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Bike touring routes & trails
United States
California
Yolo County
Davis

Stevenson Bridge – Putah Creek loop from Davis

Easy

4.6

(1771)

10,480

riders

Stevenson Bridge – Putah Creek loop from Davis

01:58

33.8km

30m

Cycling

Easy bike ride. Great for any fitness level. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels. The starting point of the route is accessible with public transport.

Last updated: April 20, 2026

Tips

Cycling is not permitted along parts of this route

After 809 m for 61 m

After 32.3 km for 123 m

Waypoints

A

Start point

Train Station

Get Directions

1

41 m

Davis Train Station

Highlight • Monument

This bustling train station is, technically, a replica; the original station, built in 1868, was destroyed in a fire. The new station, built in 1913, is still considered a historic landmark in its own right.

Tip by

2

839 m

US Bicycling Hall of Fame - Davis

Highlight • Monument

Excellent Museum of bicycles, inventors, and athletes

Tip by

3

1.12 km

University of California Davis

Highlight • Settlement

Large, beautiful campus, strong agricultural school roots, great free museums

Tip by

4

12.2 km

Stevenson Bridge

Highlight • Bridge

An bridge covered in graffiti.

Tip by

5

26.9 km

Old Davis Road | 50:50 route California

Highlight (Segment) • Cycleway

Well-paved quiet rural road

Tip by

6

29.4 km

Putah Creek

Highlight • River

Winding through the flat agricultural land, the roads and trails along the creek and its nearby canal can be bike routes

Tip by

7

32.3 km

Lake Spafford

Highlight • Lake

Midsize lake along a former stream in Davis Arboretum.
The waterway, built in 1968-69, occupies what used to be the north fork of Putah Creek, which brought floodwater to the town then known as Davisville. A dredging effort in the late 19th century diverted most of the flow to a channel known as the south fork of Putah Creek. In 1948, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers built levees at the north fork's mouth (the west end); the levees completely eliminate flow in the north fork. Whereas the original north fork flowed east, the waterway flows west. This is the result of dredging and grading over the years. When the waterway fills up with storm runoff, excess water goes through a weir and into a holding pond and from there is pumped into a pipe that carries the water to the south fork of Putah Creek. The waterway is about 1½ miles long, about 2 to 5 feet deep, along the south edge of UC Davis' central campus. A wide portion of the waterway just east of Mrak Hall is called Lake Spafford, named after F. Edwin Spafford, an alumnus who went on to be come a longtime UC Davis administrator, holding such positions as assistant to the provost; executive assistant and special assistant to the chancellor; and vice chancellor for physical construction and maintenance. The waterway runs from near the south end of D Street in downtown Davis to the UC Davis Equestrian Center.
The university classifies the remnant north fork channel as a recreation and aesthetic amenity, and a biological resource. The waterway runs through the arboretum, established in 1936 and considered today to be the university's landscape centerpiece. Pedestrian and bicycle paths line the waterway's banks. The waterway also serves as a storm water detention pond.
Poor water quality conditions have persisted since the arboretum waterway was first created more than 50 years ago. In large measure, the problems of today stem from the original design. The arboretum waterway is a stagnant pond designed to look like a flowing creek.
ucdavis.edu/news/arboretum-waterway

Tip by

8

33.5 km

Telephone pole cedar logs donated by Pacific Gas & Electric Co. were used by members of the Davis Rotary Club to build this cabin for use by local Boy Scout troops in 1927. This cabin is an example of a continued fondness for the rustic forms and images of pioneer America. It was the Rotary Club's first local community project. Stones for the cabin were gathered by the Boy Scouts and transported from a nearby creek by trucks. The other supplies were donated by the Davis Rotary Club.
Originally built on UC Davis-leased land, the university had been renting the parcel to the Boy Scouts since the construction of the cabin in 1927, but the city took over the lease in order to build a public parking lot next to the cabin. Since that time, the Boy Scouts paid the city $1/year for a land tenancy sublease, but co-owned the cabin with the Davis Rotary Club.
In 1999 the city's Human Relations Commission cited the Boy Scouts' stance on not admitting gay leaders and atheists in making its recommendation to the City Council to cancel the lease. The scouts vacated the cabin in 2002.
The nearby John Natsoulas Art Gallery, now called the John Natsoulas Center for the Arts, is the largest of the Davis art galleries. They operate the Log Cabin Gallery, by appointment, in the former Boy Scout Cabin. localwiki.org/davis/Boy_Scout_Cabin

Tip by

B

33.8 km

End point

Train Station

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

17.6 km

15.1 km

503 m

434 m

103 m

Surfaces

17.7 km

15.3 km

571 m

291 m

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Elevation

Elevation

Nothing selected – click and drag below to see the stats for a specific part of the route.

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Weather

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Wednesday 8 July

33°C

11°C

0 %

Additional weather tips

Max wind speed: 19.0 km/h

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