Rain wrecks recreation
Lindsay Sandham
Although the rains this week were not as costly and continual as the
storms Southern California saw last month, they still had a negative
effect on many local businesses that rely on the sea for their
livelihood.
“This time of year, obviously it’s very slow down here, and when
the rain hits, it makes it kind of miserable for everybody,” said Bob
Black, president of Catalina Passenger Service and vice president of
Balboa Pavilion Company in Balboa Village. “This poor town just kind
of suffers because they depend on the recreational business coming
down here. That’s kind of what this area is about.”
Black also said the retail shops and restaurants in Balboa
suffered from the decrease in visitors this past weekend.
“Especially a holiday ... when the weather’s good, it’s busy --
it’s almost like a summer day down here,” he said. “This weekend,
there was nobody.”
Norris Tapp, manager of Davey’s Locker Sport Fishing in Balboa,
said the rain had a severely negative impact on their business.
“That’s one of the first weekends that we look for in the
wintertime -- Presidents Day,” he said. “We lost substantial
business.”
Black said passenger travel on his company’s various
holiday-weekend boat tours out of Newport Harbor dropped
significantly from last year to this year.
“Last year, we averaged 330 people a day for the four days. This
year, we averaged 30 a day, and that’s because there was no sun,” he
said.
Tapp said winter is not a good time for the fishing business, but
they conduct daily whale-watching trips through the end of March. The
California grey whales are in migration along the coast.
“We rely on whale watching, particularly the school trips during
the week,” he said.
School field trips, many of which had been planned since
September, were canceled or rescheduled because of the rain. Tapp
said many couldn’t reschedule because of their school calendars.
“We stand to lose any day it rains,” he said. “Probably anywhere
from, on average, 100 passengers per day, we lose them. We have to
reschedule anywhere from two to three hundred.”
Some water-based businesses were more fortunate and did not suffer
economically from the rain.
“We can still hold classes, so from a business perspective, it
didn’t hurt because we were still able to deliver education in the
classroom,” said Brad Avery, director of the Orange Coast College
School of Sailing and Seamanship
He said, however, they do not send students out on the water in
stormy conditions, so it cuts back on their on-the-water training.
“There’s been a couple of weekends where it’s been rained out,” he
said. “That translates into less experience on the water. It’s not
ideal.”
Despite the damaging economic effects, Black found some positive
things to say about the rain.
“Well, we needed it to clean things off. Everything is nice and
clean now,” he said. “It’s nice and sparkly and ready for people to
come back down. So we did need the rain, we just didn’t need as much
as we got.”
Avery said he thinks the rain is great, and he can’t wait to see
Catalina and the Channel Islands because they will be green and
beautiful.
“It wouldn’t be California without some precipitation. It wouldn’t
be green and nice and a nice place to be,” Tapp said.
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