Take a walk ON THE CAREFUL SIDE
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Mike Swanson
Those rocks you think you’re walking on at Shaw’s or any of Laguna
Beach’s several coves probably aren’t rocks.
They’re likely barnacles, and identifying the types of barnacles
is crucial in deciding whether you ought to be walking on them. If
they’re buckshot or acorn barnacles, then you’re all right, but steer
clear of the gooseneck variety.
The “rocks” could also be aggregating anemones, periwinkle snails,
limpets, chitons or mussels, all living creatures that don’t
appreciate being walked over.
If you’re confused, then the nonprofit Tidewater Docent program,
which started sending volunteer educators to local beaches and coves
on Thursday, will be there to assist you.
With 45 trained docents prepared to share their knowledge of the
area’s vast intertidal zone, the hope is that cove visitors’
awareness of what they’re walking on will heighten respect for the
plants and animals.
Program organizers Fred and Jan Sattler, “Bluebelt”
environmentalists, also stress that removing something as apparently
slight as a mussel shell, or even a rock that really is a rock, is a
fineable offense at all of Laguna Beach’s coves.
From now on, don’t be surprised to receive a personal reminder
from someone wearing a standard-issue Tidewater Docent T-shirt. Fines
can be up to $500.
“There’s a lot to preserve out here,” Fred Sattler said, “and a
lot to see. We want people to come out and see what’s here, but they
ought to know what they should and shouldn’t do ... and what they can
and can’t do.”
New signs are also part of the plan to educate visitors and
clarify what should be left alone.
Every docent took two classes in April, totaling about six hours,
from marine life experts Cheri Schonfeld and Jon Lewengrub. Schonfeld
is a marine life refuge supervisor and community watch volunteer
coordinator serving South Orange County, while Lewengrub is the
marine life refuge project manager for the Ocean Institute in Dana
Point.
“Fred was expecting to have about 10 docents,” Jan Sattler said,
“but the interest level has been tremendous, and we expect it to
grow.”
Docents will be assigned shifts at Laguna beaches from 9 a.m. to
noon or noon to 3 p.m., depending on low tides to determine
schedules. Off-duty docents spending leisure time at the beach are
also encouraged to be on duty, even if they aren’t carrying the
informational brochures.
Trained docent Mia Davidson said the April classes provided a nice
backbone of knowledge that she continually expands upon through
“on-the-job training,” which consists simply of exploring the areas
above and under water on a regular basis.
Davidson, Jan Sattler, Nancy Bushnell and Melinda Stanton comprise
the self-proclaimed “Swim Chicks,” who can be frequently seen
snorkeling through cove channels from North to South Laguna in search
of everything interesting (as long as it hasn’t rained in 72 hours).
“You see something new every time you go out,” Jan Sattler said.
“You’ll see a lot of what you expect to see and get at least a few
unexpected, special sightings every time. It could be an octopus
tentacle sticking out of a rock that you mistake for a stick or some
colorful organism you’ve never seen before.”
A special docent tour on Tuesday revealed one questionable,
colorful organism that fit Jan Sattler’s description. She uncertainly
called the floating, hot-pink, apparently tentacled, thumbnail-sized
creature a nudibranch, a type of mollusk with several species found
on Southern California coasts.
The Sattlers said Shaw’s Cove is frequented by marine biologists.
Steven Murray at Cal State Fullerton regularly conducts studies with
his students to see how tidal life is progressing.
At Shaw’s Cove, they encountered a Cal State Dominguez Hills
professor who called the area “the richest bio-system south of Santa
Barbara,” Jan Sattler said.
The area has lost some of its richness with the disappearance of
abalone, moray eels and sheepshead (California’s answer to Hawaii’s
parrotfish). Jan Sattler cited the surplus of pelicans as one welcome
change from her childhood days in Laguna. She said the use of DDT
kept pelicans from the area in the 1950s and ‘60s.
She has mixed feelings about all the seagulls.
“The seagull’s become a more robust scavenger over the years,” Jan
Sattler said, “and people should absolutely not feed them, or leave
trash or food on the beach, because they’ll flock and poop, which
raises the contamination level in the water.”
In general, anything that isn’t in the area when you get to the
rocks, or the beach, shouldn’t be there when you leave. Moreover, you
shouldn’t be leaving with anything you find, the Sattlers said.
“We’re all just trying to do our little bit to show our
appreciation of this environment,” Davidson said. “The more people we
teach about what’s out here, the safer the area will be.”
For more information, or if you’re interested in becoming a tide
pool docent, call Fred Sattler at (949) 497-9367, or send e-mail to
* MIKE SWANSON is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline Pilot.
He covers education, public safety and City Hall. He can be reached
at 494-4321 or [email protected].
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