Lake Forest creek project to help improve bay
Alex Katz
NEWPORT BEACH -- Efforts to repair the eroded and polluted Quiet Oak
Creek in Lake Forest will have a trickle-down effect on the health of
Upper Newport Bay, which is where the creek’s runoff ends up.
Quiet Oak Creek is in Serrano Creek Park off of Serrano Road and Toledo
Way. It slows to a trickle in the dry season, when the water is “all
runoff from lawns and people washing their cars,” said Gary Beeler, a
founder of the Serrano Creek Conservancy.
Thursday marked the beginning of the conservancy’s restoration project,
which will include building new banks, moving rocks to slow erosion from
a small waterfall and adding plants to filter pollutants, said
conservancy founder Matt Rayl, who donated tractors and hired workers for
the project.
Quiet Oak Creek’s runoff now carries fertilizer, oil and other pollutants
that end up in Serrano Creek and the bay.
Planting native plants such as cattails and reeds in the creek will “take
out fertilizers and also help break up the petroleum products, the gas
and oil and stuff like that,” Beeler said.
He said the plants also would bring more birds and wildlife into the
area.
The conservancy also will widen banks to slow the creek and decrease
erosion.
The conservancy is a group of homeowners associations, residents and
businesses dedicated to halting erosion of Serrano Creek and beautifying
its banks.
Similar repairs are planned for Serrano Creek, which has been damaged by
10 years of heavy flooding and polluted by runoff from developments.
Volunteers can sign up for conservancy’s Nov. 20 planting project by
calling (949) 768-5921.
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