Alambique Creek | |
Name Etymology: | Spanish language |
Pushpin Map: | USA California |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location of the mouth in California |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | United States |
Subdivision Type2: | State |
Subdivision Name2: | California |
Subdivision Type3: | Region |
Subdivision Name3: | Southeastern San Mateo County |
Subdivision Type5: | City |
Subdivision Name5: | Woodside, California |
Source1 Location: | Wunderlich County Park |
Source1 Coordinates: | 37.4017°N -122.2439°W |
Source1 Elevation: | 1930feet |
Mouth: | Sausal Creek |
Mouth Location: | Middle Searsville Pond (Middle Searsville Marsh) just above Searsville Lake |
Mouth Coordinates: | 37.4033°N -122.2478°W |
Mouth Elevation: | 342feet |
Alambique Creek, or Arroyo Alembique, is a 2.7adj=midNaNadj=mid[1] stream located in San Mateo County, California, in the United States. It is a tributary to Corte Madera Creek and is part of the San Francisquito Creek watershed.[2]
The creek's name is Spanish for "still," referring to a liquor distillery.[3] Older Spanish spells it alembique with an "e". The English spelling is alembic, a type of still that is used today. The e spelling dominates in the 1800s and continued on most maps until the 1930s. The name refers to moonshiners Tom Bowen and Nicholas Dawson, English seaman deserters, who built an illegal still on the creek in 1842.[2] The creek runs through Wunderlich Park in Woodside, California, where, in 1904, the creek was used by J. A. Folger for the first hydro-electrical power system in the region.[4]
Alambique Creek begins below Skyline Boulevard on Bear Gulch Road near the intersection with Bear Glen Drive. 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. Of note, Lloyd's Pond is likely named for William Lloyd (1823-1895), who operated a blacksmith shop in historic Searsville, and who partnered with other early pioneers Dr. Robert O. Tripp, James "Grizzly" Ryder, and Alvinza Hayward, a bullwhacker from Amador County, to harvest the redwoods.[5] Next, Alambique Creek flows through a culvert under Portola Road into the Middle Searsville Pond (Middle Searsville Marsh) at its confluence with Sausal Creek.[1] [6]
Alambique Creek was once a historical steelhead trout (coastal rainbow trout) (Oncorhynchus mykiss irideus) spawning stream. In 1981, the creek was fish sampled and two stream resident rainbow trout which have been isolated from the Bay by Searsville Dam were collected where the creek crosses La Honda Road. In May 2002, the culvert beneath Highway 84 was identified as an impassable barrier to upstream migration.[7]