Moss Canyon- October 2016 Basic Description

Moss canyon is a single, undeveloped valley with sloping sides about 30 feet high, and no side canyons. It forms a straight line beginning at the end of pavement of Moss Avenue, and ends about 1/4 mile to the NE, below Cazador Dr. This canyon supports numerous plants, birds & other creatures, many of them native species, others introduced or cultivated. All of the streets around Moss Canyon are residential. The 150 meter radius covers the entire valley from the end of Moss Dr, plus the streets above on both sides, and a portion of Cazador St at the northern end.

Moss Canyon can be described as having two parts:
1) Lower- which has a dry, open flat bottom, with a tire track road. The dominant vegetation is Prickly Russian Thistle (tumbleweed), and the sloping sides have numerous Southern California Walnut trees. I estimate their number to be about 500, regardless of size, age, or property. A more detailed count should be conducted.

2) Upper- which is narrow, the road becomes a footpath along the bottom and rises above erosion where water flows intermittently. The dominant vegetation here is non-native grasses, plus more walnut trees and other trees and shrubs. There is a small riparian area which supports laurel Sumac, Lemonade Berry and other plants. Any of these plants could have been planted here by people, or may occur here on their own.

Posted on 13 October, 2016 23:27 by crayonsss crayonsss

Observations

Photos / Sounds

What

Southern California Walnut (Juglans californica)

Observer

crayonsss

Date

October 2, 2016

Description

Many walnut trees along side walls of valley, some mature, others small, many growing out of cut stumps. I counted some, estimate about 500 or more trees of all sizes, but a count should be conducted.

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