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The Santa Cruz Surfing Museum at Steamer Lane is staffed by docents from the Santa Cruz Surfing Club who have surfed Santa Cruz waves since the 1930s. Santa Cruz hosts several surf contests drawing international participants each year, including the O'Neill Cold Water Classic, the International Longboard Association contest, and many others.
Crystal Springs Reservoir is a pair of artificial lakes located in the northern Santa Cruz Mountains of San Mateo County, California operated by the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission for water supply to the San Francisco peninsula.
Santa Clara: Santa Clara Valley Water District: 1935: Earth: 108 33: ... Santa Cruz: Santa Cruz Water Dept. [7] 1960: Earth: 190 58: ... California American Water ...
The creek begins in the Santa Cruz mountains near the Santa Clara/Santa Cruz County border, just south of the peak Loma Prieta. It then flows northwesterly to Lake Elsman, a reservoir owned by the San Jose Water Company, [4] then on to Holy City and Chemeketa Park, then northward into the Lexington Reservoir.
Loch Lomond is a reservoir in the Santa Cruz Mountains near Lompico in Santa Cruz County, California. Part of the Santa Cruz Water Department system, it was created by building the Newell Creek Dam across Newell Creek – a tributary of the San Lorenzo River. The dam is an earth-fill barricade, measuring 190 ft (58 m) by 750 ft (230 m).
Dec. 22—Before stepping into the position of Utility Billing Division director for the city of Santa Fe in 2019, Nancy Jimenez worked as the police department's fiscal administrator, interacting ...
Lake Elsman is a 6,200-acre-foot (7,600,000 m 3) [1] reservoir, created by an earthen dam called Austrian Dam [5] on Los Gatos Creek in the Santa Cruz Mountains of California. [2] At several points it is over 140' deep [6] and its normal surface area is 96 acres. [2] It provides 12% of San Jose Water Works’ total water capacity in some years. [6]
Neary Lagoon is a small lagoon located in the Lower Westside neighborhood of Santa Cruz, California. The lagoon is protected within Neary Lagoon Park, which serves as both a municipal park and wildlife refuge for migratory birds. The Santa Cruz Water Treatment Plant abuts the southwestern edge of the lagoon.