Saucer sledding on a sunny day
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Marisa O’Neil
It looked more like cocktail ice waiting for a shaker than a freshly
fallen blanket of white.
But with the bright sun beating down and temperatures pushing 80
degrees, the 60 tons of man-made, trucked-in snow transformed
Balearic Park into a crowded, if brief, winter wonderland Saturday
morning. Costa Mesa’s annual Holiday Snow Hill gave local children,
who may be more accustomed to surfing and skateboarding, the chance
to make snow angels and scoot down a hill on a saucer sled.
True to its Southern California venue, however, toddlers played on
the tot lot mound of snow with plastic shovels, pails and other beach
toys.
“Only in Orange County would you have sand toys to play in the
snow,” said organizer Robby Waite, a recreation coordinator for the
city, which along with Costa Mesa-based Torelli Realty, sponsored the
event.
In addition to the fenced-off tot lot, two separate strips of snow
on the green grass awaited sledders. Holden Hodges, 4, took a tumble
off his saucer halfway down the hill, but got back on and continued
undaunted.
The sledding wasn’t as fun as throwing snowballs, he decided.
“I fell off and it’s colder than ice cubes,” 5-year-old Rafael
Riil said of his sled run.
As cold as the snow was, the weather was pure Southern California.
It was so warm that 7-year-old Elizabeth Moledo abandoned her
snowsuit for a T-shirt.
City employees, like preschool teacher Ally Lia, helped groom the
snow, which had a tendency to get hard in the late-morning sun, she
said.
The snow areas were such a hot commodity that long lines of
children wended their ways through the park, waiting for their turns.
And if the snow wasn’t enough, Santa Claus got a lift to the park
via police helicopter. Accompanied by a security detail of elves, he
shook hands with the waiting crowds and settled in a comfy chair to
pose for pictures with eager children, like 4-year-old Satyajit
Mayadas.
Satyajit was just getting over his fear of the man in the red suit
and was looking forward to sitting on Santa’s lap, said his mother,
Kim Mayadas.
After growing up in Massachusetts, a few mounds of snow -- no
shoveling necessary -- was a nice treat, she said.
“It’s much more tame,” she said of Costa Mesa’s snow. “And you
don’t need snow chains.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4618 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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