Egg hunt brings joy to Eastbluff
Paul Clinton
Little Anthony Rath grabbed at the colorful, plastic eggs laying on
the grass.
As his father Francis held out the front of his shirt like an apron,
the 2-year-old dropped the candy-filled eggs into it and smiled.
Anthony was happy.
The boy’s joy came at the annual Eastbluff Easter Egg Hunt at
Eastbluff Park. The event, now in its 19th year, is put on by Newport
Beach and the Eastbluff Village Center. The shops in the center donate
the candy.
“It’s great,” Francis Rath said about the event. “It gets everybody
together. It’s fun for the kids.”
Children ages 12 and younger attended the Saturday event, which drew
about 650 children -- equipped with baskets, hand-made bunny ears and
eager faces.
The children were also treated to a special guest appearance by the
Easter Bunny, who arrived riding a Newport Beach Fire Department truck.
The bunny, or at least a human wearing a furry suit, stepped off the
truck and was mobbed the minute he stepped onto a cement walkway heading
into the park.
Children pulled at the suit, grabbed his outstretched palm and huddled
around him for pictures taken by mom or dad.
Terri Mulcahy’s 2-year-old son Brandon was a little frightened by the
bunny.
“He wasn’t quite sure about it at first, but he like it,” Mulcahy
said. “He didn’t touch the Easter Bunny.”
The three-and-a-half-hour event was market by rotating egg hunts,
divided up by age group.
At the crack of 10 a.m., groups of children ages 3 and younger flooded
past colored pennants strung across the left-field section of the park’s
baseball diamond.
The children swiftly scooped up the plastic eggs, smiling and giggling
as they went. But, there were enough eggs to go around, said Trenton
Veches, the recreation coordinator at the Newport Beach Community Service
Department.
“There’s no competition,” Veches said. “Every kid gets an egg.”
There were also other activities, including face painting and a crafts
event where children could decorate pastel sand pails with felt Easter
shapes.
The crafts took place at Eastbluff Village Center, which is owned by
the Irvine Co. and located across the street from the park.
-- Paul Clinton covers the environment and John Wayne Airport. He may
be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail ato7
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