Sunday, June 07, 2009

Day At The Beach

It didn't start out to be a great beach day but by noon the skies cleared and a good time was had by all. The surfers were out early, the weather be damned; the lifeguards were having tryouts for a younger group of potential guards; there was a volleyball tournament; and lastly a Laguna Beach dance group was also there to entertain the masses.

Laguna Beach: Day at the BeachLaguna Beach: Day at the BeachLaguna Beach: Day at the BeachLaguna Beach: Day at the BeachLaguna Beach: Day at the BeachLaguna Beach: Day at the BeachLaguna Beach: Day at the BeachWater Temp: 62

Tides:
04:16 AM -0.82 feet Low Tide
05:41 AM Sunrise
10:49 AM 3.43 feet High Tide
11:12 AM Full Moon
03:02 PM 2.29 feet Low Tide
08:00 PM Sunset
09:24 PM 5.88 feet High Tide

Saturday, June 06, 2009

Safety Takes Second Place To Privacy

Laguna Beach: Day at the BeachFrom the City manager's Report:

Vegetation Abatement for Intersections Visibility and Street Sweeping -- Each year the Public Works staff identify properties where vegetation obstructs visibility for motorists. The visibility obstructions are cleared through a nuisance abatement process. At the end of the process, any properties with vegetation that is not been cleared by the property owners are cleared by a City contractor, and the costs are placed on the next year’s property tax bills. This year, a nuisance abatement process was implemented for vegetation that obstructs access for street sweeping. There were 95 intersection visibility obstructions and 214 street sweeping obstructions for which the City Council ordered abatement in March. At this time, there has been 100% compliance with the abatement notices, so there will be no need to assess any of those property owners for vegetation removal.
This is very interesting since you still can't see a thing at the intersection of 3rd and Park. I bet you could come up with a few intersections that are view obstructed by overgrown plants.

I also know of one camper-truck that hasn't been driven in years except for the owner moving it a couple of yards so that he can say it has been moved. Of course the owner is a retired Laguna Beach police officer so I guess that makes a difference - to the city but not to his neighbors.

Water Temp: 64

Tides:
03:42 AM -0.78 feet Low Tide
05:41 AM Sunrise
10:10 AM 3.43 feet High Tide
02:30 PM 2.20 feet Low Tide
07:59 PM Sunset
08:52 PM 5.94 feet High Tide

Friday, June 05, 2009

Adopt-A-Beach: Saturday, June 20th 9 am to Noon

Laguna Beach: Adopt a BeachJoin the Clean Water Now! Coalition during the Summer Solstice weekend by participating in our Quarterly California Coastal Commission Adopt-A-Beach Cleanup in Laguna Beach.

The cleanup is Saturday, June 20th, from 9 am to noon at the following 3 sites: Main Beach (HQ), Victoria Beach, and Treasure Island/Montage Resort & Spa.

Gloves, bags and educational materials provided. Community service hours for youth groups. Wear a hat or bring sunblock! Stick around and shop locally.

Contact: Roger von Bütow rogerbutow@cleanwaternow.com
Phone messages: (949) 280.2225
Website: http://www.cleanwaternow.com/

Our next, regularly scheduled beach cleanup will be the BIG yearly event, California Coastal Cleanup Day, now an international effort with nearly 100 countries and over 28 US States participating.

CCCD: Saturday, September 19, 2009 9 am to noon.

California Coastal Commission website for more information:
http://www.coastal.ca.gov/publiced/pendx.html

You Gotta Have Heart --- No You Don't!

Laguna Beach: Morning RunIt's being reported in the Coastline Pilot that the cardiac outpatient program will no longer be available at the South Coast Medical Center.

Water Temp: 64

Tides:
03:05 AM -0.62 feet Low Tide
05:41 AM Sunrise
09:28 AM 3.41 feet High Tide
01:56 PM 2.06 feet Low Tide
07:59 PM Sunset
08:20 PM 5.94 feet High Tide

Thursday, June 04, 2009

Protecting Native Endangered Species Keeps California Beautiful

by Roger von Bütow, Clean Water Now! Coalition (CWN!C)

Drought cycles and resulting fresh water resource depletions renew the century-old battle in California to find a sustainable balance of protected wilderness and increased human population demands in our home state. Many of these skirmishes wind up in courtrooms, the issues confused in the layperson’s mind by the labyrinth of regulatory edicts and hearing room proceedings.

Portrayed in the media as pitting “Humans vs. Nature,” zero-sum games, many residents are unaware of the nexus between preservation and restoration of eco-systems for threatened or endangered species and improved safe environs for us all. A recent decision by NOAA’s National Marines Fisheries Service due to years of lobbying by the Clean Water Now! Coalition (CWN!C) provides an excellent example of how these local grass roots efforts succeed in assuring future generations of the heritage they and their children deserve.

CWN!C is a watershed protection group focused upon reversing the water quality impairments that affect aquatic and riparian biota. In the case of Aliso Creek, a renowned polluted watercourse rife with the “toxic soup” of urban runoff, we find the formal recognition last month (Feb. 2009) by NMFS of the creek as one of Southern California’s Distinct Population Segments for the federally endangered Steelhead Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) to be fortuitous. Illegal dumping, past and present, of contaminants upstream that have impact spans of decades haunt this and many of California’s watersheds. Increasing urbanization continues a drip feed of carcinogenic substances unabated through urban runoff.

