Coyote Hills is 510 acres of open space in North Orange County, CA. It's owned by Chevron Oil, but the oil pumps were shut down a long time ago. The property has been sitting vacant for many years, fenced off, private, and with little impact by humans in the recent past. It looks like "old California" used to look back in the day. The organization "Friends of Coyote Hills" has been fighting the good fight to keep the property undeveloped, but alas, a final decision has been made to build homes over a large chunk of the property. Coyote Hills is the last significant open space in a ten-city, highly urbanized area of Orange County (and happens to be about a mile from where I live). It contains a rich coastal sagebrush habitat, supporting 60 pairs of California gnatcatchers and other rare species. I decided it was time to go take some photos before it's all bulldozed over and homes are built.
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Hole in the fence in a remote area. |
Coyote Hills (Chevron Oil property) is on the left of the fence. There are a number of these old service roads on the property. Some have degraded to gravel and dirt, others (like this one) are in pretty good shape.
The property has some amazing 360-degree views. As you walk it, you feel like you are on an elevated island that looks down on a sea of urban sprawl.
These markers are all over the place. I'm guessing they mark the spot of capped oil wells.
We used to call this "wild tobacco" or "tree tobacco" when I was a kid hiking around in the local mountains. I haven't seen it growing locally in a long time.
Toyon tree with red berries. This is native to California, and another tree I don't see very often unless I get away from developed areas.
A favorite part of the Coyote Hills property are the eroded sandstone cliffs. They have a nice reddish color. Here's a closer look.
Lots of California Pepper trees throughout the property.
Thanks for joining me on this walk of the Coyote Hills oil property. I like the rugged, untamed feel and very much wish it could be left as is. However, it's worth a huge amount of money... to Chevron in selling the property, to the developer/homebuilder, and as future tax revenue to the city. Seems like open space just doesn't stand a chance.
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