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The Coyote Creek Trail is a pedestrian and cycling trail along Coyote Creek in San Jose, California, which continues into Coyote Valley and northern Morgan Hill. The Coyote Creek Trail was designated part of the National Recreation Trail system in 2009. [1] It is also part of the Bay Area Ridge Trail system. [2]
Coyote Creek then bypasses the Newby Island landfill and empties into the San Francisco Bay. There is a chain of parks along Coyote Creek called the Coyote Creek Park Chain, which contains the Coyote Creek Trail. The feasibility of a trail connecting the parks within this chain to Almaden Park was first examined in 1989. [16]
Coyote Creek Trail, San Jose to Morgan Hill; Ed R. Levin County Park, Milpitas; Fremont Older Open Space Preserve, Saratoga; Grant Ranch Park, East San Jose/Mount Hamilton; Guadalupe River Trail, downtown San Jose, Willow Glen and South San Jose; Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park, Santa Cruz Mountains; Kelley Park, Willow Glen (south-central San ...
Coyote Creek Trail entrance at Tully Road. The off-street trail network in San Jose consists mostly of routes along waterways and highways. [2] Coyote Creek Trail, from Tully Road in East San Jose to Anderson Dam in Morgan Hill; Guadalupe River Trail, in two disconnected segments from Alviso to downtown and Highway 85 to Almaden Lake Park
Coyote Creek Parkway is a multi-use trail that is paved for 15 miles (24 km) south to Anderson Lake County Park. [1] Coyote Creek Parkway is a jurisdiction of the Santa Clara County Parks. Coyote Creek Trail continues to the north along Coyote Creek under the jurisdiction of San Jose city parks. [3] [4] Hellyer County Park in December 2012
Ed R. Levin County Park is the largest park in Milpitas, California. It is run by the Santa Clara County Parks and Recreation Department and is located in the chaparral and grassland foothills of Diablo Range east of the Santa Clara Valley. Monument Peak can be accessed through trails in the park.
Before Route 237 was upgraded to freeway status in 1994–1995, it was a four-lane expressway with at-grade intersections, known as Alviso-Milpitas Road or Milpitas-Alviso Road depending on different maps showing the description. The Route 237 corridor has long been sought as a location for a freeway connector between Interstates 680 and 880.
The path begins in Santa Fe Springs on the North fork of the Coyote Creek and extends south into Long Beach where it joins the San Gabriel River bicycle path at the trail bridge just South of Willow Street/Katella Avenue. Coyote Creek separates Los Angeles County and Orange County. A curious feature of the bikeway is that many of the east ...