Ventura River Parkway Trail Explained

Ventura River Parkway Trail
Photo Width:220
Map:USA California
Map Width:220
Location:Ventura County, California, United States
Nearest City:Ventura, California
Governing Body:

City of Ventura, County of Ventura

Ventura River Parkway Trail
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Use:cycling, pedestrians, equestrians (partial), on-leash pet walking
Grade:2%
Surface:asphalt concrete and unpaved

The Ventura River Parkway Trail is a southern California rail trail along the Ventura River in Ventura County. Roughly paralleling California State Route 33 for from Ventura to Ojai, it follows the route of the former Ventura and Ojai Valley Railroad that was abandoned between 1969 and 1995.

Route

The southern end of the trail, known as the Ventura River Trail, follows the east side of the Ojai Freeway about through the industrialized Ventura Oil Field before crossing under the freeway adjacent to Crooked Palm Road.[1] The trail then follows the west side of highway 33 another through the former Canet oil refinery and the Ventura water purification plant to Foster Park at the south edge of Casitas Springs.[2] The trail known as the Ojai Valley Trail diverges from the highway along the west side of Casitas Springs into riparian woodlands following the east bank of the Ventura River as the highway climbs to Oak View. From of two percent uphill grade, the trail emerges from the woodlands along the west side of Oak View to rejoin the highway from a high fill across Devils Gulch overlooking the river. The trail closely follows the west side of highway 33 north of Oak View about until crossing the highway at the intersection with California State Route 150 into downtown Ojai. The northern end of the trail runs more than a mile easterly from the intersection through Ojai a few blocks south of highway 150.[3]

History

The Ventura River Parkway Trail was built on an abandoned railroad spur (CA_VEN-1109H) that was constructed by the Ventura and Ojai Valley Railroad in 1898 and acquired by Southern Pacific in 1899.[4] The rail trail, that runs along the easterly bank of the river, was designated a National Recreation Trail in 2014.[5] The "Ventura River Trail" part of the trail (completed in 1999) extends from the coast to Foster Park, and the "Ojai Valley Trail" part (completed in 1987) extends from Foster Park into the City of Ojai. The 15.8adj=midNaNadj=mid, with the steady grade of the former Southern Pacific Railway right-of-way, is very popular with bicyclists, as well as walkers and horseback riders (on the Ojai Valley Trail segment).[6], the vision of a "Ventura River Parkway," a network of trails, vista points, and natural areas along the river, is being actively pursued by a coalition of stakeholders.[7] [8] [9] [10]

Facilities

Most of the trail has asphalt concrete pavement for bicyclists, hikers, joggers, and dog-walkers using leashes.[11] Some portions of the trail have a fence separating a parallel unpaved equestrian path. There are numerous public access points along the trail with parking lots in Foster Park on the south side of Casitas Springs and near the intersection of Main and Peking Streets in Ventura.[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ventura River Trail . TrailLink . Rails-to-Trails Conservancy . 16 May 2020 .
  2. Web site: Ventura River Parkway Trail . NRT Database . American Trails . 16 May 2020 .
  3. Web site: Ojai Valley Trail . TrailLink . Rails-to-Trails Conservancy . 16 May 2020 .
  4. News: In Search of the Missing Link. September 18, 1996. Hilary E. . MacGregor. Los Angeles Times.
  5. Kallas, Anne (June 7, 2014) "On the path to restoring the river: Trail in county gets designation from government" Ventura County Star (subscription may be required for this article.
  6. Web site: Woods II . Wes . June 27, 2023 . Find out when Ventura River Trail pathways will be completed . 2023-06-28 . Ventura County Star . en-US.
  7. Web site: The Ventura River Watershed Management Plan. Ventura River Watershed Council. 2015-06-15.
  8. Lubin, Theresa, Ventura County Parks (July 29, 2015)
  9. News: Plans for Ventura River Parkway, a route of trails from Ventura to Ojai, move along. . Arlene . Martinez . July 27, 2016 . 28 July 2016.
  10. News: VANISHING POINT Decline in insect population leading to catastrophe, report says; locals fight back. O'Neal. Chris. 2019-04-04. VC Reporter . Southland Publishing. en-US. 2019-04-04.
  11. News: Murtaugh . Isaiah . May 31, 2022 . $5 million improvement project coming to Ventura River Trail . 2022-06-01 . Ventura County Star . en-US.