Exploring Nature in the San Francisco Bay Area

Where to Find the Sounds of Nature in the Bay Area for World Listening Day

From the rustling of the wind through the trees to the yipping of coyotes at dusk, the Bay Area offers an impressive array of natural sounds. Why not take a day to escape the daily bombardment of urban noise to appreciate nature’s melodies? This Thursday marks World Listening Day and, although it’s hard to peel off mid-week, the day offers the perfect excuse to fully immerse yourself in the sounds of nature.

Here is Bay Nature’s selected list of hikes for the occasion (we give you permission to postpone them for the weekend). For more on nature sounds, take a tour with an “acoustic ecologist,” who is collecting a vast digital library of bird songs they’ve recorded across Northern California.

Photo credit: Alex Coltman.
Photo credit: Alex Coltman.

Edgewood Park, Redwood City

No one celebrates the end of each day quite as enthusiastically as coyotes do, and any of the several trails looping through Edgewood Park are excellent for eavesdropping on their distinctive song. Edgewood Park is a fairly straight shot off of 280, and best known for it impressive wildflowers come spring. For a relatively easy hike, try the Franciscan Loop, a scenic dirt path just under 1½ miles. If you’re hoping to hear some of the yips and howls characteristic of the area, try to plan your hike for sometime in the late afternoon, as the park closes at sunset. Even after the sun dips completely below the horizon, their unique calls are audible all the way back to your car in the available parking lot.

Photo credit. Bowling robot/Flickr.
Photo credit. Bowling robot/Flickr.

Mount Tamalpais, Marin

North Bay residents are no doubt familiar with Mt. Tamalpais, and for good reason; the peak offers a breathtaking 360-degree view of the entire Bay Area. This glorious scenery is accompanied by the wind whistling across the wide-open grasslands and through the redwood valleys. Miles of trails ribbon the mountain, including one leading to the historic West Point Inn. Starting from the parking lot across from the Mountain Home Inn, the hike to the inn is approximately 3.8 miles. The moderate hike is well worth it; the inn offers picnic benches perfect for relaxing and enjoying the sounds of the wind across the southern slope of the mountain.

Photo credit: DBerry2006/ Flickr
Photo credit: DBerry2006/ Flickr

Arch Rock, Point Reyes

        Of the 150 miles of hiking trails that wind along the Point Reyes National Seashore, the Bear Valley trail is easily the most popular in the park. The most direct route to the ocean, the Bear Valley trail concludes with the beautiful overlook point Arch Rock. Try taking the Bear Valley-Meadow Trail Loop and make a day trip out of this 10.6-mile coastal adventure. Starting at the southern edge of the parking lots, the rhythmic roar of the Pacific amplifies as you near its shore. Arch Rock offers some spectacular views of the ocean and with it an incomparable blend of sounds, as the waves crash against the rocks below you, and the shorebirds call out to one another above.

Photo: Mike Baird/ Flickr.
Photo: Mike Baird/ Flickr.

Point Isabel, Richmond

        Take a stroll along Richmond’s inner harbor this time of year and you’ll be treated to the whistling cries of a variety of shorebirds. Willets and American avocets are particularly abundant around Point Isabel, though it’s not uncommon to stumble across ducks, herons and other wildlife on the Point Isabel to Marina Bay hike. The trail is just under 5 miles and allows dogs on-leash, making it ideal for both you and your canine companion to get some fresh air.

Alex Coltman is a Bay Nature editorial intern.

 

The Bay Area fathers among you

This Sunday is a day reserved for celebrating all the wonderful fathers in our lives. Why not take a moment to recognize some of the prominent pops in the Bay Area’s animal kingdom?


8294893212_11f796627f_zThe Stay at Home Dad: Three-spined stickleback

Romantic courtship and parental investment? What a catch! Come spring, the male three-spined stickleback fish busies himself preparing a nest out of twigs, plant debris and mucus. He then engages in a zigzag courtship dance in hopes of attracting a potential mate back to his aquatic abode. Once the eggs have been laid and the female stickleback’s role is complete, she is driven from the nest and the male takes his place guarding the eggs until they hatch. During this time, the male takes full responsibility for the eggs, guarding them from predators and even fanning them with his tail to guarantee adequate oxygen.

o95-RAtYbS9Oo7fEL2D0ghAX_cl4zcS5DErRvus8z7oThe Tough Love Dad: Red Fox

For the first month after his pups are born, male red foxes provide their mate with food every four to six hours while she is confined to the den with the pups. However, it turns out there’s no such thing as a free meal in the animal kingdom either. Red fox pups begin learning their first lesson in independence at about three months old, when a fox father stops bringing food back to the den. Not to worry, dad doesn’t let his pups go hungry; he hides food close to the den and disguises it with leaves and twigs, teaching his young to forage and sniff out the food on their own.

s6gxKM__OHMVeoXdRFQex6VO490svdOEtihjv7OTdDEThe Sacrificial Dad: Honey Bee

You can’t blame the male honeybee if he’s only got one thing on his mind; mating with the queen is the sole reason for his existence. In fact, the male honeybee, or drone, takes his life’s goal so seriously that he’s willing to commit sexual suicide to achieve it. The honeybee’s queen mates only once in her lifetime, using the sperm collected during that one trip throughout the rest of her life. As if dying for the sake of repopulating your colony weren’t dramatic enough, the honeybee’s reproductive ritual actually occurs midair. Though only lasting a few seconds, the drone is fatally injured in the process and falls to the ground to die. Funny that this account never made it into the talk about the birds and the bees.

X4VLkPN6uvFoAX7kdh7wMKP56pOYSMYvmVBdreRs4sIThe Nonexistent Dad: California Whiptail Lizard

Men: can’t live with them, can’t live without them. Except the California whiptail lizard appears to have done just that. This all-lady lizard species reproduces asexually through a process called “parthenogenesis,” during which a female self-fertilizes her own eggs. The next generation of this celibate species will have genetic material identical to the mother’s, essentially producing clones. Might as well save the birth announcements, though; it’s always a girl.

tewYCJ1BYtkvtqQpjv_oTMigGVh2pdE-7jlThoeSaTIDeadbeat Dad: North American River Otter

You won’t find this deadbeat dad helping his mate find a suitable den to give birth, nor do they take any part in the process of raising the pups produced there. Female river otters feed, protect and teach their young to swim, all without the aid of the pups’ father. This isn’t for a lack of social structure within the species; in fact, the North American river otter is considered more social than many of his cousins. Male river otters simply seem to prefer the company of other bachelors, hunting and traveling in groups sometimes as large as 17 individuals.