Activity

Crissy Field and the Palace of Fine Arts

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Trail stats

Distance
3.88 mi
Elevation gain
3 ft
Technical difficulty
Easy
Elevation loss
3 ft
Max elevation
22 ft
TrailRank 
8
Min elevation
0 ft
Trail type
Loop
Coordinates
218
Uploaded
January 27, 2023
Recorded
January 2023
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near Marina, California (United States)

Viewed 16 times, downloaded 2 times

Waypoints

PictographWaypoint Altitude 10 ft

Starting down the path at Crissy Field

Across the street from Crissy Field Center, a wide path invites visitors to venture into the park's dunes and marshes. At the entrance to a path that crosses Crissy Field marsh, a sign reminds visitors they're in a delicately restored area that needs to be treated with care. Birds frequent this area, which looks much like a lagoon but is technically a saltwater marsh. You'll usually find ducks, gulls, and other waterfowl congregating. A bridge spanning the marsh offers better views of birds and other animals.

PictographWaypoint Altitude 6 ft

Great egret, Crissy Field

Whether in the marsh or along the dunes, you're likely to come across some majestic and sizable waterfowl during a walk at Crissy Field. This great egret, one of the larger members of the heron family, was spotted alongside the marsh waters. The great egret's signature costume is a yellow bill and long black legs, as opposed to its cousin, the snowy egret, which sports the opposite color combination. Great egrets, found on all continents except Antarctica, average about 40 inches in height with wingspans of up to 57 inches. The snowy egret also populates Crissy Field marsh. You can distinguish it from its larger cousin, the great egret, by its black bill and yellow feet. The snowy egret is also considerably smaller, standing about 2 feet tall. Brown pelicans, with wingspans of up to 8 feet, are frequent visitors to Crissy Field, and can often be seen skimming the open waters of the Golden Gate. In the 1970s, research on the negative effects of DDT on brown pelican eggs helped get the pesticide banned. Occasionally, the pelicans will repeatedly slap their wings against the water, splashing around. It's not entirely clear what drives this behavior, but they may be scavenging for food near the surface of the water.

PictographWaypoint Altitude 5 ft

Looking down from the bridge

From the bridge, glance down at the muddy sand below and you'll see a field of holes that take several different shapes. Critters like ghost shrimp, clams, and polychaete worms make their homes by burrowing into these sands. The appearance of mud in the salt marsh changes with the tides.

PictographWaypoint Altitude 12 ft

Scrubby dune habitat

Turn right at the end of the bridge, walk a short way, and you'll find yourself sandwiched between two different habitats. On your right, a scrubby dune is covered with low-lying bushes and other plants that enjoy drier, sandy soils. Chamisso Bush Lupin is a common find on the dunes. In the spring, Chamisso Bush Lupin produces violet flowers. It is named after French naturalist Adelbert von Chamisso, who also named the California poppy during an exploratory voyage to North America in the 1820s. This dried specimen of Chamisso Bush Lupin shows the plant's seed pods, which rustle and make noise as the shrub shakes in the wind. In the spring, Chamisso Bush Lupin produces violet flowers. It is named after French naturalist Adelbert von Chamisso, who also named the California poppy during an exploratory voyage to North America in the 1820s. A closer look at the lupine's twisted seed pods. These Indian paintbrush plants, still in bloom in late fall, enjoy the sandy soils of Crissy Field's dunes. Indian paintbrushes are semi-parasites. It's also worth noting that they're pollinated by hovering birds and insects, as their leaves and flowers offer no real parking place for potential pollinators.

PictographWaypoint Altitude 11 ft

Dune Swale

On the left is a habitat called dune swale. This patch is now the only example of a habitat, characterized by tall grasses, short trees, and occasional cattails, that was once common in San Francisco. And we're fortunate it's here: not included in the original Crissy Field plan, the dune swale was added to address other needs that arose in the area's restoration. Reeds and sedges like these, found in the dune swale environment, were used by native people of the region. Native Americans are allowed to collect these plants for cultural purposes if they choose to. The dune swale is the only freshwater habitat along this walk and supports a variety of trees. From here you can see the dome of the Palace of Fine Arts, where the Exploratorium is located. Trees in the dune swale habitat grow larger leaves than do the shrubs growing across the path, out of reach of the supply of freshwater. Parasitic wasps and midges use the undersides of leaves on trees in the dune swale to lay their eggs. These egg packages, called galls, are often brightly colored and can take some interesting shapes.

