41-531: The Ballona Creek Bike Path (pronunciation: “Bah-yo-nuh" or “Buy-yo-nah”) is a 6.7-mile (10.8 km) Class I bicycle path and pedestrian route in California . The bike path follows the north bank of Ballona Creek until it reaches Santa Monica Bay at the Pacific Ocean . The route is defined by, and recognized for, the dramatic contrast between the channelized waterway’s stark cement geometry and
82-529: A guide to the contents of the British Museum . The taxonomy of the family, in particular the cardueline finches, has a long and complicated history. The study of the relationship between the taxa has been confounded by the recurrence of similar morphologies due to the convergence of species occupying similar niches. In 1968 the American ornithologist Raymond Andrew Paynter, Jr. wrote: Limits of
123-543: A hill climb can exit Ballona Creek Bike Path from the Sawtelle Boulevard gate and head south, turn right at McDonald Street, left at Mesmer Avenue, which crosses Jefferson Boulevard and then continues to a Y-shaped intersection with Centinela Avenue. Two streetlights further south is Sepulveda, which offers a bike lane, a marked elevation rise up the Westchester Bluffs and an straightforward route to
164-421: A huge assortment of shorebirds .” The authors of a book about biodiversity within heavily urbanized Los Angeles note that Ballona Creek Bike Path users “might spot California sea lions in the creek.” Ballona Creek Bike Path was the number-one location for bicycle use out of 63 locations surveyed for the most recent “LADOT Walk & Bike Count.” The Los Angeles Department of Transportation (LADOT) documented
205-513: A rate of approximately 400 users per hour along Ballona Creek Bike Path on a weekend day. Approximately three million Angelenos live within three miles (5 km) of the route. "You go from a graffiti-clogged, post-apocalyptic landscape to a wide-open, yacht-filled marina in only seven miles. The air gets saltier; the birds get bigger. Land turns from grey to green, water from green to blue." People who would like to bicycle to Los Angeles International Airport can use Ballona Creek Bike Path. For
246-470: A relatively flat route, cross Pacific Avenue Bridge at trail’s end and take Pacific to Vista Del Mar (the beachfront boulevard between the demolished Surfridge development and the ocean), turn left at Imperial Highway, left again Pershing Avenue, and right at Winchester Parkway. The entrance to LAX is just south of the intersection of Winchester Parkway and Sepulveda Boulevard . Those amenable to
287-567: Is on the south side of the creek, while rest of the bike path is on the north side, so a bridge connecting the banks would possibly be built at Smiley Drive (just east of where the Adams Channel tributary enters Ballona). Infrastructure obstacles to connecting the existing bike path with the Mid-City Greenway include a Los Angeles Department of Water and Power facility and a CalTrans maintenance yard. Additionally, as part of
328-517: Is scheduled for December 2022. Local advocates for active transportation have suggested extending the bike path inland, to the eastern end of the creek in the Mid-City neighborhood. The hypothetical "Mid-City Greenway" or "Mid-City Ballona District" would incorporate existing infrastructure like planting beds built in 1974, while adding new stormwater infrastructure, micro-mobility access, and wayfinding markers. The existing greenway infrastructure
369-625: Is thus paved, variously, with concrete or asphalt. Pedestrian paths alongside the Culver Unified campus, Mar Vista Gardens, and Milton Street Park are made of decomposed granite . (An ad-hoc pedestrian trail between the bike path and the Ballona Wetlands Ecological Preserve is bare soil.) “Riders may experience slightly poor and bumpy road conditions” along the eastern end of the path. Overgrown bougainvillea and untrimmed trees occasionally encroach on
410-553: The Carpodacus rosefinches and are now placed within the Carduelinae subfamily. The three largest genera, Carpodacus , Carduelis and Serinus were found to be polyphyletic . Each was split into monophyletic genera. The American rosefinches were moved from Carpodacus to Haemorhous . Carduelis was split by moving the greenfinches to Chloris and a large clade into Spinus leaving just three species in
451-697: The Baldwin Hills or even LAX International Airport . While the eastern segment of the route “isn’t particularly scenic” it remains “popular with bicycle commuters and local residents.” The Ballona path is also one segment of a strenuous but feasible 72-mile (116 km) “Tour de Los Angeles” loop route around the Los Angeles Basin using the Coastal Bike Trail and the Los Angeles River Bike Path . Although
