Penitencia Creek

Upper Penitencia Creek (Shistuk[1])
Arroyo de la Penitencia,[2] Encarnacion Arroyo[3]
stream
Country United States
State California
Region Santa Clara County
Tributaries
 - left Arroyo Aguague
Source
 - location Poverty Ridge, Diablo Range
 - elevation 2,955 ft (901 m)
 - coordinates 37°25′15″N 121°44′12″W / 37.42083°N 121.73667°W [4]
Mouth Coyote Creek
 - location San Jose, California
 - elevation 66 ft (20 m) [4]
 - coordinates 37°22′03″N 121°52′49″W / 37.36750°N 121.88028°WCoordinates: 37°22′03″N 121°52′49″W / 37.36750°N 121.88028°W [4]

Upper Penitencia Creek is actually one of two creeks by the name Penitencia Creek in the northeastern Santa Clara Valley of Santa Clara County, California. They are both tributaries of Coyote Creek. The creek was diverted southwestward to Coyote Creek ca. 1850 by a farmer to irrigate his fields, permanently splitting Upper Penitencia Creek from Lower Penitencia Creek.[5] Upper Penitencia Creek drains the western slopes of Mount Hamilton of the Diablo Range, and passes through Alum Rock Park, before ending at its confluence with Coyote Creek at Berryessa Road.

Lower Penitencia Creek flows along the historic Mission Road between Mission Santa Clara and Mission San Jose. It runs through the city of Milpitas before receiving flows from Berryessa Creek, Piedmont Creek, Arroyo de los Coches, Tularcitos Creek and Calera Creek before entering Coyote Creek near Dixon Landing Road at the southern end of San Francisco Bay.[6][7]

History

The Ohlone called the creek Shistuk, meaning "place of rabbits".[1] The creek was known as Arroyo de las Penitencia, named after the Penitencia adobe house which stood at the highway and was used as a house of confession and penitence in mission times.[2] Earlier, when Pedro Fages and Father Crespí left Monterey they crossed the Encarnacion Arroyo on November 24, 1769, their mission being to explore up the east side of San Francisco Bay, come round the top below Point Reyes and reach San Francisco.[3]

What is now known as Upper Penitencia Creek was known in the 19th century as Arroyo Aguaje (an aguaje is a spring or watering place; locally variably spelled Aguage or Aguague). A form of the name has been retained by Arroyo Aguague, the principal tributary of Upper Penitencia Creek. The name of Penitencia Creek came into existence at least as early as 1840. At that time the Arroyo Aguague (now referred to as Upper Penitencia Creek) terminated in a sausal (willow grove and freshwater marsh) that flowed in turn into Penitencia Creek (now referred to as Lower Penitencia Creek). When the Arroyo Aguague was diverted in the 1850s to Coyote Creek, it became known as Upper Penitencia Creek.[5]

Correction: The Ohlone called the creek Shistuk, meaning "place of rabbits". Not true: in all of the documented Ohlone languages the word for rabbit is weren or some variation thereof and therefore, place of rabbits would be Weren-tak.

The closest that I can find to Shis-tak is: Čéeyiš = jackrabbit in Chocheño, therefore Place of the Jackrabbits (Hares) would be Čéeyiš-tak. Reference Lingusittic Field Notes Northern Costanoan (1925-1934) of John Peabody Harrington

Watershed

The Upper Penitencia Creek watershed drains an area of 24 square miles (62 km2) and runs approximately 11 miles (18 km) from to its confluence with Coyote Creek, the latter being about 10 miles (16 km) from San Francisco Bay.[8] The source of Upper Penitencia Creek is on Poverty Ridge in the Diablo Range. It plunges into Cherry Flat Reservoir[9] and then flows through Alum Rock Park, where it is joined by Arroyo Aguague. Arroyo Aguague discharges to Penitencia Creek from the south, but summer inflow is very low; however, the stream flows in the Calaveras Fault zone and does not go completely dry, even in severe droughts.[10] Lower down it forms the rough boundary between the Berryessa and Alum Rock districts of San Jose.

Unlike most creeks in the Santa Clara Valley, it follows a mostly natural course and does not have concrete or gabion embankments.

