30 years of exploring
Deirdre Newman
It’s one of the few places where you can take a stroll from a
desert environment through a redwood grove to a valley grassland
area. And it’s right here in Newport Beach.
The Environmental Nature Center, nestled between 15th and 16th
avenues, is celebrating its 30th anniversary of educating children
and providing a natural refuge from the asphalt jungle.
From its humble beginnings as a gully next to Newport Harbor High
School, the center has grown into a comprehensive resource featuring
native plant communities, wildlife habitats, walking trails and a
discovery center.
“The progress has been phenomenal since it first started,” said
Norman Loats, who helped persuade the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District board to approve the center 30 years ago and now sits on its
board.
The center was founded in 1972 by a group of Newport Harbor High
School teachers who wanted to take advantage of the underused land
and turn it into an outdoor classroom. Nothing could be built there
because of an easement from the drainage gully.
It was originally designed with 12 California habitats and has
since grown to 14. Newport Harbor High students helped start the
center, turning over the soil and doing the initial plantings.
As soon as the center was established, its popularity among
students mushroomed. Over the last year, more than 13,000
participated in various activities during school, after school and
over the summer, said Bo Glover, executive director.
As it did in the beginning, the center still relies on the
nurturing of volunteers to keep it thriving. The 30-year mark is
especially significant as early center volunteers can reap the fruits
of their labor, Glover said.
“Some people who planted these trees are now bringing their
children back to show them what they’ve done,” Glover said.
Eagle Scout projects are one of the biggest contributors to the
center. Since 1986, they have assisted with the trail work and built
such equipment as picnic tables, water fountains and benches for a
small amphitheater.
One of the recent Eagle Scout projects is expanding the desert
landscape, which also benefits from the expertise of Martin Colver, a
city park’s employee.
Colver said his father recently checked out the center, was
disappointed by the sparse desert landscape and volunteered his son’s
services. So Colver set to work, weeding out the nonnative brush and
bringing in more appropriate scrub. On Monday morning, he dug up the
landscape while 5,000-pound rocks were installed.
“It’s great,” Colver said. “This will be a really good addition.”
Like most things at the center, the desert is a work in progress.
And that’s exactly how it should be at a place that reflects the
ever-changing world of nature, Glover said.
“Visitors can always see something new,” Glover said.
For students, the summer nature camps instill an appreciation of
the natural environment and bolster the science training they receive
in school, camp director Helen de la Maza said.
“In some elementary schools, science doesn’t achieve the emphasis
it should,” de la Maza said. “So they can come here and receive
really strong science.”
The center is embarking on a new capital campaign -- dubbed “Raise
the Roof” -- to fund a permanent building on site. The offices,
discovery center and small gift shop are now in temporary buildings
that were brought in when the school district left and moved to its
new headquarters on Bear Street.
As the city around it continues to be developed, the center
remains an oasis of nature, constantly revealing the wonders of the
great outdoors to new generations.
“The significance of places like this is in bringing in the
leaders of tomorrow and instilling the importance of natural settings
and open space,” Glover said.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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