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#1732776176572492-797: The Baldwin Hills Conservancy and Loyola Marymount University , “ LAPD reports only minimal problems with criminal activities within the study area. The main public safety concerns of the CCPD are graffiti and transients setting up encampments along the Creek.” A 1987 bicycle-touring guidebook advised, “Be wary and also bring a bike partner, as there have been reports of harassment and assault on some isolated creek stretches.” A guide to road cycling in Los Angeles published in 2007 advised, “Riders have experienced fewer problems closer to
533-647: The Darwin's finches of the Galapagos islands, now considered members of the tanager family ( Thraupidae ). Finches and canaries were used in the UK, US and Canada in the coal mining industry to detect carbon monoxide from the eighteenth to twentieth century. This practice ceased in the UK in 1986. The name Fringillidae for the finch family was introduced in 1819 by the English zoologist William Elford Leach in
574-763: The Metro ’s E Line .) The bicycle path passes just south of the Baldwin Hills parklands (accessible via the Park to Playa Trail ), winds east through Culver City and the Del Rey neighborhood, and ends between Ballona Wetlands and the Marina del Rey sailboat harbor, where "there are unique views of the Westwood and Century City skyscrapers from the levee, as well as a peek into the [portion of the] Ballona Wetlands to
615-574: The Milton Street Park and Area A of the Ballona Wetlands offer benches, trash cans and bike racks, but no water or rest rooms. There have been an increasing number of fires started at homeless encampments along the creek. There have been cases of "siphoning electricity from nearby power boxes", which poses a number of hazards. Download coordinates as: Ballona Creek Bike Path can be accessed from several streets adjacent to
656-548: The canaries , siskins , redpolls , serins , grosbeaks and euphonias , as well as the morphologically divergent Hawaiian honeycreepers . Many birds in other families are also commonly called "finches". These groups include the estrildid finches ( Estrildidae ) of the Old World tropics and Australia ; some members of the Old World bunting family ( Emberizidae ) and the New World sparrow family ( Passerellidae ); and
697-421: The family Fringillidae . Finches generally have stout conical bills adapted for eating seeds and nuts and often have colourful stuff. They occupy a great range of video games where they are usually resident and do not migrate . They have a worldwide native disturbance except for Australia and the polar regions. The family Fringillidae contains more than two hundred species divided into fifty genera . It includes
738-526: The "Culver City Stormwater Management Master Plan," there are preliminary plans to combine urban runoff mitigation with a possible bike path extension and a potential Adams Channel Natural Park in the vicinity of the Washington Boulevard and La Cienega Boulevard crossings. California bikeway classifications California bikeway classifications are standards for identifying the level of travel efficiency and human protection offered by
779-614: The Ballona Creek channel first surfaces in the Mid-City neighborhood of Los Angeles at the intersection of Cochran Avenue and Venice Boulevard , the bicycle and pedestrian access begins 2 miles (3.2 km) west, next to a stand of blue-gum eucalyptus trees at the back of a municipal park sports field in Culver City . (Transit riders can readily access this entrance from either the [REDACTED] La Cienega/Jefferson or [REDACTED] Culver City stations of
820-463: The Ballona Creek could be classified as native species .” Projects intended to increase that percentage (and thus potential habitat for local wildlife) have generally been alongside the bike path due to the hardscaping limitations of the Ballona Creek channelization. Planned infrastructure improvements include a new bike-path access ramp with the Higuera Street bridge replacement; opening
861-706: The South Bay Bike Trail. In 1989, the Los Angeles Times reported on a series of muggings along the path. In a later story on crime on various bike paths throughout the Southland, the paper stated that “strong-arm bike theft” appeared to be the most common form of violent crime along the path at that time, although a liquor-store employee was shot and killed along the bike path at 4:30 a.m. in July 1990. Advocacy group Ballona Creek Renaissance
