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A deer takes cover from the rain.
Here’s an easy post-work hike for you: Foothill Regional Park in Windsor. I checked it out the other day when I had some free time and was passing by the Arata Lane exit just north of Windsor.
The park is to the east of the city and is a very comfortable stroll. It’s actually been around for 20 years, but I’ve met several local hikers who say they have never been there.
The park land mass is just over 200 acres and includes about a half-dozen different trails. At the highest point, you can climb to almost 600 feet. Given that the trails are all generally wide and well-marked, this is a hike for all ages. The parking lot has plenty of room, restrooms, maps, etc. (Bring the kids!)
I did a large counter-clockwise loop of the park, including some circling back and forth, to try and take in the whole expanse, which made for about four miles of actual walking. There are three small ponds in the park where you can stop and hang out or just wander by.
It’s a scenic loop, especially if you’re a fan of oaks. OK, you can see housing developments a-plenty as well, but they don’t look quite so sprawling from above. Some different varietals of woodlands are on display, and this being (nearly) spring, the colorful flowers are only going to get brighter over the next few months.
I haven’t done a lot of hiking in the Sonoma County Regional Parks system, mainly because I’m often on more arduous treks, but I felt the urge to do so after reading an interesting story in the PD last week on the struggling fiscal state of the county parks system. User fees are going up, and like every other part of California’s infrastructure, there’s no end in sight to the budgetary shock and awe that awaits us locals.
At the Foothill parking lot, I counted four cars inside the lot (they paid the $6 fee) and six cars parked just outside the gate by the sidewalk (they didn’t.) I suspect a fee hike will probably worsen that disparity. Not sure why the streets right outside a park gate aren’t no-parking areas.
[Gallery not found]My husband & friends do hike at most of the local areas; Foothill, Shiloh, Lake Sonoma, Sugarloaf and we ALWAYS pay the fee regaurdless if there is parking outside of the park. We feel people should not be allowed to enjoy the parks unless they pay. It is a very small fee to help keep the parks open!
Report comment Report commentWhy isn’t the street out front marked no parking??? You elitist jackass! Those persons probably would not have had the opportunity to enjoy the park at all, if not for a couple of spaces out front. This park was created as a pacifier to local citizens and government who wanted to have more public space and not so many mcmansions. So the developer and the city came up with the planning for the mcmansions to have their own semi private park. Those blessed enough to live in this neighborhood do not pay any use fees either.
Report comment Report commentSmartcookie you nailed it! My wife finds solice walking there everyday. We the homeowners and tax payers of this county already pay for this pleasure. The people that happen to live nearby are the ones who benefit the most. Maybe Nibor has money to burn. Some of us are trying to keep our homes and feed our kids. $6.00 a pop is not conducive to an everyday stroll, power walk or enjoying the peaceful serenity of nature.
Report comment Report commentHorse owners…please stop riding your horse on the outside of the trail. The horses are caving in the outside of the trails. And to the dog owners….if you pick up your dogs poop in the bright blue bag, please do not tie it up and then leave it on the side of the trail. There is no maid service up there. Better yet, if your dog has to poop, take him off the trail and just let him poop off trail.
Report comment Report commentHow about an address, freeway exit, directions of some kind for getting there????
Report comment Report commentTake the Arata Lane exit off of 101 just north of Windsor and follow Arata Lane less than a mile east and you will reach the park. It is well-marked with signage on Arata Lane.
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There’s also an entrance by trail from a park in the neighborhood nearby that ends up at the third pond, so even if they outlawed street parking by the main entrance there would be another way in. We used to live in that neighborhood just a few blocks from the park, it was great having that virtually in our backyard. It seemed to be primarily horse trailers that used the parking lot.
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