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| Cosumnes River, Central Valley, California | 
The 
Cosumnes River Walk in the 
Cosumnes River Preserve includes trails along the 
Middle Slough and loop trails with access to the 
Cosumnes River. The trails will lead you through 
grasslands and 
riparian forest. You are invited to combine various trail loops into your overall path. If you are headed to what is called “
The Point”—a scenic place from where you can see the Cosumnes River and the entrance to 
Tihuechemne Slough— your round trip will be at least three miles long. A 
Nature Trail Guide with a 
trail map is available at the visitor center 
From the preserve's visitor center your walk will start like the 
Wetlands Walk over the bridge with the beautiful, often overlooked plaque illustrations of animals and plants. Instead of turning left for the Wetlands Walk, turn right to stroll south alongside Middle Slough. The water in the slough may look stagnant, but, since it is connected with 
San Francisco Bay via the 
Delta waterways, it has a slow in-and-out flow: Middle Slough is a 
tidal slough influenced by the 
bay tides.
The 
Guide features many points of interest including the 
majestic valley oak, growing in the oak savannah to the left of the tracks of the Union Pacific Railroad. You'll find a variety of other plants such as 
live oak (less common to the preserve), 
willow, 
native and 
non-native blackberry, 
wild California rose, 
Santa Barbara sedge, 
cattails—and, yes, 
poison oak.
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| Long, flat, green blades of Santa Barbara sedge | 
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| Leaves of three, let it be! | 
Alongside the Cosumnes River you will find a few points with small openings in the riparian forest enabling riverside bird-watching. Seasonally, great blue herons and egrets roost and feed here. The visitor center handout with the title 
Cosumnes River Preserve describes the origin of the eponymous river as follows:
Just over 80 miles long, the Cosumnes River begins in the great Sierra Nevada mountains, deep in El Dorado National Forest. Its head waters rest at an elevation of 7,600 feet and the river is fueled mostly by rain runoff and some snowmelt. The three forks of the Cosumnes flow through lush conifer forests and tumble over the huge rocks of granite canyons. As the river drops into the drier foothill environment, it coalesces into one channel. Oaks and gray pines dominate the landscape.
In the 
Central Valley the river slows its flow and feeds the aquifer below. Less than a mile away from the preserve's slough and river trails, the water of the Cosumnes River joins that of the Mokelumne River on its way into San Francisco Bay.
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| Tihuechemne Slough/Cosumnes River junction | 
 
 
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