Thursday, July 24, 2025

Trabuco Creek Gold

 Trabuco Creek Gold


By Michael Webster: March 1, 2012 At 11:50 AM PDTmvwsr@aol.com

Weekend and day gold prospectors are heading for the Mountains in Orange County. Not far from downtown Santa Anna and the sunny beaches of Orange County, California, sits the Santa Ana Mountain Range, and Trabuco Creek, much of which is located in the Cleveland National Forest in south Orange county.

As the price of gold has gone up, survivalist's, preppers and just regular folks have been heading to the National Forests to mine for gold. They just go up for the day or if they have any luck may stay for the weekend or longer. In some of these areas you cannot stay the night or stake a claim , so check with the nearest BLM office. If you're lucky enough to find some gold, be careful who you show or tell of your gold fines by bragging about it. Or that someone may take your spot as soon as you leave. If anyone is finding lots of gold or making a lot of money in the area, I haven't seen it. Before you prospect ore mine in the National Forests, always check with the district office for finding out about the local rules and regulations. Should you find some gold and want to sell it, many places are advertizing  “We Buy Your Gold” these places have popped up all over lately. You can find them on TV, Radio, Newspapers and even in the malls.

Some believe Trabuco Creek over the years has yielded a significant amount of placer gold, including some good sized nuggets. However no amount has ever been officially registered with any governmental agency in modern times. But we believe whatever gold was taken from the region was mined by the indigenous early peoples using primitive means as they lived in the area for millennia. After them came the Spaniards and some theorists bet they found some gold as well. Numerous old arrastres  Photo of old Arrastre Gold Ore Grinder

crushing ore found in the Santa Ana's over the years suggest that the Spanish were mining gold and silver in the mountains long before the arrival of Anglo Americans in 1848.

I’ve been prospecting and mining all of my life from Alaska to South America. I douse a small shovel/pick and a gold pan, but I also have a sluice box, dredge, a dry washer and high-tech metal detectors as well. But I admit I do wet a pan now and then at Trabuco Creek. At Trabuco Creek we have found pretty good color and some nuggets. This interesting and productive ground is just 15 minutes from my home in Laguna Hills California.

The Santa Ana Mountains are a part of the Transverse Range geologic province of Southern California, in Orange County, just a short drive from one of the largest metropolitan areas in the United States. Because of rumors of placer gold and it's easy and convenient access in good weather, this location is fast becoming a very popular spot for local recreational prospectors - and much of the placer area is on non private land and open to the public and anyone is welcome to wet their gold pan in the water and look for some gold. If you want to prospect on private land, be sure to ask. You can prospect on public lands that are not designated as park or natural reserve areas.

Trabuco Canyon is north of the town of Rancho Santa Margarita. Plano Trabuco Road leads from the top of the canyon south to Rancho Santa Margarita. Trabuco is Spanish for blunderbuss, a type of shotgun. Some credit a Franciscan friar traveling with the Gaspar de Portolà Expedition in 1769 with the story that a blunderbuss was lost in the canyon, after which the area was named. John (Don Juan) Forster received a Mexican land grant in 1846 and established Rancho Trabuco. The grant was bordered by Rancho Cañada de los Alisos on the west, and by Rancho Mission Viejo on the east.


The turnoff from Trabuco Canyon Road to the unpaved Trabuco Creek Road.

Trabuco Canyon was the site of attempts to mine tin in the early 1900s.  The Santa Ana Tin Mining Company which had a number of claims in Trabuco Canyon was owned by Gail Borden of the Eagle Milk Company. He had spent a million dollars on the mine in 1903 but no tin was ever removed. Many believe that the local Indians for years mined the area for gold as did the Spanish who came later.  

Mining remains from this activity include: tunnels dug into the sides of the canyon the stone foundation of an ore-processing stamp mill;  several remains of old cement and rock dams in the upper reaches of the creek can still be seen and ancient tailing piles on and around the creek can still be located if you look good.

My wife Peggy and I first checked out Trabuco creek several years ago when we wanted to see the area where it was reported that the last grizzly bear in all of California was shot and killed. Honey thefts and hive damage by bears were common in the canyon, and were a significant factor in eliminating the grizzly bear in this area, according to local reports.

We actually prospected the creek in the past where we would find color in spots and nothing in other spots all up and down the creek which runs about seven months a year where you can pan and often sluice, when there is enough water. Caution most streams in the Santa Ana Mountains are seasonal or intermittent.  Over the years nuggets and flakes of placer gold have been obtained from both the stream gravels as well as older terrace bench gravels above the creek and the walls of the canyon.

The creek was running high this year, and there were several "wet" crossings on the road, and lots of people fishing and playing in it along the way.

Many people don’t believe that there is any gold in their hills. They say there are no records of any gold mining on the mountain. But I assure them that not only have we found gold but it is rumored that some good sized nuggets of more than an ounce in size have been produced from these deposits, but fine flakes are much more common. That is our experience. We have found some small nuggets but mostly fine gold. (See photo insert)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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