Our series visiting Trails of the Week was written in 2014 and 2015 by Tom Gehling. Be aware that details change over the years. Enjoy our trails!
Wikipedia lists the elevation of El Cerrito as 69 feet, which is the approximate elevation at City Hall. The Plaza is a little lower, the shopping districts on Stockton and Fairmont are a little higher, but most of the business in the city probably occurs at an elevation within 50 feet either way. Not so the trails of El Cerrito. For instance, the vista pictured here, on the Ridge Trail above the Recycling Center, is almost 500 feet higher, but even this doesn’t take in the full elevational range of El Cerrito. We’ve barely risen halfway to the high point in the city, a place no trail will take us since it is on private property. And under a house.
The eastern side of the crest of the hills faces Wildcat Canyon, and the Trekker trail list features two trails that head down into the canyon: the Rifle Range Road trail and the Terrace to Wildcat trail. But how to get from one to the other (without descending into the Canyon)? Surely there must be something more interesting than walking the Arlington from Terrace to Rifle Range? Well, you can’t actually avoid Arlington completely, but there are interesting ways to cut out a lot of it. And a major component of that way is the combined Leneve Place and Ivy Court paths.
Yet another oddity for this quiet, if dinosaur infested, street is the presence of the Musee des Bibelots Voies, a collection of oddments and found art on a railing along the eastern side of the road. Unfortunately this exhibit seems to have hit hard times. When visited just a week ago the railing was almost empty and a nearby sign implied the vacant lot is for sale. The picture at right is from happier times, when a variety of trinkets could be found along the roadside. Whether that day is past we will have to wait and see.
After 1500 feet Leneve Place comes to an end with beautiful vista of Wildcat Regional Park to the east. But a short extension, west and north, continues the road as Ivy Court. Ivy Court is only about 400 feet long, but at its north end is an actual path, between 1150 and 1151. Only about 100 feet long, it is a key connector for walking in the hills. The Ivy Court path is an entry to Camp Herms, a Boy Scout facility behind Arlington Park. The camp features several trails that start on the ridge and wind down either side of a scenic canyon. The northern branch eventual comes to Thor’s Bay Road and from there to Arlington and Rifle Range. We list Camp Herms as a trail in its own right, and it will be the subject of a future Trail of the Week post, but it is necessary to mention here that the land is property of the Boy Scouts, and the right to pass through can be revoked at any time. If you use the trails be courteous, and obey any directions from the owners.