Sausal Creek | |
Name Other: | Arroyo Sausal, Corte de Madera Creek[1] |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | United States |
Subdivision Type2: | State |
Subdivision Name2: | California |
Subdivision Type3: | Region |
Subdivision Name3: | San Mateo County |
Subdivision Type5: | City |
Subdivision Name5: | Portola Valley, California |
Source1: | Northeast slope of the Santa Cruz Mountains |
Source1 Location: | Portola Valley |
Source1 Coordinates: | 37.3686°N -122.2211°W |
Source1 Elevation: | 683feet372207N 1221316W |
Mouth: | Confluence with Corte Madera Creek |
Mouth Location: | Border of Portola Valley, California and Stanford University |
Mouth Coordinates: | 37.3978°N -122.2433°W |
Mouth Elevation: | 354feet |
Tributaries Left: | Bozzo Gulch, Neils Gulch, Bull Run Creek, Dennis Martin Creek |
Sausal Creek is a 3adj=midNaNadj=mid[2] northwesterly-flowing stream originating in Portola Valley along the northeastern edge of the Windy Hill Open Space Preserve in the eastern foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains, in San Mateo County, California, United States. After being joined by Alambique Creek it flows through Middle Searsville Marsh/Pond before ending at its confluence with Corte Madera Creek in a natural marsh above Searsville Reservoir on Stanford University lands. Below Searsville Reservoir and Dam, Corte Madera Creek joins with Bear Creek to form San Francisquito Creek and flows to San Francisco Bay.
Historically, Sausal Creek also had the names Arroyo Sausal, Arroyo del Sanjon and Sanjon Creek.[3] On the 1899 Palo Alto Topo Map its mainstem was called Corte de Madera Creek and its Neils Gulch tributary was called Sausal Creek.[1] Sausal Creek flows through the Rancho Cañada del Corte de Madera meaning "a place where wood is cut", reflecting the importance of the timber industry in the early days of Portola Valley. "Sausal" is derived from the Spanish word "Sauce" or "Sauz" and mean "willow grove", a name that appears as early as 1853.[4]
Bozzo Gulch is named for Emmanuel Bozzo who had a ranch at the head of the canyon in the 1860s.
Neils Gulch seems to have been modified from Neel Gulch, after David H. Neel, an 1850s settler.[3] It also was called Cañada de Sansevan and Hallidie Gulch.[5]
Bull Run Creek was named by a Southern sympathizer following the Union defeat at the Battle of Bull Run in the early 1860s. It has also been known as Sausal Creek, Willow Creek, Kelley Gulch, Uval Creek, Cañada de Sansevan for William Nichols Sansevain and Smith Gulch, for William R. Smith's steam-powered sawmill.[5]
Sausal Creek heads just west of Willowbrook Drive in Portola Valley and is circled by the Spring Ridge Trail and Betsy Crowder Trail where it is dammed to form Sausal Pond. After receiving Bozzo Gulch, Niels Gulch and Bull Run Creek from the left. It runs northwest in the San Andreas Fault zone and after crossing Family Farm Road off Portola Road it is one of a nexus of half a dozen creeks that coalesce in a large natural freshwater marsh to form Corte Madera Creek. Dennis Martin Creek flows into Sausal Creek just upstream of the reservoir area at the Family Farm Road bridge. From there Sausal Creek enters Searsville Reservoir. Old maps suggest that Dennis Martin Creek and Alambique Creek were tributary to Sausal Creek.[6]
For decades a 630 feet long section of Sausal Creek was buried in an underground culvert. In a compromise between creek preservationists and those who wanted a larger softball field, half the creek was daylighted along with construction of the new Portola Valley Town Center.[7]