Accessible

Los Gatos Creek County Park and Oka Ponds (Winter)

Los Gatos Creek County Park and Oka Ponds (Winter)

Waterfowl and gulls are the main menu here in winter and you will find many! Located in Campbell, this park includes six percolation ponds to explore. It is flat, excellent for walking (as well as for bikes and strollers), and it is partially accessible for people with mobility issues.

Back to Overview

Kevin Moran Park (Fall/Winter): A Saratoga Urban Park 

Kevin Moran Park (Fall/Winter): A Saratoga Urban Park 

Kevin Moran Park is a 10 acre park located in a quiet Saratoga neighborhood and could be easily missed. It's a beautiful multi-use park with plenty of parking. Its convenient proximity to major roadways makes it an easy option to fit some birding into your busy day.

Back to Overview

Sunnyvale Baylands Park (Year-round): Reclaimed Habitat

Sunnyvale Baylands Park (Year-round): Reclaimed Habitat

Fueled by water from the nearby water pollution control plant, Sunnyvale Baylands Park is a freshwater oasis for waterfowl and shorebirds (mostly in winter) and upland birds (year-round). Lovely, level walks throughout the park make for a pleasant stroll any time of year. This guide covers a one-mile loop around the park, hitting all the varied habitats and birds found throughout the year.

Back to Overview

Bernal-Gulnac-Joice Ranch (Winter): Birding While Enjoying History

Bernal-Gulnac-Joice Ranch (Winter): Birding While Enjoying History

Visit a historic ranch setting while birding in the Santa Teresa foothills in south San Jose. The Bernal-Gulnac-Joice Ranch offers visitors the ability to go back in time and re-visit life on the Ranch during the late 1800s/ early 1900s. And there is always a wide variety of raptors and songbirds in this easy-to-access portion of the Santa Teresa County Park.

Back to Overview

Ed Levin Spring Valley Area (Spring): Hummingbirds at the “Magic Tree"

Ed Levin Spring Valley Area (Spring): Hummingbirds at the “Magic Tree"

The Spring Valley Area at Ed Levin Park on the east side of San Jose in the Diablo Foothills offers one of the best places in Santa Clara County to observe migratory hummingbirds in spring. Enjoy an easy walk around the Spring Valley Pond and spend some time at the “Magic Tree” watching the hummingbirds come and go, or take the more challenging Spring Valley Trail for a walk in the grassy hills and surrounding woodlands.

Back to Overview

Coyote Lake (Winter): A Winter Stop for Waterfowl and Much More

Coyote Lake (Winter): A Winter Stop for Waterfowl and Much More

Whether you want a relaxing lakeside drive with easy bird watching, or a vigorous hike through the rolling hills, Coyote Lake in Gilroy is a prime attraction for birdwatchers. Beautiful scenery is the backdrop to lots of overwintering waterfowl and wild animals like deer, wild boar, Wild Turkey and California Quail that are habituated to people. Come for the Bald Eagles and courting Western and Clark’s Grebes and you will find so much more.

Back to Overview

South County Regional Wastewater Authority, Gilroy (Winter): An Oasis For Wintering Ducks, Shorebirds and Raptors

South County Regional Wastewater Authority, Gilroy (Winter): An Oasis For Wintering Ducks, Shorebirds and Raptors

Explore this oasis in Gilroy! The levees along settling ponds with varying amounts of water and vegetation attract ducks, shorebirds, raptors and more. This site is never crowded and has no hills, just level dirt roads, easy for walking and driving.

Back to Overview

Byxbee Park and Palo Alto Regional Water Quality Control Plant (Winter): Waterfowl and Migrant Birding at an Artsy Palo Alto Baylands Preserve

Byxbee Park and Palo Alto Regional Water Quality Control Plant (Winter):  Waterfowl and Migrant Birding at an Artsy Palo Alto Baylands Preserve

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.

Back to Overview

Hellyer County Park (Winter): Take a Gander at these Geese!

Hellyer County Park (Winter): Take a Gander at these Geese!

The highlight of this urban San Jose park is scouring through the hundreds of Canada Geese that cover the lake and lawn areas in hopes of finding a Cackling, Greater White-fronted or even a Snow or Ross’s Goose. Start this trip in the late morning after the geese have flown in.

