Crystal Cove benefits from cleanup
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH--Picking up tiny pieces of plastic and foam from an
otherwise beautiful beach can really get you thinking: Who could be
so inconsiderate as to litter at a place like Crystal Cove? How could
anyone possibly throw bottle caps and cigarette butts in the street,
even miles from the ocean where it will eventually turn up?
These were some of the more negative thoughts amid the otherwise
upbeat energy of Saturday’s annual Coastal Cleanup Day.
“I didn’t think there would be as much trash out here as there
was,” said Janele Shockley, a Sage Hill School student who had
volunteered alongside her mom, Heide Alexander.
“It makes you a little mad,” Alexander said. “People wouldn’t have
to be here today if others took the time to just throw away their
trash.”
The mother-daughter team was among about 200 volunteers at Crystal
Cove State Park, which in turn made up a fraction of the thousands of
volunteers statewide. Litterbugs aside, the pair said it was a fun
and satisfying day they will probably take part in next year.
The annual event takes place along the state’s coastline every
year, coordinated by the California Coastal Commission with the help
of local sponsor organizations. In Newport Beach, for example,
Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends coordinated about 1,000
volunteers for a very successful cleanup day in the Back Bay.
The local Surfrider Foundation chapter sponsored the cleanup in
Corona del Mar State Beach. And along other portions of Newport, the
city was the lead agency coordinating volunteer and sponsor efforts.
“In the 13 years I’ve been involved, it definitely seems like it’s
getting better,” said Rita McCoy, a volunteer coordinator year-round
for Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends. “Before you would actually
see things like refrigerators and batteries, but people are getting
the idea about littering. It’s getting better.”
King Thomas of Newport Beach and his 14-year-old son, Brian, said
their half-full garbage sacks were filled mainly with little pieces
of trash: plastic bottle caps, bits of plastic and Styrofoam and a
few oddities mixed in -- some stuff you just wouldn’t expect to find
in the brush at Crystal Cove.
“I’d say the strangest thing was a huge pair of discarded
underwear,” King said. “Yes, I had my gloves on for that.”
“Luckily, it was mostly the little stuff,” added Brian, a Boy
Scout who said he plans to volunteer again next year.
Winter Bonnin, coordinator of the Crystal Cove volunteers,
emphasized that it’s this little stuff that will continue to be a
problem, long after the elusive day when people finally stop
littering.
“The pieces of Styrofoam are a big problem, they last forever and
the wildlife eat them,” Bonnin said. “People come out here and think
it’s clean, but you can literally just sit in one place amid some
brush and just pick up little pieces for an hour.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at june.casagrande@ latimes.com.
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