Not so trashy
Marisa O’Neil
Hundreds of volunteers armed with trash bags, rubber gloves and
bottles of water scoured local beaches and shorelines Saturday
morning as part of the 19th annual International Coastal Cleanup.
Local environmental groups organized cleanups in the Back Bay and
Crystal Cove State Park, where volunteers cleared three beaches of
accumulated garbage. Sage Hill student Audrey Kim, 16, helped collect
and weigh garbage at Reef Point, where volunteers collected nearly
200 pounds worth.
“I come to the beach a lot and see so much trash,” she said. “It
bothers me because I swim in that water and I sit in that sand. It’s
really gross.”
Each of the 300 or so volunteers at Crystal Cove State Park
received a tally card to mark down the types of garbage they found.
Most volunteers listed cigarette butts and Styrofoam as the top two
items collected on the beach.
Plastic bags, balloons and six-pack rings can injure or kill
wildlife, said Crystal Cove Volunteer Coordinator Winter Bonnin. But
the little things, like bits of Styrofoam, can cause just as much
damage because fish and birds often mistake the non-biodegradable
substances for food.
“We found lots of Styrofoam, plastic beads, beer bottles, water
bottle lids, juice box straws,” Lake Forest resident Steve Runels
said. “And a plastic chopstick.”
Runels and his family came to the cleanup with their 11-year-old
son Jackson’s Cub Scout Pack 621. Some schools and companies
throughout Orange County also sent groups to the event.
Other items collected included golf balls, a rake and a glass
bottle filled with assorted beetle and mouse carcasses.
Volunteers from “little 5-year-olds up to seniors” took part in
the cleanup and prize raffle that followed, said Mary Fegraus, a
volunteer with the Crystal Cove Interpretive Assn. The event gives
people, especially children, a chance to enjoy one of the last
vestiges of unspoiled coastland in the area, said fellow Crystal Cove
volunteer Dick Raulston.
“Sure they get to pick up some trash,” he said. “But they also get
a taste of nature and get to see what’s going on.”
Another 300 people took part in a cleanup in the Back Bay, said
John Scholl, an environmental scientist at the Upper Newport Bay
Ecological Preserve. Though he said they collected about two thousand
pounds of trash, plenty more still remains.
He wants to organize four or five more smaller cleanups before the
bird nesting season starts.
The International Coastal Cleanup had more than 450,000 people
from 90 countries participate last year, according to the Ocean
Conservancy website. It’s designed to clean beaches and raise
awareness of risks to wildlife from polluted waterways.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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