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Heal the Bay Blog

Author: Heal the Bay

“You survived! It wasn’t the end of the world in 2012, as the Mayans presumably predicted, so we celebrated in big ways on Tuesday with our Not the End of the World Volunteer Party. There are many people to thank for making this party so successful.

First, we want to give a big thank you to Greg Seares and his team at Bodega Wine Bar for hosting our party! This swanky venue worked out perfectly, with its crooks and crannies well suited for various activities, from crafts to photos to raffle entries. And the food was amazing, as always.

Heal the Bay Volunteer Party 2013 at Bodega Wine Bar, Santa Monica - Arbor Collective SkateboardWe also have a long list of shout-outs geared to our generous sponsors who graciously donated fun raffle prizes to our dedicated volunteers. Arbor Collective donated a beautiful swallowtail skateboard, our neighbors at Starbucks gave their famous Pikes roast with a reusable tumbler, while Dive N Surf provided a beautiful Body Glove wetsuit as well as two beach towel/mat sets! 

We had some generous friends at the pier with Pacific Park donating a pair of unlimited ride passes and Santa Monica Pier Bait & Tackle coming through with gift certificates for four fishing poles and bait for a day.

REI was honored as a Super Healer for their huge support to HtB in 2012, and continued the tradition by donating multiple chances to win their camping cookware set of plates and bowls. A big thanks to Rustic Canyon Wine Bar and Huckleberry Cafe for the gift cards, Yoga Works for the complimentary one-week passes, Magicopolis for their very generous 10-ticket package to a show, and Planet Bike for the LED bicycle lighting system set. 

Not to be out-done, our crafty staffers Tara Treiber (Education Director) and Amanda Jones (Education Specialist) shared their appreciation to our cadre of volunteers, by donating prizes that they made themselves!

Thanks to our amazing volunteers for the work you do for cleaner watersheds and healthier, informed communities. Thank, thank, thank you to the sponsors who donated the space and great prizes to honor our volunteers!



When the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium asked our neighbors to help us celebrate the marine center’s 10th anniversary throughout the month of March, they jumped at the bait, creating ocean-inspired concoctions to serve in their establishments.

We’re looking forward to spending a week making our way through the signature libations and food specials at these seven Santa Monica businesses – beginning March 1st to allow time for return visits! 

Neptune's MuseThe Basement Tavern will be serving up the Green Barnacle cocktail: jalapeño and honey dew infused vodka, citrus, agave, mint, and cucumber over ice.

·      Beachy Cream Organic Ice Cream will be scooping the flavor of the month, Peanut Butter Jellyfish.

·      The Hungry Cat will be pouring Neptune’s Muse (pictured right): gin, lemon juice, simple syrup, liquore Strega, Creme de Violette, served up with a black lava salt rim.

·      Lago Santa Monica  presents the Santa Monica Starfish cocktail: fresh oro blanco grapefruit, blood orange, Tru Organic Vodka, splash of sparkling prosecco.

·      The Lobster, featuring the Heal the Bay Tide Pool: Rain organic vodka, Midori, Malibu rum, chambord, splash of pineapple and orange juice, served straight up, with 10% of the proceeds going to the Aquarium. 

·      Rusty’s Surf Ranch premieres the Rubyfish Red: Absolut Ruby Red Vodka, white grapefruit juice and grenadine, served in a souvenir Rusty’s glass. Mention the Aquarium’s anniversary and receive 10 percent off the check.

·     Mariasol Restaurant will offer a 10% discount on all food (not alcohol) for all those who mention the Aquarium’s anniversary. 

Many thanks to our 10th Anniversary Party Partners!

As we commemorate a decade operating our Aquarium, we’re highlighting our history, previewing our plans for the NEXT 10 years and encourage all to celebrate with us.

If you haven’t already, come visit our Aquarium, located beach level at the Santa Monica Pier, just below the carousel. Join us the first weekend of March to celebrate our 10-year anniversary!



We try to practice what we preach, so it’s gratifying that our Santa Monica Pier Aquarium is receiving recognition for being a green business.

The Aquarium was chosen to receive two awards — one for stewardship of the natural environment and the second for sustainable economic development — by the annual Sustainable Quality Awards program. The Santa Monica Chamber, the city’s environmental department, and Sustainable Works run the annual competition each year, acknowledging businesses in Santa Monica that have made significant achievements in the areas of sustainable economic development, social responsibility and stewardship of the natural environment.

With 19 businesses vying for the awards this year it’s a true accomplishment to receive honors in two categories. The Aquarium and the other winners will be honored at a luncheon next month. These awards will be added to the Sustainable Quality Award the marine science center received back in 2005 and our certification as a Santa Monica green business. It might be time to build a trophy case!

Sustainable Quality Awards



We need lots of support and love as we work to green our communities, whether it’s room to gather or fuel to keep us going (some of us can’t get very far with an empty stomach and no caffeine). So today we show some love to the folks who helped us make our recent Beyond Local workshops a success.

First, we thank the Talking Stick coffee lounge and the Boys and Girls Club in Venice, which graciously donated their space to this local activist workshop. Our eco-leaders-in-training also enjoyed warm beverages from our local Starbucks (which also donated items to our Beauty by the Bay fundraiser in December) and the yummy sandwiches from our newest neighbor Jersey Mikes.

MacMall proved to be an amazing holiday partner, selling microfiber cloths to their customers with proceeds benefiting Heal the Bay. Then they threw a free concert (featuring the hiphop fusion band Dirty Heads), and surprised us with the presentation of a larger-than-life-size check of the impressive proceeds. We are blown away by that amount of love! 

Now we offer a sneak peek at the month of March, when the following local establishments will partner with us to celebrate the 10th anniversary of our Aquarium!

Here’s wishing you lots of love today and beyond!

Want to REALLY green your community? Become part of the solution to ocean pollution, join our elite Speakers Bureau team!



Hundreds of sick sea lions are overwhelming marine mammal rescue centers up and down the Southern California coast this winter.

According to the Daily Breeze, it’s not uncommon for the Marine Mammal Care Center in San Pedro to see an influx of young sea lions and elephant seals during certain months of the year. But this influx—85 animals are currently being cared for—is record-setting.

“They’re coming in starving and in record numbers. Nutrition is their biggest challenge,” David Bard, operations director at the Marine Mammal Care Center, told the Daily Breeze

Now staff at the center and its Laguna Beach counterpart the Pacific Marine Mammal Center find themselves seeking help to handle the increase in dehydrated, malnourished sea lion pups.

There are many theories as to what is causing so many ill young sea lions, but overall, scientists are stumped.

“We currently do not know the reasons for the poor condition of California sea lion pups,” Sharon Melin, research biologist for NOAA in Seattle told SoCalWild.

It could be a few factors or a combination. “Starving pups at this time of year usually means that the mothers are having trouble finding enough food to support the energetic cost of lactation,” says Melin. “It could also mean that mothers are dying from disease…but we do not have evidence that suggests this is occurring.”

Want to help?

The Marine Mammal Center seeks cash donations, as well as Karo light corn syrup, safflower oil with vitamin E, household bleach and back-up electric dryer. Consult their wish list for up-to-date needs

You can also donate to local marine mammal rescue groups such as the California Wildlife Center, who have rescued over 100 sea lions so far in 2013, many of which are then transported to the Marine Mammal Care Center.



Valentine’s Day has come and gone, but it’s not too late to let us know about your love for the ocean. Post a photo, make a YouTube video, create a Vine, or write on our timeline about your love for the ocean.

We’ll send the most creative poster a pair of matching Heal the Bay T-shirts! To enter include @HealTheBay and the hashtag #ProtectWhatYouLove on your post or put it on our Facebook timeline.

Meanwhile, flowers and candy are typical Valentine’s gifts. Why not let your loved one know that you care about what they care about: The ocean.

