This boardwalk looks like something out of Myst
| Park Location |
| 202 Lindo Place, next to Northstar Park |
| Size |
| many thousands of gallons |
| Features |
| wildlife viewing area |
| interpretive signs |
| no restrooms, but see next door |
| Events |
| (please add...) |
The North Area Pond is next to Northstar Park, near the corner of Anderson Rd. & F St. It is located within what is sometimes called the Northstar Greenbelt.
These are located in one of the storm water retention basins that the City of Davis has constructed. To get there, take F street north from Covell Boulevard for 0.8 mile. At the intersection of F street and Anderson Road, turn west and park in the parking lot next to the pond. There are paths, and a boardwalk has been constructed into the lake to a viewing platform.
The North Area Pond is first and foremost a storm water retention area, but it also functions as a lovely site to watch native birds. An incomplete list of the birds that you might see here includes (in taxonomic order): Canada goose , wood duck, mallard, cinnamon teal, northern shoveler, bufflehead, hooded merganser, pied-billed grebe, double-crested cormorant, great blue heron, great egret, green heron, black-crowned night-heron, turkey vulture, northern harrier, Cooper's hawk, Swainson's hawk, red-tailed hawk, American kestrel, sora, common moorhen, American coot, killdeer, American avocet, spotted sandpiper, greater yellowlegs, Wilson's snipe, gull sp., mourning dove, barn owl, Anna's hummingbird, Nuttall's woodpecker, northern flicker, western scrub-jay, yellow-billed magpie, American crow, violet-green swallow, cliff swallow, American robin, yellow-rumped warbler, song sparrow, white-crowned sparrow, golden-crowned sparrow, red-winged blackbird, Brewer's blackbird, and house finch. Non-native birds include starlings, rock doves (pigeons), and European sparrows.
Unfortunately, the park area near the ponds are planted with Chinese tallowtrees, which are invasive species. Each winter, seeds from the trees at Northstar Park are washed into the ponds and germinate, and are forming dense thickets that are preventing the birds from being able to move easily in the ponds. A few times citizen volunteers removed (with city permission and participation) all the tallowtrees from the ponds, but these volunteers were unable to remove the largest of the plants. At this point, without bringing in major landmoving equipment, the only way to remove these plants would be by a careful and selective application of herbicide. City officials have promised to do so, but as yet have not fulfilled their pledge. Tallowtrees at the site are now up to 20' tall.
Fishing is not allowed.
Pictures from North Area Pond
A lone great egret
North Area Pond
Click the image to read this sign!


