Volunteers cleanup Crystal Cove
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June Casagrande
In the hazy and humid late morning, Natalie and Nicole Kaylor toted a
twisted hunk of wood and wire almost as big as them.
The lesson is likely to be a lasting one: “No littering!” Natalie,
8, said.
The El Morro sisters were among about 350 volunteers who pitched
in two Crystal Cove cleanup sites as part of the statewide Coastal
Cleanup Day, in association with the International Coastal Cleanup,
organized by the Ocean Conservancy. Throughout Newport-Mesa, hundreds
more volunteers collected trash for a half dozen environmental and
government agencies along the coast, the Santa Ana River mouth, the
Back Bay and even at inland sites where litter accumulates.
Worldwide, about 400,000 people participated last year.
For many, the work is its own reward. But others, including
Natalie and Nicole, enjoy some fringe benefits, too.
“We get sweets,” 5-year-old Nicole said, fumbling with a frosted
chocolate cookie she had scored at the Pelican Point volunteer
headquarters.
Despite last year’s thorough volunteer effort to clean up Crystal
Cove, there was plenty of garbage to be found there. Little pieces of
Styrofoam and cigarette butts were among the most bothersome bits.
Globs of tar hardening in the sand and scrub also contribute to the
trash littering the stunning shoreline.
“It’s really gross. People swim in this water,” said Lauren Kraft,
13, an eighth-grader at Corona del Mar High School.
Like many people in her class, Lauren decided to take part in
Coastal Cleanup day in order to earn extra credit at school.
“And it’s also bad for the animals,” she said.
Besides just cleaning up the shoreline, Coastal Cleanup Day is
designed to make people more conscientious of their own polluting
habits and to raise awareness of how litter throughout the watershed
usually ends up at the beach.
Lauren, who had begun work at around 8 a.m. said that plastic bags
and small pieces of plastic, along with cigarette butts, were some of
the most common things she cleaned up.
“There’s really no reason for it,” she said. “There are lots of
trashcans. They make it really easy not to litter.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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