Santa Teresa County Park, in southern San Jose, is a great place for an April hike. I took my College of San Mateo Peninsula Parks & Trails class there on Saturday, April 23. We met at the Pueblo Group Picnic Area and then walked a 4.5-mile loop that included Hidden Springs Trail, Ridge Trail, Coyote Peak Trail, the Coyote Peak Loop, the Rocky Ridge Trail, and the Mine Trail. We ate lunch and enjoyed beautiful views from atop Coyote Peak. The trail up to Coyote Peak is quite steep in places.
The Rocky Ridge Trail follows a serpentine outcropping with beautiful wildflowers that are adapted to growing in the inhospitable serpenitine soil. Associated with earthquake faults, serpentine is high in magnesium and low in nitrogen and phosphates, which inhibits the growth of most plants, including the non-native grasses that dominate most of the open fields in the Bay Area. By stunting the growth of these non-natives, serpentine allows native wildflowers such as goldfield, poppies, creamcups, and linanthus to thrive.
Santa Teresa County Park has more than 14 miles of trails for hikers, equestrians, and bicyclists. Leashed dogs are allowed on the trails. It has group picnicking, a field archery range, and an eighteen-hole golf course.
TO GET THERE... from Highway 85 or 101 take Bernal Road exit and head west.