Slow summer at beach draws to a close
As Newport-Mesa students get ready to go back to school Sept. 6,
activity at the beach is slowing down.
Mark Herman, a Newport Beach lifeguard dispatcher, said it’s been
a slow summer for tourism at Newport Beach.
“The crowds have been low all summer,” he said.
Herman, who has worked as a lifeguard for 18 years, said the
crowds may be light this year for a number of reasons, including the
swarm of black jellyfish and the low surf.
He also said high gas prices could be prompting some Riverside
County residents to stay home.
“Normally on a Sunday it would be packed all the way to the
fence,” he said as he observed the crowd from the main lifeguard
tower on the Newport Pier. Although there were many sunbathers,
surfers and boogie boarders lining the shores, there was still much
open sand and room for swimmers Sunday.
Herman said the beach has been more crowded in past years,
especially the summer of 2003, when the pier area was swarmed with
visitors every day.
“The news has been scaring people with the jellyfish,” Herman
said.
In recent weeks there have been many reports of black jellyfish
washing ashore and stinging beach visitors. Herman said there have
been no serious allergic reactions among the hundreds of jellyfish
stings lifeguards have treated.
Herman also said that school is starting a little earlier this
year, which may effect beach activity in the coming weeks -- although
Labor Day weekend is always crowded.
“I wouldn’t declare summer over,” Herman said, referring to the
weather and the possibility of good surf rolling through in the next
week or two.
What does lowered beach attendance mean for local businesses?
For some, it hasn’t made a difference.
The prime location of Board Walk Sports, at the end of Newport
Pier, makes it a good spot attract tourists looking to rent bicycles,
fishing poles and boogie boards.
Noe Martinez, the store’s supervisor and a Costa Mesa resident,
said this summer has been busier than last, but he expects business
to drop off significantly after Labor Day.
Newport Beach resident Chris Ross, co-owner of Newport Soda, a
gourmet sandwich and old-style soda fountain shop that opened at the
end of May, said it has been a relatively slow summer.
Other local shop owners have also told him business was off this
year, he said. “The Fourth of July was supposed to be the busiest
day, but it wasn’t,” Ross said. He added that he and co-owner Shawn
Newgaard are working on building up business from local residents to
sustain the shop during the slow months of winter.
“It’s all been word-of-mouth, and so far it’s been pretty good,”
Ross said. “If I can break even then [in the winter], I should be
able to turn a profit next summer.”
Ross said he thinks the city’s centennial celebrations will help
make next summer a busier season.
* LINDSAY SANDHAM is the news assistant. She can be reached at
(714) 966-4625 or [email protected].
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