Native plants making comeback at park
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Deirdre Newman
Efforts to restore Castaways Park with native plants and flowers are
blossoming while the city is enjoying the fruits of the park’s
success.
The Public Works Department received a 2004 Project of the Year
Award from the Southern California chapter of the American Public
Works Assn. Thursday.
The park, located next to the Upper Newport Bay Ecological
Reserve, is a self-sustaining ecological site. It is populated with
low-maintenance plants and flowers, which need only a modicum of
water to survive. The city’s focus on returning to natural vegetation
at the park was praised by environmentalist Jan Vandersloot.
“I think it shows a lot of environmental sensitivity and forward
thinking in restoring their park to its natural condition, and in the
case of Castaways, it’s part of the Newport Bay ecosystem,”
Vandersloot said. “I think it’s just a great and laudable action that
the city has taken such restoration efforts.”
The park has a colorful past -- from its early use as a port, then
a country club, a restaurant and now a park. The Irvine Co.
transferred the land that is now the park to the city as part of a
development agreement. The city dedicated the 17-acre park in 1998.
But only a small portion of the park was planted because of budget
limitations at the time.
A Castaways Park Advisory Committee was formed in April 1999 with
members who included representatives from the California Native Plant
Society and the nearby Environmental Nature Center. The committee
developed a varied California native plant palette and tapped grant
funding of almost $100,000 from the California Coastal Conservancy
and $50,000 from the Nature Conservancy.
The planting and restoration work started in March and the first
fruits of the labor are starting to blossom. Bright California
fuchsia, vibrant yellow bladderpods and mountain lilac are popping
out, a harbinger of the rainbow medley of colors expected to infuse
the park landscape this spring. Early rains have helped jump-start
the blooming, said Marcelino Lomeli, park and tree maintenance
superintendent.
“People had the perception that native [plants and flowers] were
brown and not beautiful. But diversity that has color and leaf
texture, that’s our goal,” Lomeli said.
The annual flowers and grasses were installed using a
hydro-seeding method, which spreads the seeds using water pressure,
Lomeli added. The process enables the seeds to bind with the soil to
prevent them from getting washed away during a heavy rainstorm. The
flowers will reseed themselves, because as their seeds fall into the
soil, they acclimate well and germinate, Lomeli explained.
Fences csurround the restoration areas. They will be removed when
the weather and vegetation are ready, Lomeli said. Some of the plants
are also covered with small tepees, for now, to protect them from
ravenous rabbits.
The park is meant to be educational by illustrating native plants
and flowers and the display of a firebreak zone. This zone is planted
with natives such as coyote brush, bladderpod and coastal sunflower,
which are fire resistant and retardant, Lomeli said.
A meadow area that’s about three-fourths of an acre offers native
sedge grass that is so drought tolerant, it can potentially survive
being watered only once a week during the summer, Lomeli said.
“It’s the largest stand of sedge grass I know of in the state,” he
said.
A visitor from Santa Monica was so impressed with the sedge grass
that she contacted Lomeli and said she wanted to use it in her front
and back yards, he said.
Mulch paths for meandering through the restoration areas will be
accessible once the fences are taken down. The vegetation can grow
from knee-high up to six feet, Lomeli said.
“I think most people enjoy the park because there are not a lot of
things to do,” he said. “You can just come, think and enjoy being
with nature. We have 46 other parks where you can do active things.
Everyone coming and leaving [here] is smiling.”
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