Here’s a selection of gifts to help you show your love:

  • A Heal the Bay Membership: Like the human heart, our members fuel our activity—from ensuring that our beaches and local waters are clean to educating tens of thousands of kids on the hows and whys of combating pollution.
  • A Clean Beach: Bring your sweetie to our next Nothin’ But Sand, conveniently scheduled for the Saturday after Valentine’s at Will Rogers State Beach.
  • Whale of a Weekend: How big is your love? Celebrate the annual migration of the Pacific gray whale, which completes one of the longest migrations of any species. The migration can sometimes be seen from the west end of the Santa Monica Pier. Festivities take place at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium all weekend. 
  • Moonjelly TLC: “Adopt” a moonjelly  (or select another of our nine animal options) in your beloved’s name, via our Aquarium’s Aquadoption program.
  • A swanky reusable water bottle: Artist Erik Abel continues to support us, adding U.S.-made “Kelpafornia” aluminum water bottles to the collection of items he’s designed just for us. Fifteen percent of sales benefit Heal the Bay. 
  •  A Heartwarming View: Take a walk along the shoreline or favorite waterway, confident in knowing that you’re supporting a clean and healthy ocean.

 

Don’t see anything quite right for Valentine’s? Visit our Shop page for a wider selection.



What better time to thank the First Lady of Song, Ella Fitzgerald, than Valentine week. Find a recording of Ella singing “My Funny Valentine,” you’ll soon discover what we mean….

But we love Ella for more than just her three-octave range. We also love Ella because a few years before she passed away in 1996, she formed the Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation to help create educational opportunities for children.

Her foundation recently funded resources for our “Lunch ‘n Learn” field trip program (pictured left) to help foster a love of the ocean in students from regional schools. Each year, Heal the Bay provides marine education through Lunch ‘n Learn to 500 underserved Title 1 students, bussing them to Duke’s Malibu for a day of beach exploration and learning games.

Although we live in Southern California, winter mornings at the shore can still be chilly. We’d like to thank Venice Ale House owner Tom Elliot for serving free hot coffee to our Nothin’ But Sand volunteers who’d gathered in January to clean up Venice Beach.( Some of us at Heal the Bay also appreciate the spirit-warming benefits of Venice Ale House’s selection of craft beers… one pint at a time!)

White sharks off our California coast are safer now, thanks to your advocacy efforts. We are grateful to all of you who signed and shared our petition supporting the listing of the Northeastern Pacific population of white sharks as endangered or threatened. Yesterday, the Fish and Game Commission unanimously voted this population of white shark to candidacy under the CA Endangered Species Act. This is an exciting decision! Thank you for your support!

Learn more about our science-based educational efforts. Lunch’ n Learn is just the beginning!

Warm your heart and come to our next Nothin But Sand beach cleanup on Saturday, February 16, 10 a.m.-Noon at Will Rogers State Beach.

 



In a step towards better understanding whether our local white shark population needs protection, the Fish and Game Commission unanimously advanced the Northeastern Pacific population of white shark to candidacy on February 6 under the California Endangered Species Act. This means that Department of Fish and Wildlife staff will spend the next year collecting data and assessing whether a threatened or endangered species listing is merited for this species.

As a wide-roaming, apex predator, it’s hard to get a strong understanding of white shark population estimates and trends. Some studies estimate that the adult population count in the Northeastern Pacific is in the hundreds of individuals, while other research shows that numbers may be on the increase in the past few years. White sharks are slow to mature and reproduce, so changes at the population level can take time.

Southern California is an important spot for juvenile white sharks. They’ve been spotted off Redondo and Sunset Beaches as well as Malibu, and some have even been caught by anglers in the Bay – most recently off Venice Pier and Manhattan Beach Pier. But, they are vulnerable to ongoing threats, such as incidental catch, pollution, and other issues along our coast, and we don’t have a comprehensive sense of how their population is faring.  This effort over the next year will help better understand how these sharks are doing in our local waters and throughout their range, and identify any protection that may be needed.

Stay tuned for updates and how you can engage. Meanwhile, keep your eyes on the water – you might just be lucky enough to spot one of these elusive elasmobranchs.

