About  Temecula Creek

Temecula Creek, formerly referred to as the Temecula River, runs 32.6 miles (52.5 km) via southern Riverside County, California, us , past the agricultural communities of the Temecula Valley alongside the State Route 79 corridor, such as Radec and Aguanga, and finishing 0.five miles (0.eighty km) southeast of the original city middle of Temecula. The creek is filled with boulders and is usually dry and sandy. It is a enormously undeveloped coastal-draining watershed. Until the 1920s, water flowed in Temecula Creek year-round.

History of Temecula Creek

A Luiseño Indian rancheria named Temeca or Temeko was named as early as 1785. In 1828 Temecula became the call of a rancho of Mission San Luis Rey. Alfred Kroeber referred to that the name can be derived from the Luiseño phrase temet meaning "sun". The village of Temecula originated on a bluff on the south financial institution of Temecula Creek opposite the vintage Wolf's Store in step with an 1853 survey. In 1948, the proprietors of the Vail Ranch constructed a 132-foot-high (forty m) dam on Temecula Creek, the Vail Lake Dam, approximate ly 10 miles (16 km) above the confluence with the Santa Margarita River. Today the lake is a public recreational use region.

Watershed in Temecula Creek

Temecula Creek originates at the north slope of Aguanga Mountain, flows northeast 1 mile (1.6 km) to Dodge Valley, in which it continues northwest via Dodge Valley, Oak Grove Valley, Dameron Valley, Aguanga Valley, Radec Valley, Butterfield Valley, into Vail Lake Reservoir, after which it flows southwest through Pauba Valley to Temecula Valley where it joins Murrieta Creek. Temecula Creek has a barely larger drainage region than Murrieta Creek. The Santa Margarita River starts offevolved at the confluence of the 2 creeks at the top of Temecula Canyon. With the encroachment of houses on both facets of Temecula Creek, quantities may be channelized.

Tributaries of Temecula Creek

  1. Pechanga Creek

  2. Vail Lake Dam, Vail Lake

  3. Kolb Creek

  4. Arroyo Seco Creek

  5. Wilson Creek

  6. Cahuilla Creek

  7. Hamilton Creek (Cahuilla Creek)

  8. Long Canyon Creek

  9. Cottonwood Creek

  10. Tule Creek

  11. Chihuahua Creek

  12. Rattlesnake Creek

  13. Kohler Canyon

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Ecology of Temecula Creek

Biologically diverse, supporting both coastal and desolate tract fauna and flora, it is bounded through the Agua Tibia Wilderness area and the Cleveland National Forest. The creek supports coastal sage scrub, such as Jojoba, alluvial fan scrub, mesquite bosque mix, coast stay oak woodland, and mature Fremont cottonwood-willow woodland. In addition to riparian breeders, birds consist of least Bell's vireo, Nuttall's quail, ladder-backed woodpecker, and California and Gambel's quail. Arroyo southwestern toad also are found in Temecula Creek. North American beaver (Castor canadensis) may additionally gradually improve the water table and return quantities of the move to perennial waft at sitei which include its confluence with Murrieta Creek. However, farm animals grazing alongside Temecula Creek have injured its understory.

DIRECTION TO MVMNTCHIROPRACTIC FROM TEMECULA Creek, CALIFORNIA (92592)