Life in the tide pool
Lauren Vane
On nearly every flight arriving at John Wayne Airport there is always
a certain passenger onboard. He or she is the squirrelly 9-year-old
who has been running around the cabin for the duration of the flight
babbling nonstop about Mickey Mouse and Splash Mountain. Many
sleepless nights and one long flight have amounted to this moment in
every child’s life: It’s time to go to Disneyland.
While amusement parks like Disneyland and Knott’s Berry Farm bring
herds of tourists to the area each year, Orange County is also home
to hundreds of natural attractions that scatter the coastline from
Newport Beach to Dana Point: the tide pools.
According to tide pool experts in Newport and Laguna Beach, the
tide pools get millions of visitors each year. And unlike area
amusement parks, there’s no pricey admission fee, and all you need to
bring is curiosity and a pair of rubber-soled shoes.
Orange County’s tide pools begin in Corona del Mar and extend
south to Dana Point’s Doheny State Beach. Two of the most popular
tide pooling sites -- and historically, the most frequented -- are
Corona del Mar’s Little Corona and Laguna’s Heisler Park.
The Little Corona tide pools can be accessed by turning onto Poppy
Avenue off Pacific Coast Highway in Corona del Mar. A path leads down
to the beach where Poppy meets Ocean Boulevard.
After walking down the gradual incline, toes hit the sand, and the
tide pools appear like beauty marks at the water’s edge. At a low
tide, each pool is a mini-ecosystem,offering visitors a window to
life beneath the sea.
The grooved rock formations have been cut and shaped by the waves;
every dip and cavern is filled with a piece of the ocean. Upon taking
a closer look, it appears the rocks are moving. Shore crabs are
everywhere, feeding themselves and filling the air with a soft
clicking noise that mimics the fizzle of Pop Rocks candy.
On a weekday morning nearing the end of the school year, the rocks
were crawling with almost as many school children as there were shore
crabs.
Tide pool rangers from the city of Newport Beach lead tours such
as this one throughout the school year. Little Corona is a
marine-life refuge and a no-take zone, meaning that nothing but trash
can be picked up or removed from the beach. The rangers educate
children and the public about the importance of the tide pool
ecosystem.
“This is like a marine nursery,” said Newport Beach tide pool
ranger Sam Rodriguez.
All kinds of marine life are born and raised in the tide pools and
it is important not to disturb them, Rodriguez said.
The tide pools at Little Corona have received so many visitors
that the ecosystem has suffered, Rodriguez said. Five or six years
ago, a survey revealed significant damage and caused the city to
consider limiting the amount of public access to the tide pools. Back
then, tide pool visitors would have only seen mussels and crabs.
The tide pool rangers cut down on school visits and boosted
conservation efforts, and now the tide pools have regenerated. “These
tide pools are a lot better than they used to be,” Rodriguez said.
Tide poolers looking to further quench a curiosity for marine life
can travel south to Laguna Beach, where more tide pool hot spots can
be found. The tide pools below Heisler Park and those at Treasure
Island are no doubt the favorites.
Heisler Park stretches out along Cliff Drive off North Coast
Highway in Laguna Beach. The tide pools there can be accessed by
several stairways and paths down to the beach from the park area. To
find the Treasure Island tide pools, visitors can gain public access
at the Montage Resort and Spa, South Coast Highway at Wesley Drive.
The rocky coves and outcroppings are a special resource in Laguna,
said Fred Sattler with the Ocean Laguna Foundation.
“We are very fortunate that our tide pools, even though they’re
not what they used to be, they’re in very good shape,” Sattler said.
The foundation runs a tidewater docents program, which sends tide
pool experts out to the pools during high season to teach people
about tide pools and how to be a good tide pooler, Sattler said.
Matt Brown, who began his position as marine safety officer in
December, conducts educational programs and gives out citations to
those who ignore the marine life protection rules.
“Watch where you’re walking, walk slowly and treat the marine life
with respect,” Brown said.
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