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Huddart Park Information

This forested hike offers a fabulous mix of elevation change, length, and beauty.

Watch for:

This property is home to bobcats, black-tailed deer, eagles, newts and banana slugs

Details for Huddart Park Hike

Distance: 4.6 miles round trip

Elevation change: 928′ elevation gain

Hiking time: 2-3 hours

Trail surface: Uneven, dirt trail

Best Season: Year round

Managing agency: San Mateo County Parks

Parking lot location: Click here for directions

Overview: Huddart Park, just a few miles from Highway 84, offers many great trails with varying amounts of elevation change and length. It is conveniently located within easy reach of the cities on the San Francisco Peninsula.

For a fun, moderate 4.6-mile hike take the path from the Huddart Park entrance. Hike from the Crystal Springs Trail past the Zwierlein picnic area. The connect with the Dean Trail.

The shaded hike wanders through redwoods, oaks, manzanita, California coffeeberry, Douglas-fir and many kinds of ferns. A downhill section flattens out to follow Union Creek as it winds through second-growth redwoods.

Directions to Huddart Park

From I-280, exit at Woodside Road (Highway 84) and go west for 1.5 miles. Turn right on Kings Mountain Road and drive 2.1 miles, turning right into Huddart County Park.

More About Huddart Park and the neighboring Phleger Estate

Huddart Park was named after James Huddart, a wealthy lumberman who was raised in an orphanage. Huddart’s difficult childhood inspired him to do something for the local youth, so before he died in 1935, he deeded 900 acres of his property to the County of San Francisco, with instructions that it be developed into a public park. A few years later the property was transferred to San Mateo County, who has owned and operated the land as a public park since 1944.

Once known as Mountain Meadow, the historic Phleger Estate is a former logging site where redwoods and wildlife habitat are now protected as part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. POST protected this 1,252-acre estate in 1994 with the help of Save-the-Redwoods League and private donors. It opened to the public in 1995 after POST secured $10.5 million from the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund and transferred the land to the Golden Gate National Recreation Area.

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