Back to Overview

Blackberry Farm (Fall/Winter): A Riparian Corridor in Silicon Valley

Blackberry Farm (Fall/Winter): A Riparian Corridor in Silicon Valley

Easily reachable by car or public transit (the VTA 51 bus), this Cupertino city park has a level paved trail that follows the creek through orchards, forest and fields and is lined with benches at reasonable intervals, making it a beautiful, accessible natural area in the heart of Silicon Valley. The paved trail continues south through McClellan Ranch Preserve, where SCVAS's headquarters are located.

Back to Overview

Foothills Nature Preserve in Palo Alto (Year-round)

Foothills Nature Preserve in Palo Alto (Year-round)

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!


Back to Overview

Los Alamitos Creek Trail (Spring/Summer)

Los Alamitos Creek Trail (Spring/Summer)

Enjoy this easy, partially shaded walk alongside the Los Alamitos Creek in Almaden Valley. Bird life is plentiful and varied, especially in the spring! Or visit in the summer to take advantage of the shady trails.

Back to Overview

Guadalupe Creek off Guadalupe Mines Road (Year-round)

Guadalupe Creek off Guadalupe Mines Road (Year-round)

Enjoy some interesting birding on this short half-mile easy-paced paved loop in a quiet San José neighborhood. Those of us who have birded this area for many years have discovered a mix of montane, riparian and lowland birds throughout the seasons including migrants and occasionally an unusual vagrant.

Back to Overview

Alum Rock Park (Summer): Creekside Birding

Alum Rock Park (Summer): Creekside Birding

Penitencia Creek Trail in east San José is a beautiful, shaded creek side trail with easy level walking where wildlife and birds abound. While it can be crowded after 10 a.m. on weekends, early mornings offer solitude and silence and increase the chance for wildlife and bird encounters. Deer (and their fawns) are especially common, and bobcats, snakes, and other creatures are sometimes seen. The creek hosts numerous Steelhead Trout, and in the past may have supported Coho Salmon.

Back to Overview

Stevens Creek County Park (Spring/Summer): A Morning Drive-and-Bird

Stevens Creek County Park (Spring/Summer): A Morning Drive-and-Bird

Just a short hop off Highway 280 in Cupertino brings you to this, our very first Santa Clara County park. Drive through lower Stevens Creek Canyon, stopping to bird at parking spots and picnic areas. Shady creeksides, a reservoir to scan, and oak and chaparral hillsides are alive with resident and migrant birds. The secret to finding them is to come early to beat the heat and crowds. And don’t forget your picnic lunch!

Back to Overview

Palo Alto Baylands (Spring/Summer): Swallow Central and Pond Loop Trail

Palo Alto Baylands (Spring/Summer):  Swallow Central and Pond Loop Trail

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.

Back to Overview

New Chicago Marsh and EEC (Spring): Spring Magic Up Close!

New Chicago Marsh and EEC (Spring): Spring Magic Up Close!

The San Francisco Bay is a critical habitat in spring, both as a migratory stopover and as breeding grounds for many birds. Birding at the Don Edwards National Wildlife Refuge Environmental Education Center (EEC) in Alviso allows close views of the extraordinary species diversity that makes use of this habitat, all in a short distance on flat ground.

Back to Overview

Ulistac Natural Area (Spring): Enjoying Migration in an Urban Oasis

Ulistac Natural Area (Spring):  Enjoying Migration in an Urban Oasis

Sitting adjacent to an avian flyway (the Guadalupe River), surrounded by suburban sprawl, and boasting the last remnant forest in the city of Santa Clara, Ulistac holds its own as a spring migrant trap. Enjoy the smell of native plants and trees in the restored areas of the park and witness the gradual process of forest regeneration.

Back to Overview

Los Gatos Creek Trail at Meridian (Spring): Spring Migrants in San Jose

Los Gatos Creek Trail at Meridian (Spring): Spring Migrants in San Jose

For great habitat in an urban setting, visit this paved trail along the Los Gatos Creek in San José. It’s the perfect location for spring migrants!

Back to Overview

Christmas Hill Park (Spring): A River Runs Through It... for KIDS!

Christmas Hill Park (Spring): A River Runs Through It... for KIDS!

In the heart of Garlic-growing Gilroy, this jewel of a park has some really top-notch, natural river habitat for both birds and kids to enjoy. The oak-bay woodland on the park’s namesake, Christmas Hill provides plenty of places to explore steep trails with older kids, but even very young children can enjoy the birds on the lawn and in the trees at the playground area. The combination of well-maintained city park and immediately-adjacent wildlife habitat makes this park perfect for a family outing… but the restrooms are CLOSED ON SUNDAYS.

Back to Overview