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Arana Gulch

Protected areas of Santa Cruz County, CaliforniaValleys of CaliforniaValleys of Santa Cruz County, California
View from Arana Gulch Bridge
View from Arana Gulch Bridge

Arana Gulch is a creek and landform that forms part of the southeastern boundary of the city of Santa Cruz, California. The creek begins in the Santa Cruz Mountains and flows southwest into Monterey Bay via what was once called Woods Lagoon, now the Santa Cruz Small Craft Harbor.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Arana Gulch (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Arana Gulch
Hidden Valley Road,

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Wikipedia: Arana GulchContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.029116 ° E -121.973572 °
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Address

Hidden Valley Road 1303
95073
California, United States
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View from Arana Gulch Bridge
View from Arana Gulch Bridge
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Nearby Places

DeLaveaga Disc Golf Course
DeLaveaga Disc Golf Course

DeLaveaga Disc Golf Course, commonly known as "DeLa", is a world-renowned 29-hole disc golf course in the hills of DeLaveaga Park above Santa Cruz, California. It was established in 1984. It boasts one of the original long disc golf courses, with some holes measuring more than 500 feet in length. The 27th hole, known as "Top of the World," is one of the most famous holes in disc golf; the tee box is situated nearly 600 feet from the pin—and 100 feet above it. DeLaveaga placed #10 on Release Point's 2019 list of World's Best Disc Golf Courses.Designed by Professional Disc Golf Association hall of famer and World Disc Games founder Tom Schot. DeLa was installed in 1984 and was one of the first organized courses for disc golf. Holes #8A and #26A were added later. The course is about 9,300 feet in length, with a mostly wooded holes and a few open one's. A wide variety of shots are required for this course, from uphill, downhill, flat,tight, and open tee offs. it includes some wide open meadows, cliffs and ravines, large redwoods, eucalyptus and oaks. The course is free to play though there is a US$2.00 parking fee. In 2011, the PDGA World Championships were held in California, and a round was played at the Delaveaga course. The 2011 Worlds were won by local Nate Doss. UDisc rated the course #10 in the world and #1 in California in 2020. Each May, the disc golf community descends upon Santa Cruz, for the Masters Cup, one of the PDGA's national tour events and one of the oldest tournament events in disc golf. Since 1991 it has also hosted the B-tier FaultLine Classic tournament