PictographWaypoint Altitude 5 ft

View from second bridge

Closer to the beach, a rocky inlet provides hunting and hiding grounds for lots of critters. Here, another egret tiptoes its way around, searching for a morsel. A closer view of a snowy egret. You can identify it by its black beak and yellow legs, the opposite color scheme of its cousin, the great egret. Keep an eye on the surface of the marsh's water and you might see the silvery flash of a topsmelt leaping. These fish get their name by their habit of swimming near the water's surface. Topsmelt isn't actually true smelt, they're members of the silversides family. That relation is apt: it's their silvery scales that make them glint so brightly as they leap.

PictographWaypoint Altitude 11 ft

Two-sided dune

Rounding a dune near the beach, you can see evidence of the wind's effects on plant life. Low-lying shrubs and other plants cover the more sheltered side (on the left in this picture) like a rugged carpet, while the windy side boasts mostly sparse bunches of American dune grass interspersed with hearty wildflowers. The native beach strawberry spreads runners throughout the less windy side of the dunes, taking over large patches. These runners not only serve as the plant's main form of reproduction but also help retain the dune's sands. In the spring, they bloom with small white flowers that later produce scarlet berries similar to our more familiar strawberries. The marsh gum plant takes well to salty soils. The native Ohlone used the plant's signature sticky sap as a balm. The scent of the leaves, if you crush them between your fingers, is reminiscent of fruity candy.

PictographWaypoint Altitude 9 ft

Dune grass

On the windward side of the dune, dune grass helps to anchor shifting sands and retain the dune's shape. Dune grass grows from stems that spread underground, an ingenious adaptation that keeps the plant from being buried by windblown sand. The constantly shifting dune landscape at Crissy Field beach means a fence that surrounded a dune a month ago might no longer be on the dune's edge. Rangers frequently put new fences in front of old ones in an ongoing effort to protect the dunes from dogs and people. Crissy Field's dunes are populated by both indigenous and non-native plant species. Here, the plant on the left, with the tiny white flowers, is a visitor: Cakile maritima, commonly known as sea rocket. The purple flowers belong to the native Abronia umbellata, also known as pink sand verbena. This lovely yellow-flowered plant is frequently found along the windy side of the dunes. It's Abronia latifollia, or yellow sand verbena.

PictographWaypoint Altitude 6 ft

Crissy Field beach

Looking west along the beach, you can follow the flow of water as it winds its way inland to the salt marsh. On its way, it carves an ever-changing channel. The not-so-distant Golden Gate bridge adds to the scenery. A walk along the beach brings you to the inlet of the salt marsh. Depending on the tides, you may have to wade through some shallow water or walk inland a bit to navigate around the marsh. A killdeer pokes around a sand "island" in the inlet. A closer view of a kildeer. These successful shorebirds are often seen at Crissy Field and tend to adapt well to habitats modified by humans. Listen for their call: "kill-dee, kill-dee." A narrow inlet on the beach lets bay water flow in, creating the saltwater marsh. Waves constantly pile and shift sand along the sandbar, sometimes closing the inlet, which rangers must regularly dredge to reopen.

PictographWaypoint Altitude 6 ft

Four-legged friends

Crissy Field beach is a favorite for folks out walking their dogs. You'll often see many four-legged friends digging together in the sand or swimming for frisbees in the waves. Signs of a day at the beach. The sounds of Crissy Field are not to be missed.

PictographWaypoint Altitude 11 ft

Warming Hut Bookstore and Cafe

This is a welcome resting point on a foggy day. Stop in for food, drinks, or souvenirs.

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