‘Tween beach and bay
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Lindsay Sandham
Before Disneyland, Legoland and Knott’s Berry Farm, there was the
Balboa Fun Zone.
Awash with history, the nearly 70-year-old amusement park has seen
some cosmetic changes, renovations, business ups and downs and plenty
of restaurant and shop turnover, but the feeling of good,
old-fashioned fun remains.
“The Fun Zone is the idea of coming down and hanging out and
eating corn dogs and pizzas,” said Bob Black, vice president of the
Balboa Pavilion. “It doesn’t really change that much. We like the
uniqueness, the old flavor of Balboa.”
Kim Wells of Corona del Mar, who brings her two children a couple
of times a year, said the area offers something for everyone in the
family.
“It’s appealing that there isn’t change,” she said. “You always
know what to expect.”
When the kids were really small, Wells recounted, she and her
husband would wander through with them in strollers. When her father
comes to visit, he likes to hang out on the harbor and watch the
fishing boats come in.
Longtime Balboa Peninsula resident Gay Wassall-Kelly started
vacationing here with her family in 1949, when she was 10.
“We rented a little cottage on the water,” she said. “The first
thing I found was the Fun Zone.”
By the time she was in high school, she and her girlfriends were
coming down from Los Angeles during the summer and Easter break,
which was known to Balboa visitors as “Bal Week.” The Fun Zone took
on a new meaning for her -- it went from a place to get 25-cent photo
strips and ride amusement park rides to a place to ogle boys and
giggle with her girlfriends.
And while times have changed, fashion trends have come full cycle,
Wassall-Kelly said.
They used to wear pedal-pushers and zoris -- known today as capri
pants and flip-flops -- and they always wore cotton blouses, although
the minute they left their parents’ sight they untucked them and tied
them in a knot, so “maybe you could see a little skin.”
The crowd had a tendency to be a little older in those days,
especially with places like the popular Rendezvous Ballroom, where
teenagers and young adults would dance and party until 1 a.m.
A dance called the Balboa Shuffle started at the Rendezvous in the
late 1930s and quickly spread throughout the nation, according to the
Balboa Pavilion website (https:// www.balboapavilion.com).
“You always knew a tourist,” Wassall-Kelly said. “Guys would wear
black socks with penny loafers. We made fun of them.”
On weekends and in the summer, the area still fills up with
tourists. “We sort of pride ourselves on a family atmosphere,” said
owner Joe Tunstall. “We sort of cater to people with children up to
12 or 13. It’s a nice clean, safe place.”
Kim Wells said although big amusement parks also cater to the
young crowd, that’s a whole-day commitment, and it costs around $50 a
person right when you walk in the door.
“You can come here for a couple of hours; it’s not a big
commitment,” she said.
Fun Zone general manager Patrick Moore said what’s attractive
about the area is it’s not just an amusement park; people can come
down for the day and enjoy the beach or the many activities offered
at the Balboa Pavilion, such as harbor cruises, skiff boat rentals,
Catalina passenger service and sport fishing trips.
“I love working here,” he said. “I’ve got the bay on one side and
the beach on the other.”
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