ON THE WATER -- A fight to save Little Corona
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Way back when, in the late 1940s and early 1950s,
when Nancy Gardner went surfing at Little Corona Beach, things were
different.
No steps led down from Ocean Boulevard and rocks didn’t secure the
bluffs at the other end. City officials didn’t install a concrete dam
until the 1960s, and the sandy beach led deeper into the ocean. Most
importantly, there wasn’t a steady stream of fresh water into the waves.
The beach “is a poster child of what population growth has done to the
coastal area,” Gardner said on a recent morning, standing on the bluffs
overlooking the beach.
Back in the old days, Little Corona was “a very beautiful beach, with
nice surf and nice tide pools,” she said. “We only saw [fresh] water
during storms.”
When the water kept coming, it took Gardner and others a while to
catch on.
“We were naive about what the changes meant,” she said. “We’d say,
‘Oh, there’s water at the beach.’ It was a while until we realized that
was urban runoff.”
A member of the city’s harbor quality citizens advisory committee and
active in the Surfrider Foundation, Gardner has been working with others
to preserve the beach.
“We know we’ve got this water and it’s hard to go back to the
original,” she said.
One plan is to capture the water before it hits the beach, clean it
and find another use for it. Creating “bio ponds” in the canyon above the
beach could provide a habitat for wildlife and also turn that area into a
hiking spot for residents.
Another threat to the beach’s survival is the constant groups of
visitors, such as the 100-plus school kids climbing around Little
Corona’s tide pools as Gardner looked on.
“It’s one of these mixed blessings,” she said, adding that the city’s
looking into funding for guides to supervise such groups. “It’s wonderful
to see [kids coming to the beach,] but at the same time they’re all over
the rocks and the rocks can’t handle it.”
And while Gardner now reminds people that they shouldn’t take shells
or other things away from the beach, she admittedly did so herself
decades ago.
“We [took from] these tide pools,” she said. “And all in the name of
biology. For an ‘A,’ we had to get 100 specimen.”
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