Get in the water, help the water
Alex Coolman
Victor Villasenor was paddling in the waters off 15th Street on a recent morning, showing off the moves he plans to use in the sixth annual
Surfrider Foundation Clean Ocean Paddle, which takes place today.
The 17-year-old Costa Mesa resident was paddling a 19-foot-long banana
yellow surf ski, a vehicle that looked like a cross between a kayak and a
top fuel dragster.
“Anything faster than this,” he noted, “would be the Olympic class.”
Most of the paddling action to be had in today’s event, however, will
be of a more modest speed, said event coordinator Geoff McAdams.
The paddle, which runs from Balboa Pier to Newport Pier and back
again, is not intended primarily as a speed contest but as a fun excuse
to get in the water and raise a little money.
“It’s a really kickback race,” McAdams said. “People turn around when
they get tired.”
The event is a fund-raiser for the Surfrider Foundation and will
benefit the group’s programs that bring water-testing lessons to several
local schools, including Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor high schools,
McAdams said.
A second race for kayakers will run around Lido Isle.
Jim Smiley, owner of Paddle Power, a kayak shop on the Balboa
Peninsula, has been coaching Villasenor in his efforts to become a
paddling speed demon. He said the young man has clocked some impressive
laps around the island.
“He’s doing laps in the 20 [minute range],” Smiley said. “He can start
the race at nine and be at work by 10.”
There will also be a beach cleanup on the peninsula between the piers,
McAdams noted.
Entry donation for the paddle is $25. Participants should meet at
Balboa Pier or -- for the Lido Isle race -- at 15th Street, on the bay
side of the peninsula, at 8 a.m. Races start at 9 a.m.
FYI
For more information about the Surfrider Foundation’s Clean Ocean
Paddle, call (949) 378-3021.
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