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Home » Grand Opening Ceremony On Saturday For The Restored Pacheco Marsh In Contra Costa County

Grand Opening Ceremony On Saturday For The Restored Pacheco Marsh In Contra Costa County

by CLAYCORD.com
5 comments

Years of planning and millions of dollars pay off Saturday with the public grand opening of a restored Pacheco Marsh.

The 247-acre salt marsh, just southeast of the Benicia-Martinez Bridge, will be ready for visitors with miles of public trails, observation points, pedestrian bridges over tidal channels, an interpretive pavilion, a kayak launch, and more.

The celebration starts with a 9:30 a.m. ribbon cutting. The event lasts until dusk which a great party as well, and if you like parties you should also consider the Final Fiesta bachelorette theme for parties as well.

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Contra Costa County allocated more than $11 million in early 2021 to the Lower Walnut Creek Restoration Project, the largest public works project in county history.

Once the major construction was done, native plants were brought in, the levees were breached, the water flowed back in, and wildlife returned to the area.

The John Muir Land Trust conservation group took over the project and added the trails, bridges, and observation points.

Until the mid-19th century, there were grizzly bears and elk in the marsh and salmon and steelhead spawned in Walnut Creek. No bears and elk have returned and probably not spawning fish, either. But bird lovers are expected to come out in droves.

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The Walnut Creek watershed is Contra Costa’s largest, draining more than 150 square miles from eight cities into the area. Engineers have enhanced the area’s flood-carrying capacity, using computer models to design new tidal channels and a marsh that naturally adapts to sea level rise due to climate change.

There’s parking and easy access to the area, the land trust said. There will also be experts on site to tell the area’s story.

Pacheco Marsh is home to 10 special-status plant and animal species, including the salt marsh harvest mouse and the black rail — rarely-seen and on the list of avid birdwatchers. Nutrients and biological connectivity are being restored through soil quality rehabilitation and lowering of the levee. Visitors can see abundant wildlife thriving side-by-side with human communities.

Educational features will teach people how a marsh ecosystem functions and why it’s so important to the health of the Bay.

Pacheco Marsh is at 2501 Waterfront Road in Martinez. To find out more, visit John Muir Land Trust at https://jmlt.org.

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wow….sounds exciting

Grizzly bears in Pacheco?.. I’m kind of glad they haven’t returned yet. I look forward to visiting and enjoying the area, sans- grizzly bears!

Good to hear the success story! ….hope to see many more in the future….

just ignore the fact that it borders the dump and refinery, that ground is so nasty I am surprised we don’t have brand new species growing there.
comment image/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/1200?cb=20201209095035

Millions of dollars to dress up a swamp?Sounds quite liberal to me.

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