Ralph B. Clark Regional Park Fish

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Yucaipa Regional Park Lake Fish Report - Yucaipa, CA (San ...
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Ralph B. Clark Regional Park is an urban park located primarily in Buena Park, California, south of Rosecrans Avenue at the southern edge of the West Coyote Hills. A smaller section with six softball fields is located north of Rosecrans Avenue in Fullerton, California. The park was originally opened as Los Coyotes Regional Park in 1981, and was renamed in 1987 after then-retiring Orange County Supervisor Ralph B. Clark (1917-2009).


Yucaipa Regional Park
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Park facilities and activities

Amphitheater, barbecues, baseball/softball fields, bicycling, fire rings, fishing, group picnic areas, hiking trails, horseshoe pits, Interpretive Center, interpretive programs, model sail boating, picnic tables, picnic shelters, playground equipment, tennis courts, volleyball courts.


Yucaipa Regional Park Lake Fish Report - Yucaipa, CA (San ...
photo src: www.socalfishreports.com


Interpretive center

The interpretive center is a small museum which features ice age fossil and local geology exhibits.

The center has an impressive mural of ice age mammals by Mark Hallet.

Among the fossils on display is a 9-million-year-old baleen whale skeleton that was recovered from a local construction site. It is reputed to be one of the only complete Miocene whale fossils in existence.

Admission is free.


Mojave Narrows Regional Park
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Trails

The park has a pleasant tree shaded trail that runs about 1.2 miles (1.9 km) along its periphery (including a 0.3-mile (500 m) walk along the north edge of the park).

The trail rises to the top of Camel Hill (located in the north east corner of the park). Sights from the top of Camel Hill include Catalina Island, the Long Beach port, Signal Hill, Palos Verdes Peninsula, the KFI radio tower, Hawks Point Bluff, Mount Baldy, the Los Coyotes Country Club, the Santa Ana Mountains and the Huntington Beach Power Plant structures.

Nearby trails
The trail head for the Emery Ranch Trail lies just to the west of the portion of the park which is north of Rosecrans Avenue. This is a somewhat steep 0.4-mile-long (600 m) trail that winds its way up through the local coastal sage scrub plant community. The trail ends at the peak of the hill near a water storage tank.

The trail head for the Castlewood Trail and the Rosecrans Trail are on the northern side of Rosecrans about 0.4 miles (600 m) east of the park entrance. These trails are part of the Fullerton loop, a popular mountain biking route.


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Wildlife

The park has a surprising variety of wildlife, given its small size. More than 130 species of birds have been sighted in the park and there are resident populations of squirrels, rabbits, fish, lizards and turtles. In the evening, just after sundown, bats can be seen feeding on the insects that fly over the pond. On occasion coyotes, raccoons and opossums visit the park.


Catfish_ Daniel Ruiz.jpg
photo src: cms.sbcounty.gov


Fishing

The pond is stocked with catfish and trout. In addition, there is a resident population of Largemouth bass and bluegill. Catch and release rules apply to the bass.

Fishing licenses are required for people sixteen years and older.

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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