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Bear Gulch Reservoir is a reservoir in the town of Woodside, California. It is the main storage for the Bear Gulch District of the California Water Service, holding up to 215 million US gallons (810,000 m 3) of water, and serving 55,501 people. [2] It is fed by water diverted by two dams on nearby Bear Creek.
San Andreas Lake. Bean Hollow Lake ; Bear Gulch Reservoir ; Big Lagoon ; Central Lake ; Crocker Lake; Reservoir de los Frijoles (1663965, 1663967) Knuedler Lake ...
Joshua Tree National Park: 1949? 15 4.6: 290? Barrett Lake: ... Bear Gulch Reservoir: Bear Gulch Dam: ... Big Bear Lake: Bear Valley Dam:
The fish was discovered in the 1980s in Montana's Bear Gulch area by Adelphi University palaeontologist Richard Lund, who has been exploring the limestone formations of the region since 1969. [2] [3] The area was thought to be the location of a shallow bay. Fish remains are scattered throughout the area.
The Woodside Diversion Damwas built around 1840 as a grist mill and is located within the 1,200-plus acre California Water Service Company watershed, and there is a second diversion taken from the lower portion of Bear Gulch Creek near Manzanita Road in Woodside.The California Water Service purchased the Bear Gulch Water Co. from the University ...
Named tributaries include McGarvey Gulch, [6] Squealer Gulch, [7] Tripp Gulch, [8] and Appletree Gulch. [9] McGarvey Gulch joins West Union Creek at Huddart County Park. Although West Union Creek runs dry most summers, it has perennial pools that provide refugia for steelhead trout, the anadromous form of rainbow trout.
Fishing is a common activity at the dam, both in the reservoir and the Lehigh River it feeds. Species commonly caught include trout and smallmouth bass. [7] The Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission regularly stocks the Lehigh River at the dam with brown and rainbow trout raised in hatcheries at the end of winter to shore up fish populations. [8]
Alambique Creek begins below Skyline Boulevard on Bear Gulch Road near the intersection with Bear Glen Drive. [2] After crossing La Honda Road, and just south of the intersection of Mountain Home Road and Portola Road, Alambique Creek enters Lloyd's Pond (Upper Searsville Pond) which is currently impounded by the road-fill of Portola Road and a culvert.