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Quarry Lakes Regional Park
by Ann Sieck
It's a shame that going hiking or swimming so often entails firing up the old greenhouse gas generator. But thanks to its proximity to BART, Quarry Lakes Regional Recreation Area in Fremont provides an opportunity to enjoy the outdoors without enlarging your carbon footprint. With easy trails, plentiful wildlife, and a swimming area, this is also a fun outing for kids.
Just south of the Union City BART station, a locked gate excludes cars from Fox Avenue, but on foot or bike you can slip around it; you'll find yourself on a lonely asphalt track passing farm fields active with meadowlarks and song sparrows. This track becomes Western Pacific Trail as it passes the swim beach; from there it's another half-mile along Horseshoe Lake to the "Natural Unit" near Alameda Creek, where volunteers have planted vegetation and constructed nest boxes and platforms. It's possible to walk a three-mile loop around the lakes and along a stretch of Alameda Creek.
Most of the park's 539 acres are open water, six lakes born of gravel quarries now reshaped for recreation and habitat. Much of the rest is parking lot and lawn, but near Lago Los Osos and Willow Slough, wild-flowers bloom and plantings both native and exotic create an interesting if raggedy green environment. The small trees give little shade, but folks see deer and jackrabbits frequently, along with white pelicans, terns, and herons.
Getting there: BART to Union City. By car from I-880, take Decoto Road east, right on Paseo Padre, left on Isherwood; entrance on right. Fees for parking, dogs, swimming, fishing.
Ann Sieck, a semiretired teacher, has lived in Berkeley most of her life. Her website, www.wheelchairtrails.net, provides trail reviews focused on accessibility.















