The place to be
Christine Carrillo
While sunbathers tan on the beach, swimmers play in the water,
bicyclists maneuver through congested parking lots and bike paths and
fishermen and women on the pier wait patiently for a tug or two, Newport
Beach transforms the Memorial Weekend into a summer kickoff.
Some beach-goers took a short trip to the water from Newport Beach
while many traveled from Riverside and San Bernardino counties.
While some seek to ride the waves and others try to avoid them, they
all traveled to the beach to have fun.
“We have to go seek places to ride,” said Kolleen Armstrong of Yucca
Valley, who grew up in Orange County and was bike-riding with her family.
“This is a great day to do it.”
On a Sunday that started out gloomy, many agreed that by the afternoon
the beach was the place to be.
“It’s a three-day getaway,” said Debbie Jones of Orange. “So we can
come here and relax since we know we don’t have to go back to work [until
Tuesday].”
According to Lifeguard Capt. Eric Bauer nearly 80,000 people held the
same mentality.
“They are all here because they enjoy the same thing,” he said. “They
enjoy the beach.”
Bauer, who has participated in water activities since he can remember,
can relate to the people that travel to the beach on the holiday weekend,
and while he hopes they enjoy themselves he also hopes they enjoy
themselves safely.
“We’ve had a full gamut of rescues from 4-year-olds that go out
further than their toes can touch, to the elderly and even the tough guys
. . . marines and professional boxers,” Bauer said.
After a moderate 14 rescues on Saturday, lifeguard staffing has
increased in preparation for the holiday beach-goer rush.
“I like it because it’s usually more active and more things are
happening,” Bauer said. “It’s always nice to protect people so they can
have a nice holiday weekend.”
The holiday weekend brings in more out-of-towners who generally stay
in the beach areas nearest the parking lots, according to Bauer. As a
result, more rescue and lifeguard activity occurs within those areas
because people are unfamiliar with the beach.
“We encourage people to swim near an open lifeguard,” Bauer said. “We
encourage beach-goers to ask about the flag system.”
The green flag represents light conditions, the yellow flag represents
moderate conditions and the red flag represents hazardous conditions, but
Bauer stresses that beach-goers should remain cautious at all times.
“In general people are not aware of the power of a rip current,” Bauer
said. “They need to not panic, swim parallel to the beach until they’re
out of the rip current, swim into the blue water and then toward the
shore.”
While the person caught in a rip current may be a strong swimmer,
strength has nothing to do with getting loose. In that case it’s what you
know.
With Newport Beach staffed and ready for the summer crowds, and the
Memorial Day beach-goers coming out in droves, it appears that summer
days are here again regardless of the actual seasonal change.
“The second you come to the beach you can relax and everything else
goes away,” said Candice Kotenmayer of Orange.
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