| 45th | Top California beaches |
| San Gregorio State Beach | |
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| Location | San Mateo County, California |
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| Nearest city | San Gregorio |
| Coordinates | 37°19′23″N 122°24′7″W / 37.32306°N 122.40194°WCoordinates: 37°19′23″N 122°24′7″W / 37.32306°N 122.40194°W |
| Governing body | California Department of Parks and Recreation |
San Gregorio State Beach is a beach near San Gregorio, California, USA, south of
Half Moon Bay. Part of the California
State Park System, the beach lies just west of the intersection
of State Route 1 and State Route 84. San Gregorio
Creek widens to form a small freshwater lagoon in the park
behind a sand berm, or barrier beach, which
typically blocks the mouth of the creek, forcing the creekwaters to
flow underfoot as they seep into the Pacific Ocean. During the rainy season
the creek often cuts through the sand berm and flows directly into
the ocean. Historically the creek was a coho salmon spawning site and the Department of Fish
and Game is considering restocking it with coho to improve the
salmon fisheries south of San
Francisco.[1]
Park facilities include restrooms and picnic tables. Dogs are not permitted on the beach, as it has been identified as potential nesting habitat for the endangered (official status "threatened") Western Snowy Plover, a subspecies of the Kentish Plover. North of the main beach is a nude beach (private property) that charges a fee to park in their parking lot north of the park's lot that provides closer access.
A stone marker with a plaque commemorates (now missing) the three days Spanish explorer Gaspar de Portolà's expedition camped at the beach to rest and treat their sick in 1769, during his first (failed) attempt to reach Monterey Bay. They would go on to discover San Francisco Bay instead. The site is registered as California Historical Landmark 26.
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