
On a cold December morning in 2001, my cousin, the late Tom Mulderrig, and I arrived to sit in a long line of cars waiting for the grand opening of the Quarry Lakes Regional Recreation Area in Fremont. After the gate opened, we paid our parking and fishing fees at the kiosk, quickly parked my truck and walked down to the lake.
It was exciting to fish a new lake, Horseshoe Lake, that had been planted with many thousands of pounds of trout. For years, I had heard stories of people who snuck into the quarry ponds to bag big smallmouth bass.
I quickly caught my limit of rainbows in the 1-1/2 to 2-1/2 pound range while throwing out Power Bait and nightcrawlers. Others around us were doing well also. It was a great way to begin a new chapter in outdoor recreation in the Fremont and Union City area.
Pete Alexander, the fisheries program director for the district at the time, was walking along checking out the catches and I showed him my limit of rainbows. It was the first limit from the lake he had seen that day – so I always joke with people that I caught the first officially certified limit of rainbows reported from Quarry Lakes.
Quarry Lakes has quite a history. The quarries that Quarry Lakes Regional Recreation Area is named for were established in the mid-19th century. Gravel taken from the banks of Alameda Creek was used in the construction of the transcontinental railroad's western section, according to the East Bay Regional Park District.
After quarrying ended, the Alameda County Water District began to use the lake for groundwater recharge by diverting water from Alameda Creek into the pits.
Quarry Lakes Regional Recreation Area was the culmination of many years of planning and partnership between the Water District and the East Bay Regional Park District. The two agencies acquired the property that now comprises the park between 1975 and 1992 through purchase, donation and inter-agency agreements. Of the park's 471 acres, some 350 acres are the