Aware of the water around them
June Casagrande
Local environmentalists are hoping that people who take part in the
Great Earth Walk on May 1 will put up their feet and stay a while
after the walk is over.
This year, the Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends are kicking off
a new event to promote eco-consciousness in the community.
Estuary Awareness Day will include environmental exhibits, arts
and crafts for children, nature education stations, free boat tours
of the bay and entertainment by local high school bands.
“It’s a family-oriented event, and the intention is that as the
families come through and participate in these activities and look at
the booths and they’ll start to understand the bigger picture of how
what they do upstream affects the water quality,†said Roger Mallett,
executive director of the Naturalists and Friends.
An estuary, as Mallett hopes many will learn, is where fresh water
streams and runoff meet the salt water of an ocean or bay. In Newport
Beach, it’s also where litter from as far away as Riverside finds its
way into the ocean.
Newport’s Back Bay estuary also includes salt marshes that are
home to species such as the endangered light-footed clapper rail.
Estuary Awareness Day will take place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. May
1, right after the Earth walk ends.
“The idea is the Earth walk takes place in the morning, then
hopefully, people will mosey over to our Estuary Awareness Day,†said
Dennis Baker, a board member of the Newport Bay Naturalists and
Friends.
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