with the water agencies for reclaimed water, otherwise these also would disappear during the drier times which have obviously become a more frequent feature resulting from climate change.
Image: Jeff Sullivan |
It could be said that such large depressions of dry lake beds around the Lakeview area could also be considered giant vernal pools in many respects as many of the same plants and amphibians thrive in such locations as these Goldfields always do when the waters begin to dry up. BTW, below is a link to western Riverside County wetlands creatures which are dependent on Vernal Pools for their existence:
Western Riverside County Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Plan (MSHCP) Biological Monitoring Program
Vernal Pool Survey Report 2010
Photo by Mike Wilson
Region where San Jacinto River merges with Mystic Lake
just west of Highway 79 and north of Lakeview California |
Photo Mine Major construction of San Jacinto River bridge on Hwy 79 in Riverside County 1994 |
Priest Francisco Garcès (March 19, 1775 1st expedition)
"Winding around by a very miry road, we came to a hill, [Footnote 93] having traveled about four and a half leagues almost to the northwest but with many windings, because the hills as well as the plains are so boggy. The groves are thickly grown with grass, one species of which bears a seed very much like rye."
Juan Bautista de Anza (March 19, 1775 1st expedition)
"At eight o'clock in the morning we took up the march down the valley toward the northwest. Its amenity and the beauty of its trees continued for three leagues, after which the trees came to an end but the amenity continued. We followed it for three more leagues, till we came to the banks of a large and pleasing lake"
Fray Pedro Font (December 30, 1775 2nd expedition)
"The land is very soft and when it rains it is somewhat miry. Here and there in the valley there are some hills with rocks and shrubby growths but without any trees, though the soil of the hills is soft like that of the valley. In all the valley there are no other trees than the cottonwoods of the river bottoms. In the high and snow-covered sierras one sees pines and live oaks, and it may be that on their skirts and in their canyons they may have other trees, because they are very moist."
Nature.org
|
Juan Bautista de Anza (March 19, 1775 1st expedition)
"We followed it for three more leagues, till we came to the banks of a large and pleasing lake, [Footnote 116] several leagues in circumference and as full of white geese as of water, they being so numerous that it looked like a large, white grove."
Priest Francisco Garcès (March 18, 1775 1st expedition)
"We saw a countless multitude of white geese like those which I saw at Agua Amarilla."
Fray Pedro Font (December 30, 1775 2nd expedition)
"In the valley there is a large lake formed by the San Joseph River, and by other arroyos which come from various springs and brooks in the sierras roundabout and which have no other outlet. Therefore, according to the signs, this lake rises very greatly during the rainy season. In it there are vast numbers of geese which at a distance are seen in large white flocks."
Image: SoCal Hunt Files |
Word of note on some of the Hunting Clubs. There has been controversy in the past with the Ramona Duck Club regarding grading with heavy equipment:
SAN JACINTO: Grading prompts wildlife concerns (Sept 2011)
SAN JACINTO: Army Corps probes wetlands area grading
But again if anything could be said about their efforts, they have kept certain regions alive with wetlands upkeep and water agreements with reclamation agencies.
Image: Press Enterprise |
Image Wiki |
HEMET: Canada geese may flock from Temecula, Menifee
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Image: Riverside Co Flood Control |
Map image: EPA |
One of the main things I was always curious about when I traveled Hwy 395 and later Interstate 215, was if the San Jacinto River could have at one time back in history maintained some permanency in it's flow even if at times it was nothing more than a mere stream surrounded on both sides with backwater Vernal Pools during the drier periods ? Consider for a moment, there were no upstream dams and for countless centuries a water table clearly untapped for 1000s of years. Mature old growth riparian forested areas scattered along it's banks here and there, perhaps all the way to Corona California where it would have met the Santa Ana River floodplains. Most maps never show the San Jacinto River as flowing beyond Lake Elsinore, but clearly there always was an outlet where the landscape topography is at it's lowest point through the city center of Elsinore itself and flowed mostly along what is known today as Collier Avenue, but more on that later.
Image: San Jacinto & Lake Elsinore Watershed Authority |
This area above is the often favourite area for photographers to stop at a couple of points on the Route 74 also known as the Ortega Highway. You can see the modern version of the lake where the historical southern portion is no longer allowed to flood. You can also see the channelized portion where the San Jacinto River flow inlet extends into the lake near the top middle of this lake photo. Interestingly, if the snow capped Ortega Mountains were a more common occurrence back centuries ago as in this 2008 photograph, then certainly this would have helped to maintain river channel flow from Elsinore to Corona in what is known today as Temescal Creek. Certainly anything was possible, especially considering the second journey of the Anza Expedition where they had a month earlier experienced a major blizzard right next to the Salton Sea. Clearly heavy snowfall would have been more common up in the Ortega Mountains. It could well have been possible for a more maintainable flow of the San Jacinto River with numerous downstream tributaries which could have extended all the way to Corona connecting at the Santa Ana River. In any event this would prove an excellent corridor route for numerous aquatic creatures which I will get to later.
Press Enterprise |
Map image: Wikipedia |
Image: Wiki - Temescal Creek |
Here is an extremely interesting and fun interactive wetlands map just released on May 4th 2014 by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service of the entire North American region which lists all various forms of documented wetlands habitat types of ecosystems which need protecting of what is left. There are numerous kool interactive tools to use within this map. By all means link the link below and bookmark it for future reference:
National Wetlands Inventory
http://www.fws.gov/wetlands/Data/Mapper.html
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Temescal Canyon & Historical Possibilities
Image: Riverside County Floodcontrol |
Sycamore Creek, Temescal Valley, Riverside County, CA |
Add caption |
The Spanish explorers made no mention what so ever of any kind of fish being found in the San Jacinto River Valley. But they had previously made mention of finding fish as they traveled through western Arizona along the Gila River. Although they didn't spend much time in the San Jacinto River Valley, this doesn't necessarily mean there were none to be found there. If all the main components of a massive wetlands system which allowed for a self-sustaining uninterrupted river bed to Lake Elsinore, would it not be more than likely possible then that there be a continued connection through the Alberhill area down into the Temescal watershed system towards the confluence with the Santa Ana River to clearly have been possible ? Another reason I personally have for believing in possible fish migration connections are two other native fish I have personally stumbled upon in the early 1980s in the south and middle forks of the San Jacinto River Canyons. Take a look at the picture I have used before of the Middle or Main channel of the San Jacinto River from a Hwy 74 vantage point heading up to Idyllwild.
California Route 74 @ AARoads San Jacinto River Main River Channel |
image: Warwick Sloss |
"(Gasterosteus aculeatus) L. Sticklebacks were collected by dip net in the San Jacinto River near Cranston Station in the San Bernadino National Forest (Riverside County)"
(source)
photo: Mine |
photo: Mine |
Imaage - Wikimedia |
Can anyone else picture or visualize in your mind's eye the San Jacinto River Valley floodplains with Grizzly Bears fishing for Southern California Steelhead Trout as they make their way east to the South, Middle and North Fork Canyons to spawn ? Well I certainly can!
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Further Reading References of Interesting
Swimming Upstream: "Restoring the Rivers and Streams of Coastal Southern California for Southern Steelhead and other Fishes
California Fish Species
Steelhead/rainbow trout resources of Orange County
Inland Empire Waterkeepers
There are seven species of fish that are endemic to the Santa Ana River, but only three are found today:
Santa Ana River Native Fish
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