Going natural
Bryce Alderton
What began as an excursion with her school’s environmental club has
turned into a five-year love affair.
Cal State Long Beach student Barbara McCoy began venturing out to the
Bolsa Chica Wetlands with Eco-Terra, Long Beach City College’s
environmental club.
“The club had volunteer projects out there so everyone went out there
and decided that they loved it,” McCoy said.
She now flocks to the wetlands the third Saturday of each month to do
everything from clearing out invasive European plants and planting
California species to picking up trash along trails and building wooden
rails, all part of her dedication to the 12-member Bolsa Chica Stewards
group.
The goal of the Stewards is to return the native coastal sage to the
wetlands.
In addition to the four different types of sage, the Stewards also
plant poppies, coast sunflowers, monkey flowers, which are trumpet-shaped
and colored red and yellow, St. Anne’s Lace and toyon cherry and coastal
oak trees.
“I like going outside and playing in the dirt,” McCoy said. “It’s neat
seeing how the plants have taken over.”
She said Sage bushes have grown as tall as six feet at one habitat
that sits a mile south of Warner Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway and is
dotted with eucalyptus and palm trees.
“Seeing all the bushes in bloom and telling what type of sage it is is
fun,” McCoy said.
Bird-watching has become one of McCoy’s hobbies after taking an
ornithology class last fall at Cal State Long Beach, and Bolsa Chica’s
bird population suits her just fine.
“They have a lot of birds out there so now I’ll take my binoculars
each time I go out there,” McCoy said.
The 23-year-old Lakewood resident is in her final year at Cal State
Long Beach and will graduate in May with a degree in marine biology. She
wants eventually to get a PhD. in marine biology as well.
“I’m an animal person but I’m into plants for all the flowers,” McCoy
said. “I like to go out in the spring and see all the bushes in bloom so
I can tell what type of sage it is.”
Her dedication paid off when she and fellow Steward Marabeth Madsen
were recognized for their dedicated leadership for the Steward program at
the fifth annual Kennedy-Kopin Bolsa Chica Conservation Award ceremony
New Year’s Day at the wetlands.
* BRYCE ALDERTON is the news assistant. He can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected]
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