Choose your spot
- Share via
S.J. Cahn
Here’s a choice. Would you rather:
* Take a walk along Balboa Island at sunset.
* Risk bodily injury at the Wedge.
* Sip a cool drink at a bar overlooking the harbor.
* Hang out in your backyard with friends.
In Newport-Mesa, where residents are quick to point out how great
life is (and which is set on a TV pedestal overlooking such spots as
Riverside and Corona), the great thing just might be that the choice
is never so limited. Whether at the community’s extreme south-east
point, Crystal Cove State Beach, or to the northwest at MetroPoint,
there seems to be always something to do, always a place that’s a
“best of” for someone.
An informal survey of Daily Pilot readers, plus a couple of
familiar faces, shows why.
A WHOLE ISLAND IN PLAY
Perhaps it comes as no surprise, but Balboa Island is a popular
pick.
“For years my sweet wife and I have managed to relieve the
pressures of busy lives by taking weekly walks around Balboa Island
and surrounding environs in the early morning hours,” said Costa Mesa
resident Geoff West. “It’s a wonderful escape any time of the year,
but is especially therapeutic after all the summer tourists have
departed. Although our route seldom varies, the scene changes
constantly.”
In particular, the island is a haven for folks as the sun dips
behind the peninsula and below the ocean.
“I would have to say the boardwalk around Balboa Island in the
winter at dusk,” said Doug Stuckey, a former spokesman for the
Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce and now regional marketing
consultant for Wells Fargo’s Orange County region. “The crowds are
gone, the weather is cool, and it is a great place spend some quality
time with my wife talking about each other’s busy day.”
Other pieces of Newport-Mesa’s landscape are powerful draws, as
well.
“My favorite place in Newport is the Back Bay,” said Marlene
Hester. “It is so quiet and peaceful. Problems seem to disappear
there as if they were against the law. The people are friendly and
sometimes a quick smile from someone is like a shot of happiness. I
try to return these smiles because I know how nice it feels to
receive them.”
Other spots make for good hikes, said Corona del Mar resident
George Jeffries.
“Crystal Cove State Beach -- park in the lot near entrance and do
the circuit from along the bluff, down to the beach, and on to a
trail or steps back up to the bluff,” Jeffries said.
SAND BETWEEN THEIR TOES
The beach, too, is a place of solace of some, mayhem for others.
“My favorite spot is Little Corona beach,” said Costa Mesa Det.
Sgt. Jack Archer. It’s peaceful there. I go there by myself sometimes
just to get away from things. And I live in Riverside, so I like to
go to the beach when I can.”
A more infamous spot slams its way to the top of longtime Newport
resident Bill Sharp’s list.
“My favorite spot is the Wedge, because it’s unique,” the promoter
of big-wave surfing said. “Out of all the waves that break around the
shores of this planet, our Newport’s own Wedge is pound-for-pound one
of the most powerful and exciting that exist. And that’s made it
world-famous. I assure you, more people around the globe have heard
of the Wedge than have heard of Fashion Island.
“There are still those mighty days every now and then when the
‘freight trains’ are looming up halfway out the harbor jetty and the
crowds shift to the beach. And those special moments will inject
enough adrenaline into the system to erase the unsavory memories of
impossible parking and banging rails with clueless goofballs,
instantly reinstalling the Wedge at the top my list of favorite
places.”
The other end of Newport’s beach also has great waves that call
out to Newport-Mesa Unified School District PTA president Patty
Christiansen.
“That’s an easy one,” she said. “58th Street beach in Newport.
Great waves and fantastic ocean breezes. But, also some interesting
contrasts, such as the ugly black oil tankers offshore with the
beautiful island of Catalina on the horizon as their backdrop.
Another contrast is the dripping wet rock jetties that spear out into
the ocean, flanked by sign posts holding at least 10 signs each
warning of danger, sharp rocks, you could be killed, etc.
“My friends and I have been going down to 58th Street weekly for
what I have dubbed ‘Beach Fridays’ since my oldest son was 2. That’s
been 27 years now that we meet on the sand at 58th St. to enjoy sand,
sun, salsa (and chips, of course) and sodas.”
AWAY FROM THE CROWDS
Not every popular pick is a public place.
“My favorite thing to do occurs in a house in Costa Mesa,” said
Sue Clark of Newport Beach. “I bring my dog over to my good friend
Dave Riggle’s house, he is my spiritual mentor, and we sit in his hot
tub and watch our dogs run around and play with each other. It’s
kinda like when we used to have kids that little. I listen to his
take on life, which I very much respect, and we talk about how
grateful we are for our good lives and how we don’t even care that we
are in our 50s.
“That is my favorite thing.”
John Blom, who owns a photo studio in Corona del Mar, doesn’t
venture to far from home to reach his picture-perfect point.
“My favorite spot is the back patio of my home in Eastbluff from
where I like to watch the sun set,” he said. “It’s a place of
solitude and quiet. I work with people all the time and it’s a place
where there’s no people.”
Places to eat frequently popped up in people’s minds.
“Mine has to be the Omelet Parlor on 17th Street,” said Bo Glover
of the Environmental Nature Center. “Not a better meal nor company of
friends can be found anywhere!”
A restaurant’s ambience often proved the difference between a good
place and a great one.
“My favorite hangout is Zubie’s Chicken Coop at the corner of
Hospital Road and Old Newport Boulevard,” said Gil Lukosky, owner of
Nikki’s Flags. “The ambience there is fantastic, the food is great
and the drinks are cheap. Just the way I like it.”
Crowds don’t always prove a problem, either.
“Besides my passion for playing golf at Costa Mesa Country Club at
first light every Monday and Thursday morning, my wife and I enjoy
the Metro Pointe food court on summer weekends with friendly crowds
and live music,” said Costa Mesa Planning Commissioner Bruce Garlich.
“And we must include the OC Performing Arts Center for its sheer
magnificence!”
And sometimes plates of food and politics mix.
“The most secret “in” political hangout in Newport Beach is the
Back Bay Cafe,” said the collective political duo of Ron and Anna
Winship. “You can see the people that “really” run our city there!
When you have had enough of traditional food fare and want that one
satisfying moment of “bloated self satisfaction” it’s a trip to Benny
Hanna’s by the Airport, with those giant beer bottles....that say:
“That’s enough!” It’s one of those places you just can’t resist going
back to -- over and over again!”
Two former Piloteers picked, if you think about, similar spots.
“The Anti-Mall and Havana of course, being the cool kid that I
am,” former Newport Beach reporter Mathis Winkler said from Germany,
where he now works.
Former Editor Bill Lobdell put himself along the harbor.
“Yeah, a window table at the bar at Billy’s at the Beach, a mai
tai in hand,” he said.
Finally, for those who follow some of Costa Mesa’s lingering
issues, one last best spot is laden with irony.
“The evening view from the Bear Street bridge at South Coast
Plaza,” said Robert Graham, who has long pushed for a bridge at 19th
Street over the Santa Ana River.
* S.J. CAHN is the managing editor.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.