Ecology

Upper Penitencia Creek remains a Steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) stream and according to two reports may have supported Coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) historically, based on habitat suitability analysis.[11][12] The Santa Clara Valley Urban Runoff Pollution Prevention Program (SCVURPPP) developed a workplan for watershed analysis in 2006 as the stream was deemed potentially impaired by sediment from anthropogenic activities, this Limiting Factor Analysis reported results from an extensive snorkel sampling effort during spring and fall 2005 which indicated that the watershed supported between 1,300 and 1,500 age 1+ and older steelhead, of which age 2+ and older fish comprised approximately 5 to 10%, from approximately 3.5 miles (5.6 kilometers) upstream of the confluence with Coyote Creek upstream to natural waterfall barriers in Upper Penitencia Creek and Arroyo Aguague. With the exception of the man-made, historic rock baths confining the stream in Alum Rock Park, significant barriers to spawning runs were not identified.[13] Although the structure on Upper Penitencia Creek in Alum Rock Park presents a significant partial barrier to fish passage, an engineering analysis to modify the barrier was completed in 2011.[14][15] The City of San Jose, in conjunction with the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority (VTA) are planning to remove this barrier, a concrete weir related to the historic Youth Science Institute bridge, along with three other stream restoration projects with $2.5 million in funding from VTA as mitigation for environmental damages related to other VTA construction. The project is scheduled for completion in October, 2012.[16]

In dry summers the creek goes dry about one mile below Alum Rock Park. Flows are diverted by the Santa Clara Valley Water District (SCVWD) to three off-channel percolation ponds at Noble Avenue, which in turn, recharge creek flows for about two miles below the ponds through the summer. However the diversion is also capable of drying the stream in late spring which may interfere with outmigrating steelhead smolts.[10]

A Bay Area-wide study of which watersheds had the greatest potential for restoration for steelhead trout populations identified three streams in Santa Clara County: Upper Penitencia Creek, Stevens Creek and the Guadalupe River.[14]

(Upper) Penitencia Creek Trail & Recreation

Penitencia Creek Trail follows some of the creek: it begins unpaved at Noble Avenue in the east, passes percolation ponds which are open to the public, goes unofficially under Piedmont Road, becomes paved through Penitencia Creek Park, passes under Interstate 680, and ends in the far end of Penitencia Creek County Park at Mabury Road in the west.[17] On October 25, 2008, a dedication ceremony was held to designate the trail as part of the Bay Area Ridge Trail network, where it would provide a gateway to Alum Rock Park and the Boccardo Trail, which are parts of the Ridge Trail. It will someday connect to Coyote Creek, which will provide access to the San Francisco Bay Trail.

Upper Penitencia Creek is closed to fishing year-round to protect the trout population.[18]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Upper Penitencia Creek (Report). Santa Clara Valley Water District. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Erwin G. Gudde, William Bright (1949). California Place Names: The Origin and Etymology of Current Geographical Names. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. C-242. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Hubert H. Bancroft. History of California. 1884-90. San Francisco, California: A.L. Bancroft and Company. p. 184. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Penitencia Creek
  5. 5.0 5.1 Erin Beller, Robin Grossinger, Maika Nicholson, Micha Salomon (2012-06). Upper Penitencia Creek Historical Ecology Assessment (Report). Richmond, California: San Francisco Estuary Institute. Retrieved 2012-08-11. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Lower Penitencia Creek
  7. "Lower Penitencia Creek Watershed Map". Oakland Museum. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  8. Santa Clara Basin Watershed Management Initiative (SCBWMI) Watershed Assessment Subgroup (2003-08). Watershed Characteristics Report - Chapter 7: Natural Setting (Report). Santa Clara Valley Urban Runoff Pollution Prevention Program. p. 179. Retrieved 2012-08-11. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. "Cherry Flat Reservoir". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
  10. 10.0 10.1 J. J. Smith (1998). Steelhead and other Fish Resources of Western Mt. Hamilton Streams (Report). San Jose State University. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  11. Robert A. Leidy, Gordon Becker, Brett N. Harvey (2005). "Historical Status of Coho Salmon in Streams of the Urbanized San Francisco Estuary, California". California Fish and Game: 243. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  12. Buchan, L. A. J., R. A. Leidy, and M. K. Hayden (1999). Aquatic resource characterization of Western Mt. Hamilton Stream fisheries (Report). Sunnyvale, California: The Nature Conservancy.
  13. Stillwater Sciences (2006-08-18). Upper Penitencia Creek Limiting Factors Analysis Final Technical Report (Report). Santa Clara Valley Urban Runoff Prevention Program. p. 172. Retrieved 2012-08-11.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Gordon S. Becker, Isabelle J. Reining, David A. Asbury, Andrew Gunther (2007-08). San Francisco Estuary Watersheds Evaluation: Identifying Promising Locations for Steelhead Restoration in Tributaries of the San Francisco Estuary (Report). p. 14. Retrieved 2011-05-14. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  15. "Estuary Passage Improvement Program". Center for Ecosytem Management and Restoration (CEMAR). Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  16. Julie Edmonds-Mares, Joseph Horwedel (2011-11-21). Cooperative Agreement with Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority for Riparian Improvements in Upper Penitencia Creek in Alum Rock Park (Report). Retrieved 2012-08-11.
  17. "Penitencia Creek Trail". Retrieved 2012-08-11.
  18. "2012-2013 Freshwater Sport Fishing Regulations". California Dept. of Fish and Game. Retrieved 2012-08-11.

External links