Caliente Creek is a creel with Street View imagery along much of its length. It's also a place I've never been, where there are limited iNaturalist records. There are, however, some wonderful records made by @naomithebot and other botanists as part of a bioblitz in the past.
I added a few more records of things visible on Google Street View from the highest point I could see the creek (and adjacent slopes) to its apparent 'outlet' from a trash-strewn ditch in the central valley onto a road and a sump.
you can retrace this path with the attached observations. I don't only follow the creek, there are some other nearby things too.
Note there are a few more observations at the very top... inat won't let me add them to this blog post without deleting the others
aug 2012
quite a few of them around here. this is an interesting high hot valley with some desert affinities perhaps. Never been up here. Too bad.
aug 2012
as the canyon narrows moving downstream, bedrock becomes closer to the surface, forcing moisture and sometimes surface water towards the stream bed. Here it becomes wet enough to support cottonwoods instead of just junipers and smaller shrubs. Looks like there is some grazing happening here. Also a willow to the left, probably lasiolepis but I wouldn't try to guess based on google street view imagery.
ubiquitous here and easily visible both on google street view (aug 2012) and air photos. This species is a dominant to codominant tree in much of the foothills surrounding the Central Valley, though there is an odd distribution gap in part of the southern Sierras. Trying to build up the range map for this species on iNat.
scattered in these two washes. aug 2012
aug 2012
neat! This canyon is called sycamore canyon, perhaps there are more upstream but no google there and it's probably private land
the brown trees. They aren't dead, they lose their leaves during the dry season. Visible on the air photo too!
aug 2012
toasty brown for summer
also look the other way... this road must wash out a lot
aug 2012
continuing all through here of course. probably hundreds of thousands in this canyon
aug 2012
though nice to see water in the creek, in august.
jan 2011
upper spot where road leaves this drainage
jan 2011.
I guess there is limited value to data indicating any amount of grey pine in the western sierra foothills down here. but hey it's free data. more or less. There it is
I think. dec 2008. what a mess. shows up on air photo. must be a seep here or something
why?
jun 2012, not there in 2008. grazing or fire issue maybe. or they just aren't visible in winter.
jun 2012
this wash is intense - it's huge and super filled with sediment. I wonder if it has been like this for a long time or if it is only due to whatever land use, grazing, logging way up high, fire suppression, whatever. if only we had more access to info about what it was like back then. Need more connection with Native people who are still around!
perhaps planted. This line of athel seems to be in where Caliente Creek loses its coherency. So odd that a huge drainage and very wide wash just vanishes. Where does the water go during the big floods? Does it just spread out over farm fields? Are there enough ditches to hold it all? I know during the really big floods the Tulare Lake refills a bit despite the drainage attempts. s it will undoubtedly do some day in the future.
Jan 2008, plus 2012.
Has anyone mapped the current hydrology of the central valley? So many hydrologic restoration opportunities with no political will to do them.
this little dry swale with tree tobacco seems to be part of a floodway that sometimes gets water kicked in from Caliente Creek. Which is odd because upstream I couldn't find a channel. July 2012, dry of course.this road probably isn't passable during the rare times it flows
the ditch that holds the valley bottom remains of caliente creek, a small cottonwood survives here
jul 2012
so it kind of looks like caliente creek ends here, in a sad garbage pile, where it literally gets dumped on this road. How odd. I guess it flows so rarely that any time it reaches here is a flood event everywhere else anyway.
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