Harbour holiday happenings
Christine Carrillo
As the holiday season approaches, the events commence.
With the snowflakes along the pier now lighted, after the sixth
annual Light a Light of Love event held on Sunday, Huntington Beach
can now gear up for the 40th annual Huntington Harbour Boat Parade
and Cruise of Lights presented by the Huntington Harbour Philharmonic
Committee.
For those who missed the first one and are looking for another
chance to attend a parade to pique their holiday spirit, the boat
parade this weekend will give them that chance.
“It’s a real ride and it’s a lot of fun,” said Dick Dorsey, who
was elected this year’s grand marshal of the parade. “It’s a real
festive occasion ... a community participating thing. The boat
parade, for [Huntington] Harbour, is the start of the holiday season
here.”
On Saturday and Sunday, the harbor will showcase a variety of
decorated and lighted boats winding their way along a three-hour
route through the waterway, giving audiences a chance to witness the
area’s seasonal transformation and preparation for the highly
anticipated Cruise of Lights, which will run from Dec. 12 through 22.
As nearly 60 boats compete in 14 different categories, the parade,
which is best viewed on the bridge next to the fire house on Pacific
Coast Highway near Warner Avenue, will get audiences’ holiday juices
flowing.
Although the boat parade provides the public with only a limited
and distant view, the Cruise of Lights gives the public an
opportunity to see Huntington Harbour’s holiday-lighted homes and
holiday decorations up close.
The Cruise of Lights, which benefits local school music programs,
will offer weekday cruises at about 6, 7 and 8 p.m. and Saturday and
Sunday cruises at about 5:30, 6:30 and 7:30 p.m.
As the boat parade and Cruise of Lights return for another year,
the city’s longtime Rent-A-Santa program will not.
The program, which ran for two to three weeks every December,
would give people a chance to hire a Santa to visit their children
for 15 to 30 minutes at a time for a small fee.
“It was a good program and it was popular,” said Richard Barnard,
special project manager for the city. “It just wasn’t paying for
itself and it was costing us money.”
Due to recent budget reductions, the city decided to cut the
program this year and is uncertain whether it will be brought back,
Barnard said.
For more information about the boat parade or Cruise of Lights,
call (714) 840-7542.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.