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The Silas Lake Park reopens today after being closed for six months. The
park was closed because mud and rock slides destroyed part of Cambridge Road,
the only access into the park. “We had to remove tons of boulders and rocks,”
said Hugh Foster of the Parks and Recreation Department. “Then we had to rebuild
a bridge and reconstruct almost a mile of highway. I’m really surprised we got
it done so soon.”
The park is three miles north of Colfax on Highway 28. Cambridge Road is a
two-lane highway that winds upward through Pearl Canyon before it descends to
Silas Lake, which has about 20 miles of shoreline. The largest lake in the
county, it is also famous for bass. In fact, the record largemouth bass catch in
California occurred here in 1975. A 14-year-old boy caught a 19-pound bass.
The lake has two ramps for boaters, a full-service restaurant, a snack bar,
a small tackle store, and a boat rental facility. As with all county parks, no
alcohol is sold or permitted. More than 100 picnic tables have protective roofs
and big barbecue pits. There are public restrooms with free shower facilities,
lots of trash cans, and hiking trails for nature lovers. The west side of the
park includes a softball field, a soccer field, and two volleyball courts.
Horseshoes and kite-flying are two other popular activities. In the summer, a
designated swimming area has a lifeguard on duty seven days a week.
The entry fee is $10 per vehicle and $10 per boat. Reservations are not
accepted. The parking lot holds about 500 vehicles; if it is full, no additional
vehicles are allowed to enter. Latecomers either leave or wait in line for
someone to leave the parking lot. Some weekends there are three dozen vehicles
waiting in line outside the gate. Because of many requests, park officials soon
might start permitting campers to stay overnight on weekends.
The park is open from dawn to 10 p.m. during the summer. “We probably
average 2,000 people here every day during the summer,” said Foster. “They come
here to fish, swim, water-ski, jet-ski, picnic, commune with Mother Nature, you
name it. People love this place.” |
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