Bird Walks in the Open Space Preserves of Palo Alto
We’ve come up with some great ideas for places you can bird on your own or with your household. Our self-guided bird walks will direct you to where to bird each month and provide advice on which birds to look for in which habitats. Check out these self-guided bird walks in the Open Space Preserves of Palo Alto. For all SCVAS bird walks, visit our Self-guided Trips page.
Byxbee Park, in the Palo Alto Baylands Nature Reserve, features a hill with a 360-degree vista, grasslands studded with conceptual art, marshy sloughs, a creek and tree-lined paths, throughout which you can find wintering waterfowl, migrating passerines, soaring raptors and a variety of gulls.
A lake for winter ducks and summer swallows, a panoramic vista for soaring hawks and cruising vultures, redwoods and oaks for woodpeckers, juncos, and bluebirds, and chaparral for towhees, wrens and jays! Foothills Nature Preserve in Palo Alto, newly opened to the public, has it all, all year round for everyone!
Just as the Ohlone people greeted the sun each morning at dawn for hundreds of years, so the swallows begin their daily swooping flights over the ponds, creeks, sloughs, and marshes of the Palo Alto Baylands. Though late spring and summer is thought of as a "quieter" time for birds, at the Palo Alto Baylands there continues to be a variety of avian species that are fascinating, interesting and entertaining to observe and enjoy.
Watching shorebirds and water birds up close is fun at Charleston Slough and Adobe Creek. On a short or long walk you can take the time to study their behaviors and laugh at their antics: coots swim-chase each other, egrets dash after one another with plumes flying, dabbling ducks tip over with their tail feathers in the air…
Welcome back to Emily Renzel Wetlands. It's changed a bit since we last visited it in summer, but it remains delightful, and is home to many ducks and other waterfowl. It consists of two freshwater ponds which can be birded easily in an hour and a half. Located midway between Charleston Slough and Palo Alto Baylands, it combines well (by car) with either of them.
In the winter, Coast Casey Forebay is a resting and foraging place for large flocks of water-loving birds. There is often a surprise here: an American Wigeon below the pump house, a Sora in the drainage ditch, a Wilson’s Snipe in a hidden pond. This short and easy trip is great for birders of all ages and abilities, offering you ample views of many birds gathered together in a single spot.
Wondering how many Green-winged Teal and Northern Pintail can pack themselves into a small area? Pining for a glimpse of a rare Swamp Sparrow? Read on to start planning your winter trip to the Palo Alto Baylands via the San Francisquito Creek Trail!
Pearson-Arastradero Preserve is an open space preserve on the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains. The preserve is located in Palo Alto and is a great place to go birding if you live in Mountain View, Los Altos, Palo Alto, or San Mateo.
La reserva natural Pearson-Arastradero es un parque ubicado en los pies de las montañas de Santa Cruz. La reserva está ubicada en Palo Alto y es un gran lugar para observar aves si usted vive en Mountain View, Los Altos, Palo Alto, o San Mateo. El parque posee una variedad de hábitats que incluyen praderas, bosques de robles y un pequeño lago, los que atraen a una gran variedad de aves durante todo el año.
Top Photo: Clark’s Grebes by Vivek Khanzode
Pearson-Arastradero Preserve is located in Palo Alto and is a great place to go birding if you live in Mountain View, Los Altos, Palo Alto, or San Mateo. The park features a range of habitats from grasslands to oak woodland, and a small lake, all of which are home to a wide variety of birds throughout the year. In the spring, many birds arrive from the tropics and make this their home for a few months when they build their nests and raise their young before heading back south in the fall.