Enjoy the Bay Area Car-Free with
Transit to Trails
August 2009 Update:
The Transit to Trails map won a
CartoSIG Map Award from the Cartography Special
Interest Group (CartoSIG) at the 2009 ESRI User Conference.
Get some great ideas on how to take public transit to some of the
best hiking and bicycling trails in the Bay Area with Transit
to Trails, a
supplement to Bay Nature Magazine’s April issue. Co-sponsored
by MTC, it features a fold-out map with transit-accessible hikes
from Almaden Quicksilver County Park in Santa Clara County to the
Skyline Wilderness Trail in Napa County. You’ll get some great
ideas for possible destinations and know that you are helping to
reduce the Bay Area’s carbon footprint by going car-free.
Footloose and Car-Free in the Bay Area, the front-page
article in Transit to Trails, is a first-person account
of going “carless” written by David Loeb, executive director
and publisher of Bay Nature Magazine (www.baynature.org).Other
articles include Up and Down at Point Reyes, where hikers
at this national seashore are treated to the sounds of pounding surf
and have views of the Farallon Islands, along with an occasional
bobcat sighting; a personal account of an Overnight on Mt. Diablo,
where the author shared the trail with a tarantula; and A Bayshore
Getaway in Silicon Valley, which details where you can access
the six-mile Stevens Creek Trail, a $12 million project that meets
the Bay Trail at Mountain View’s Shoreline Park.
See the Valley of the Moon from the Overlook Trail that begins a
half-mile from the town square in Sonoma. A partial-loop hiking-only
trail, it’s just three miles and is of only moderate difficulty.
On the other end of the spectrum, there’s a 38.5 mile one-way
backpacking hike from Fremont to Livermore on the Ohlone Wilderness
Trail, traversing rugged terrain in Mission Peak, Sunol, Ohlone and
Del Valle regional parks. Classified as strenuous, this trail
requires a permit from the East Bay Regional Parks District.
For up-to-date transit directions throughout the Bay Area, including
schedules, times, costs and walking directions, visit www.511.org and
click on “Transit.” A Web site sponsored by the Open
Space Council, www.transitandtrails.org,
will be launching in 2009 and will incorporate trailheads from Transit
to Trails into a 511-linked trip planner.
Copies of Transit to Trails are available at the MTC/ABAG
library at 101 Eighth Street, Oakland (across from the Lake Merritt
BART station), or contact the library for a copy to be mailed to
you (library@mtc.ca.gov or
510-817-5836). Copies are also available at the transit kiosk in
San Francisco’s Embarcadero BART station or at the Bay Crossings
store in San Francisco’s Ferry Building.
To access Transit to Trails online, visit http://baynature.org/articles/apr-jun-2009/transit-to-trails/
—
Georgia Lambert
See also: