The Back Bay beckons
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Young Chang
Regulars to the Newport Beach Back Bay know its colors well.
In the morning, at about 7 a.m., there are grays -- a light silver
film of mist that floats just above the water like a levitating block of
tinted glass -- hazy blues from a sky that hasn’t yet welcomed a full-on
sun, and a sap green from grass that doesn’t look as vibrant in the weak
morning light.
In the afternoon, say, 3 p.m., the bay is a party of yellows. A
blue-yellow in the sky, a Tweety-bird yellow in the flowers and a
sun-kissed yellow in the expanse of greenery that is in some places a
lighter, more impressionistic green.
In the early evening, about 6 p.m., the bay gets ready for sleep. The
blue-yellow sky morphs into a shade of periwinkle, the water grays
slightly and lavender flowers look sort of lime green, tinted by the
dulled, setting sun.
It is for these simple and subtle whimsies of nature that walkers,
bikers and runners choose the Back Bay as a place to exercise and sort
through the happenings of their day.
“It’s kind of spiritual, in a way,” said Bill Carnett, a longtime
Newport Beach resident who walks about two and a half miles, five to
seven times a week, at the bay. “It relaxes me and I feel better.”
In the quiet and rather spontaneously located spit of Newport Beach
nature, outdoor enthusiasts -- including owners who walk their dogs or
dogs who run their owners, in some instances -- are coming out at all
times of the day now to take advantage of the spring bloom and Daylight
Savings Time.
Carnett is more of an early-evening walker. This week, the 79 year old
made his rounds wearing a beige zipped-up jacket, khaki-colored pants and
sneakers. He doesn’t wear exercise clothes anymore.
“I wear just normal clothes. I used to run, but you get old after
awhile and you get sore feet and everything,” he said.
But Carnett brings up a good point. The colors and styles of clothes
worn by walkers and bikers also change throughout the day.
Flared and faded blue jeans hung on the hip, believe it or not, are
common during the time of day Carnett walks. Teenage girls, probably just
finished with an extracurricular activity at school, walk the bay wearing
little T-shirts, backpacks and retro-inspired jeans.
Rick Rodriguez, a Santa Ana Heights resident whose home is right up
one of the trails of the Back Bay, bikes or walks there every evening
alone. He’s not wearing wind-slicing biking gear, just a sweatshirt and
shorts.
“I bike here for the scenery, the fresh, cool breezes,” he said.
Mid-afternoon is when you might spot the greatest number of helmeted,
spandex-wearing, neon-striped bikers who seem to whiz by almost too fast
to soak in the scenery. Contrasting with them are adults wearing business
attire who are breaking from work or just off early.
Karen Ollila, of Costa Mesa, walked the bay Thursday with Hannah
Surles, the 7 year-old daughter of a friend whom she picked up from
school.
Dressed in black dress slacks, black suede heels and a short-sleeved,
pink button-down shirt, Ollila walked with Hannah for about an hour
talking about everything from the times-tables that third-graders have to
learn to the official names of certain lizards.
They avoided the dirt paths, though, as Ollila wasn’t wearing the
right shoes.
They were there to “look for animals and birds and smell the nice
smells,” Ollila said.
Hannah was winning their game. She had found six animals to Ollila’s
three. Among the findings were birds, ducks and alligator lizards.
They also spotted wild mustard flowers past the bridge near the Upper
Newport Bay Ecological Reserve.
“Those plants smelled like a combination of sugar, butter and
perfume,” Hannah said.
And in the mornings, in the mist and colder air, it’s a fashion show
of sweatshirts. White ones, blue ones, old ones, extra-roomy ones.
Carnett’s son, Jim Carnett, regularly walks the bay at about 7 a.m.
“The morning’s just very special and everything’s so fresh,” he said.
“It’s just beautiful. And the wildlife -- the chipmunks, rabbits, I’ve
seen coyote out there too.”
Participants of “Bike the Back Bay,” an Earth Day celebration, will
get a taste of what Carnett describes April 21 as the ride starts at 9
a.m.
Rob Perry, a Newport Beach resident who walks vigorously along the bay
in the late afternoon, favors this pot of untouched nature for its
rarity.
“It’s one of the last pieces of what most of Southern California used
to look like,” he said.
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