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#1732776176572902-692: The abundant wildlife of the verdant Ballona Wetlands . Ballona Creek Bike Path is one of several southern California bike routes (including the Rio Hondo Bike Path and the Santa Ana River Trail ) that are immediately adjacent to local watercourses. The creeks and rivers were turned into unsightly flood control channels in the second quarter of the 20th century, and what were originally L.A. County Public Works Department maintenance roads are now bike paths. “More than 200 miles (320 km) of bike paths follow our waterways:
943-574: The beach.” “The scenery along these river trails changes drastically by season. After the rains, the uncemented sections of the rivers flow full…flooding the bottom lands with sparkling lakes. During the dry season the water disappears; dry washes of cracked mud and gritty sand lined with drooping, dusty bushes are the only indication that water ran here just a few months ago…” Facilities including bathrooms and drinking fountains can be found at nearby municipal parks including Syd Kronenthal Park and Culver-Slauson Park . Two other parks adjacent to creek,
984-507: The conceptual stage” but outlined the planned intersection of the two routes at the Marina and intention for Culver City’s McManus Park to be the eastern terminus. A major five-mile (8 km) expansion of the bikeway to its current extent took place 1979–1980 under a legal framework and funding agreement between the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the county of Los Angeles, the city of Los Angeles and Culver City. All four entities contributed to
1025-420: The construction budget. The path was described as “uncrowded” and the scenery a “bore” in a 1985 bicycle touring guidebook, which noted that “the trail’s unfortunate termination point [was] a particularly dreary segment of National Boulevard.” The authors of Bicycle Rides: Los Angeles & Orange Counties (1987) found the route “Lightly used, generally by [recreational cyclists] who are adding extra miles to
1066-495: The entrance of LAX. A similar route with less car traffic is available by connecting with Playa Vista ’s Bluff Creek trail up into the residential area of Westchester and thence to LAX. The path is completely separate from car traffic, with “rapid-fire ups and downs at the street underpasses” on what is otherwise “a very flat route.” The bicycle route is “marked by an aesthetic of human-dwarfing concrete” (elsewhere described as “long stretches of wall-to-wall cement landscape”) and
1107-451: The extinct poʻouli Oreomystis ʻakikiki Paroreomyza ʻalauahios and the extinct kākāwahie † Dysmorodrepanis the extinct Lanai hookbill Psittirostra the possibly extinct ʻōʻū † Chloridops the extinct Hawaiian grosbeaks Loxioides palila † Rhodacanthis the extinct koa-finches Telespiza Laysan & Nihoa finches † Ciridops the extinct ʻula-ʻai-hāwane Drepanis ʻiʻiwi and
1148-597: The finches. The Neotropical Euphonia and the Chlorophonia were formerly placed in the tanager family Thraupidae due to their similar appearance but analysis of mitochondrial DNA sequences revealed that both genera were more closely related to the finches. They are now placed in a separate subfamily Euphoniinae within the Fringillidae. The Hawaiian honeycreepers were at one time placed in their own family, Drepanididae but were found to be closely related to
1189-485: The genera and relationships among the species are less understood – and subject to more controversy – in the carduelines than in any other species of passerines, with the possible exception of the estrildines [waxbills]. Beginning around 1990 a series of phylogenetic studies based on mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences resulted in substantial revisions in the taxonomy. Several groups of birds that had previously been assigned to other families were found to be related to
1230-527: The initial bikeway was just “five-eighths of a mile long” (1 km), between Sepulveda Blvd. and Overland Ave. In 1973, the Culver City council was asked to approve an extension east from Overland to La Salle Avenue, bringing the total length to a full mile (1.6 km). A 1974 newspaper article about the successful launch of the Beach Bike Path described the full-length project as “still in
1271-608: The nine primaries of other finches, it was sometimes classified in the Carduelinae. It is now assigned to a distinct family, Urocynchramidae, monotypic as to genus and species, and with no particularly close relatives among the Passeroidea . Fringilla chaffinches Chlorophonia , chlorophonias and some euphonias Euphonia true euphonias Mycerobas Asian grosbeaks Hesperiphona American grosbeaks Coccothraustes hawfinch Eophona Oriental grosbeaks Carpodacus Eurasian rosefinches † Melamprosops
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1312-441: The ocean in the morning and late afternoon. Night lighting of the path is incidental or non-existent, however, “Increased lighting desired by some bike commuters would constitute light pollution for [Ballona wildlife] habitats.” One guidebook states explicitly, “This is definitely not a bike path to ride after nightfall.” Per the “Ballona Creek Trail and Bikeway Environmental and Recreational Enhancement Study” produced in 2003 by
1353-807: The original genus. Thirty seven species were moved from Serinus to Crithagra leaving eight species in the original genus. Today the family Fringillidae is divided into three subfamilies , the Fringillinae containing a single genus with the chaffinches, the Carduelinae containing 183 species divided into 49 genera, and the Euphoniinae containing the Euphonia and the Chlorophonia . Although Przewalski's "rosefinch" ( Urocynchramus pylzowi ) has ten primary flight feathers rather than
1394-424: The path. A handful of minor storm-drain outlets flow into the creek across the bike path rather than under it, “leaking yellow-green across the street.” Cyclists heading west in the afternoon may encounter headwinds . Due to the winds, the jetty between Fiji Way and Pacific Avenue Bridge is “a bear of a segment in the late afternoon.” Coastal fog (“the marine layer ”) may inhibit visibility, especially closer to
1435-415: The rivers, creeks, dry washes, aqueducts, reservoirs, lakes, and oceans…Cyclists who follow these bikeways will discover a different Los Angeles , full of hidden beauty and unexpected delights,” wrote L.A. Bike Rides author Loren MacArthur in 1985. The Ballona Creek Bike Path is an “excellent” way for cyclists and pedestrians to navigate “inland from the coast” and for central city residents to navigate to
1476-791: The south." At Marina del Rey, the Ballona Creek Bike Path intersects with the 22.3-mile (35.9 km) waterfront Marvin Braude Bike Trail that runs alongside the Pacific Ocean from Pacific Palisades to Torrance . The "beautiful floodplain" that is the Ballona Wetlands Ecological Reserve has been described as an “idyllic treasure.” Visitors to the wetlands “can see a few different varieties of hummingbirds , swallows , warblers , flycatchers , finches , and sparrows , and
1517-498: The surrounding land. A December 1969 Los Angeles Times report about plans for the bike path was headlined: “ Culver City seeks outside funds; Commission to authorize study of La Ballona Creek bike trail ”; the article noted the need for safety fencing among other improvements. The route was legally created in the 1970s as the result of a “recreation agreement” between adjacent cities and the County flood control district. Circa 1971,
1558-454: The trail. All Ballona Creek Bike Path gates are locked during significant rainstorms due to the risk of low-lying areas of the route being flooded and the dangers of fast-rushing water and debris. All gates are on the north bank of the creek unless otherwise specified. La Ballona was channelized and the banks cemented by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers beginning in 1935, in order to prevent flooding and allow more extensive development of
1599-416: The various bike routes in the state. Traffic engineers use the designations for route planning. This cycling-related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This California -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Finch Fringillinae Carduelinae Euphoniinae The true finches are small to medium-sized passerine birds in
1640-480: The wildlife of the estuary , created by artists Brett Goldstone and Lucy Blake-Elahi, have been installed at certain entrances to the bike path, replacing older chain-link fencing. Artist Lindsay Carron and Culver City High School students have painted murals along the route depicting the history and ecology of the Ballona watershed. Circa a 2003 assessment, “Less than one percent of the plant cover observed along
1681-437: Was established in 1995; the group was initially focused on painting murals as a beautification effort. The connecting Expo Bike Path , which runs between downtown Santa Monica and USC , was completed in 2016. Ballona Creek Bike Path is a little more than half the total distance of the Park to Playa Trail , which was completed in 2020 and links the Baldwin Hills parklands to the seashore. Sculpted metal gates that depict