Laguna Beach: Aliso Creek Steelhead TroutAliso Creek Steelhead Trout

Frustrated by little change in the watershed for years, several years ago Board member Mike Hazzard and I formed a working group, Friends of the Aliso Creek Steelhead http://www.alisocreeksteelhead.org/. The only watchdog organization to achieve any significant enforcement actions by Cal/EPA within the Aliso Creek Watershed, CWN!C knew that water quality and habitat monitoring continued to show degradation and entropy. Many indigenous species populations were either decimated or non-existent due to abuse. We were confounded by local jurisdictional denial of steelhead historical presence in Aliso, so we developed a detailed database to support our contention and provided it to NMFS.

Sometimes a fountain pen or the tap of a few computer terminal keys by regulatory overseers can do what threats, cajoling, demands and even sound science cannot. In this case, O. mykiss also enjoys a more elevated status because it qualifies as an Evolutionary Significant Unit (ESU): It is a separate species from its cousins, unique to the Mediterranean climate of Southern California and Northern Baja Mexico.

“Anadromous,” it migrates from salt to fresh (where it spawns) back to salt water during its life-cycle, and you may know it as the beautiful multi-colored Rainbow Trout, its resident incarnation. Adapted to the warmer, more ephemeral coastal streams of our area, this opportunistic salmonoid can survive environs with less oxygen than its northerly counterparts. Remarkably, it need not return to the watercourse or estuary where it as born.

If a stream has steelhead in it, then one can assume it’s safe and healthy enough for human immersion. This is what USEPA Clean Water Act guidance requires of these types of waters “fishable and swimmable”. O. mykiss’ three primary necessities, low toxicity, low temperature and high dissolved oxygen (DO) content are the markers biologists have encouraged our state public agencies to honor for optimal water quality objectives and standards. What’s good for the steelhead all over California is therefore actually good for humans too.

What’s next? For us the sustaining of our contention regarding O. mykiss by NMFS will assist us in reversing the distress within this watershed. Higher standards will be integrated in the regulatory oversight food chain, almost every water-related project will get closer planning scrutiny and hopefully not require litigation or enforcement action to do so.

For the steelhead it’ll mean eventual restoration and recolonization, a Southern California native fish given a chance to finally come safely home again. Someday, a child will gaze into this creek with wonder and awe at this amazing survivor if we’re successful.

Roger von Bütow is the Founder & Executive Director of the Clean Water Now! Coalition (Est. 1998) website: http://www.cleanwaternow.com/

He’s also a professional environmental consultant, ecological journalist, the Beach Manager for Cal Coastal Commission volunteer beach cleanup programs in Laguna Beach, and several years ago initiated the Proud Community Affiliate program in Laguna for Keep California Beautiful: http://www.keepcaliforniabeautiful.org/.

He can be reached at: rogerbutow@cleanwaternow.com

50000 Parking Tickets In 2008

Laguna Beach: Couple at Diver’s CoveIt has been reported in the OC Register's web site that Laguna Beach issued 50,798 parking tickets in 2008.

What Laguna Beat wants to know is how many speeding tickets did they issue? How many tickets for running red lights or stops signs did they issue?

Nobody dies from parking to long but they do from reckless drivers.

Water Temp: 64

Tides:
02:26 AM -0.31 feet Low Tide
05:41 AM Sunrise
08:39 AM 3.38 feet High Tide
01:21 PM 1.84 feet Low Tide
07:47 PM 5.87 feet High Tide
07:58 PM Sunset

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

City Council Was To Hear A Report On Aliso Creek Watershed

Laguna Beach: Aliso CreekDid anyone go to the City Council meeting last night? Ok no one did. I didn't.

My question is: Did the Council understand anything that was said to them about the Aliso Creek watershed? Do they know what a watershed is? Did they read the report written for them prior to the meeting? Do they understand Laguna Beach's responsibility in cleaning up our surface water?

We believe the answer to all the above is NO.

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Hallelujah The Sun Shines Again

Laguna Beach: The Return of the Beach Chairs

You Really Need To Take A Hike

Laguna Beach: Montage ParkJennifer Wood's blog Laguna Canyon has an essay by Len Gardner: Fall Color - California Style. When you're done reading it then go take a hike.

Water Temp: 62

Tides:
12:47 AM 0.77 feet Low Tide
05:41 AM Sunrise
06:30 AM 3.41 feet High Tide
11:59 AM 1.20 feet Low Tide
06:38 PM 5.48 feet High Tide
07:57 PM Sunset

Monday, June 01, 2009

Someone Please Tell Me It Will Be Sunny In June!

Laguna Beach: Getting’ SettledWater Temp: 62

Tides:
05:07 AM 3.60 feet High Tide
05:42 AM Sunrise
11:12 AM 0.79 feet Low Tide
05:59 PM 5.15 feet High Tide
07:56 PM Sunset
12:47 AM 0.77 feet Low Tide