Scotts Valley, which slopes to the north with elevations from is an important agricultural center, and Bachelor Valley, Tule Lake and Benmore Valley are also used for agriculture.
California State Route 20 runs across the northern part of the watershed from east to west. There are no towns in the watershed. European presence in the watershed began when the brothers
Salvador Vallejo and Juan Antonio Vallego established a cattle ranch covering a land grant that covered Upper Lake, Bachelor Valley, Scotts Valley, and Big Valley. American farmers started to settle the area after California became a state in 1850. They planted crops such as grains, potatoes, grapes and orchard crops, but because of transportation difficulties relied on cattle and sheep for income. Grazing quickly led to the native perennial bunchgrasses being replaced by an annual grassland with grasses of European origin. Fire was also used to convert brush to grasslands. Visitors from the
San Francisco Bay Area and the
Central Valley came for health or to vacation at the mineral springs resorts in Lake County. The
Witter Springs resort opened on the west side of Bachelor Valley soon after the springs were discovered in 1870. The Pearson Springs Hotel had opened by 1879, later to become the
Saratoga Springs resort. The Blue Lakes Hotel opened in 1870 on the west end of upper Blue Lake where the Pine Acres Resort is today. Commercial agriculture expanded in the early 1900s as better roads and railways made transport of produce more practical. In 1944 important crops in Scotts Valley included pears, walnuts, hop's and green beans, which were mainly grown in land reclaimed from the former Tule Lake. There were about 800 dairy cows around the Upper Lake and Scotts Valley in 1944. Since then there has been a steady decline in fruit and nut production. Sedimentation in Clear Lake increased greatly after 1927 due to use of heavy earth-moving equipment to build roads, reclaim wetlands, conduct open-pit mining and mine gravel from the streams. The headwaters of Scotts Creek on South Cow Mountain were severely burned in 2018 by the
Mendocino Complex Fire, which may have increased erosion and the flow of sediments and dissolved nutrients into the Clear Lake. ==See also==