– Sarah Sikich

Coastal Resources Director, Heal the Bay

Want to learn more about these mysterious creatures? Join us for Shark Sundays at our Santa Monica Pier Aquarium.



“We were so ready for this because the teachers at the Aquarium made us comfortable with being in the real ocean. We knew we were safe.”

So said one of my middle school students after snorkeling last spring at the Catalina Island Marine Institute (CIMI).

I had wondered how my young student scientists would respond. Would they cringe away from the speeding seals, flee in terror from the bloody sight of top smelt being devoured, or be thrilled to their very marrow at the physical proximity of wild marine mammals?

As three young harbor seals closely tore through our group of swimmers, in pursuit of the bait ball we ourselves had been trailing, my heart warmed as my young scientists responded with wonder and awe instead of fear or confusion. Joy, tempered with an accurate understanding of ocean food webs, had prepared them, quite literally, to dive deeply into marine science with an invigorating boldness that belied their youth. My adolescent students relished this potentially scary encounter, despite the cold water, sense of risk, and hard work such experiential learning can entail because they had personal experience of the ocean and strong content knowledge gained through frequent visits to the Heal the Bay’s Santa Monica Pier Aquarium.

As I reflect on 10 years of teaching and learning in partnership with the stellar staff at Heal the Bay’s pier aquarium, my student’s acquisition of this knowledge based confidence, experience based competence, and persistent engagement with Southern California’s marine environments is the most obvious reward. However, this yearly educational series offered by Aquarium staff to my students at Santa Monica Alternative School House, is merely the tip of a large iceberg. Heal the Bay staff have cheerfully deployed their generous souls again and again when confronted with young people who needed lessons more important then genus and species names.

Four brief examples make it clear that marine science is just one of this talented staff’s specialties: Heal the Bay Education Director Tara Treiber acted as a personal mentor to two young girls who were “lost” in some adult’s estimation. She found places for them to intern, followed their progress, and poured a current of caring over them, washing them safely back in the direction of health and productivity. Both are thriving in their schools now and one of the two has taking up scuba diving so she may remain close to the ocean she professes to love. A better example of “just in time” mentoring of adolescents could not be found, as this was definitively a turning point for these girls. Viewed from the comfortable perspective of time, a turning point that turned positive! The girl’s parents would tell you that the relationships formed at the Aquarium with the people of Heal the Bay “saved” them.

Nick Fash [Aquarium Education Specialist] is cited by at least three former students as the inspiration for their marine biology related majors at college. A fourth student now at Georgetown is considering environmental law, similarly influenced by Heal the Bay’s philosophy of science-based activism and his experience testifying at public hearings. Amanda Jones’ (also an Aquarium educator) teaching continues to elicit promises from perennially distracted and rowdy 8th graders to make “perfect choices” as she makes things “so interesting.”

Three teenage girls still covered in the mud, scratches, and grime from plant removal activities in the Malibu Creek watershed vowed to be “to be scientists just like Sarah Sikich [Heal the Bay’s Coastal Resources Director].” Personal generosity, woven into professional people of accomplishment, who care far beyond their job descriptions, is central to my experience of partnering with the Aquarium over the last 10 years and a magnificent starting point for considering the next 10. I would swim with these fine people anywhere!

Next, I’ll share some of the stories of science-based activism that my students and Heal the Bay have partnered on over the years.

— Kurt Holland, middle school teacher at SMASH

As we commemorate a decade operating our Aquarium, we’re highlighting our history as well as previewing our plans for the NEXT 10 years.

If you haven’t already, come visit our Aquarium, located on the Santa Monica Pier, just below the carousel. Join us the first weekend of March to celebrate our 10-year anniversary!



Of course I knew about the Los Angeles River. Growing up for a few years right next to the huge concrete channel and biking near Griffith Park where it is lush and green, I had seen the L.A. River be both storm drain ditch and real natural river. But these two faces, these two memories were separated by more than 10 years of living, and there are few things more enlightening like learning the context, the backstory of the places we thought we were already familiar with. 

This past Sunday, on the recommendation of a coworker, I took the “Tour the L.A. River” tour hosted by Jenny Price and organized by Hidden Los Angeles.  Jenny Price is an environmental writer and longtime advocate of river revitalization efforts. Hidden LA was started by Lynn Garrett as an effort to break down the stereotype of LA as characterless city with no beauty or depth – a perspective sometimes promulgated by us Angelenos.

The tour is a  nine-stop, 40-mile tour by carpool caravan, down local side streets and sometimes shady parking spots. At each stop, Jenny Price gives history and context of the river as it flows down from its headwaters through both concrete-channels and soft-bottom, natural spaces.

“Think of your favorite place to visit, think of your favorite place to eat,” Jenny begins.  “None of those places, none of us, in fact would be here if it wasn’t for the L.A. River. Yet people still laugh at the notion that L.A. has a real river.”

Jenny also makes sure to dispel common myths.  “L.A. is not a desert!”  Sure, we have a Mediterranean and semi-arid climate, but when the Spanish came to the basin from the north they found what they described as a ‘lush green valley’, ideal for agriculture and perfect to establish a settlement.”  Quite a bit different from the hazy city-skyline and congested freeways we normally imagine when we think of our city.

The L.A. River is the reason the city exists, its waters were the life-blood that nurtured the city’s growth. Yet for all our dependence, as a whole we treat it as an outcast, good only as a movie lot or watery trash chute ending at the ocean –L.A.’s pariah.

But there is hope, the designation by the EPA in 2010 of the river as a “traditional navigable waterway”, has opened a series of regulatory enforcement that means city, state and federal agencies must begin to treat the river like any other natural river and not simply a flood control channel.

During the tour, Jenny pointed out the projects that are part of the larger LA City’s River Revitalization Master Plan, a plan designed to rehabilitate LA communities by revitalizing the river, creating value, capturing community opportunities and greening neighborhoods. One of the stops, Marsh Park, was engineered to double as a stormwater infiltration zone, capturing runoff from the nearby neighborhoods treating and infiltrating the water instead of dumping it directly into the river. We also stopped at Maywood Riverfront park, where Jenny talked about the great environmental and economic benefits revitalizing the river can bring to park starved neighborhoods such as Maywood.   Amongst our group was Cassie Gardener of East Yards Communities for Environmental Justice who talked about the disproportionate health effects on inland communities from the major freeway (I-710) and nearby transportation corridor (Alameda Corridor).

Under a similar vision of bridging environmental and social issues, Heal the Bay is endeavoring a similar project in South LA. The WAYS Reading and Fitness Park is designed to be a multi-benefit park that will serve as an outdoor classroom, community green space, fitness area, and a water quality improvement project for the watershed and for a community that is already desperately lacking park space.

Our tour ended with a visit to the Dominguez Gap Wetlands, a roughly mile-long stretch of wetland habitat project of the LA County Flood Control District designed to “return important ecological functions of water quality improvement, wildlife habitat, and aquifer recharge to the urban lower Los Angeles River.”  Nearing the end of the day, a walk along mile-long stretch of native and aquatic plants and water is striking reminder of what the concrete channel it runs alongside must have looked like to the settlers of the valley. Watching the lush Dominguez Gap wetlands rub shoulders with the concrete L.A. river was a strikingly succinct summary of the whole tour.

Walking along the river sometimes we walked along sunlit jogging paths with native California sage, and sometimes we walked down dirty foreboding tunnels underneath roaring train tracks.

We’ve treated the river well, poorly, and even worse at different places.  Revitalizing the LA River is about breathing life into the heart that connects all of Los Angeles, and ultimately about revitalizing our own communities and collectively our city.

Thanks go out to Jenny Price and Hidden LA for organizing an eye-opening and fantastic trip down history and time.  I highly recommend taking the tour yourself and ultimately doing what Jenny asked of us who took the tour that day: “Tell someone about the river! Tell them to come and see it for themselves.”

Stephen Mejia

Heal the Bay’s Urban Programs Coordinator

Come to the Los Angeles River Center March 5-19 for Heal the Bay’s Speakers Bureau training and help spread the word about solutions to pollution.