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Heal the Bay Blog

Category: Santa Monica

Santa Monica, California located in Los Angeles County is a popular eco-friendly coastal destination for families, couples, tourists and Southern California beachgoers.

Two avid surfers have set sail on a two-week expedition in a 22-foot, all-electric boat down the Californian and Mexican coasts. Their mission: Survey the health of the Southern California’s ocean waters and raise awareness about plastics in the sea.

Mark Ward and Billy Dutton will take water samples throughout L.A. County and share them with Heal the Bay. Amanda Griesbach, water quality scientist at Heal the Bay, trained Mark and Billy to analyze and report on water conditions each day.

“Taking these samples helps Heal the Bay because Mark and Billy will be testing the water far from shore,” says Griesbach. “Our monitoring compliance samples are collected close to the shore in ankle-depth water. Mark and Billy will be out where people swim and surf. It’ll be interesting to see if there’s consistency, or if the bacterial pollution in problem areas dilutes that far from shore.”

Mark and Billy will discuss their “Riding Currents” expedition on October 10 at 6 p.m. at the California Yacht Club, 4469 Admiralty Way in Marina Del Rey. Contact: 310.823.4567

Follow them on Facebook.

Track their journey.

Interested in how clean L.A. waters really are? Consult Heal the Bay’s Beach Report Card. Know before you go.



On Friday, October 5, Heal the Bay supporters and staffers packed a Metropolitan Water District meeting room to lend our voices to the fight to keep strong stormwater protections in place throughout Southern California.

Thanks to those of you who came to the “Take L.A. By Storm” hearing, for taking time to share your testimony with the Regional Board. Your words were powerful and effective in letting officials know that the Los Angeles community supports swimming and fishing in safe waters.

In addition, the NRDC and LA Waterkeeper as well as experts Rich Horner, Jenny Jay, and Mark Gold, and a diverse cross-section of people (mothers, divers, NGOs, surfers, beachgoers and ocean lovers) presented robust testimony. All wore buttons declaring: “I support a strong permit.”

While we won’t know until November 8 how the board will rule on the push by many cities to weaken existing pollution limits, we felt we made progress on key elements of the permit, including Public Participation, Low Impact Development and Monitoring. However, due to the concerns raised by a coalition of cities that will be regulated under the permit, the Board is also contemplating a proposal to weaken the permit by allowing something other than strong numeric limits for receiving waters ‑‑ our waterways.

To those of you who couldn’t make the hearing, but who lent your support by either signing our petition or providing moral fortitude, we also thank YOU!

You would have been proud to hear the AP environmental science students from Apex Academy in Hollywood (pictured, below) share their love for clean water. “We have to protect what we have,” one 15-year-old testified. “We can’t live without water. We have to take care of it.”

Apex Students at MS4 Hearing

Sign up for our Action Alerts to stay up to date on the Take L.A. by Storm campaign as we continue to push for numeric, enforceable limits. Or follow us on Twitter for real-time updates with the hashtags #LAbyStorm and #CleanWater.

Help us sustain our fight for clean water. Donate now.



One of the many joys of working at Heal the Bay is making new friends and partners in our community.

Green Vets LAWe’d long known Green Vets Los Angeles (pictured right) for their durable reusable bags, so when it came time for us to replace our worn out beach cleanup bags (to carry our tents, flags and other items), we knew whom to call! Their team came through big time, sewing and customizing military-worthy carryables. We can’t wait to debut our new collection at our next Nothin’ But Sand on October 20. Plus, it feels good to know that we are supporting job training for veterans, both injured and non-injured as they readjust to life here at home.

We mostly know Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks because we love her music!  (“Lullaby” anyone?) However, we were recently lucky enough to receive a contribution from the singer to help us protect the ocean. Thank you, Natalie!

Big thanks to the Ford Motor Company for including Heal the Bay in their Community Changes program. Get your next oil change through this program at one of four local dealerships (it doesn’t matter what make of car you drive) and name your price. Whatever amount you choose to pay will go directly to Heal the Bay. Register here.

UMeTime provided a respite to the freeways this past weekend when the local app developer donated proceeds from their Carmageddon pub crawl to further our work. Thank you!

To celebrate the Fall Equinox, Naam Yoga hosted a free beach yoga session on September 30 and included us in their community circle. Om-m-m. And to keep the yogi spirit going, don’t forget to order a tank or tee-shirt from Honu Yoga and they’ll donate 20% to Heal the Bay!

Check back next week to see whom we’ll thank!

Want to see your name here? You and/or your company can also help support Heal the Bay’s work to keep our local waters healthy and clean. Learn how.



The baby swell shark at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium was developing in its egg for exactly one year when it broke free of the egg casing on Monday, October 1, 2012. For one whole year the tiny shark grew in its egg, living off a yolk, on display for the Aquarium’s thousands of guests to see. The baby shark occasionally squirmed enough to shake its egg casing, often called a “mermaids purse” by beachcombers. Starting the cycle all over again, two new shark eggs have been laid in the last 24 hours.

The shark nursery is now bursting with life. Plan your visit to the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium.

These new eggs and the baby shark, called a pup, need a sponsor.  Sponsor the shark pup through Aquadoption.

Swell Shark Pup



Are you a take-charge kind of person? Do you enjoy hearing your voice boom out over a megaphone? Have a passion for finding solutions to pollution? Then you might be a potential beach cleanup captain.

Beach Captains help orchestrate cleanup events each third Saturday of the month called Nothin’ But Sand. Captains help guide volunteers, address the audience via a cool megaphone, handle registration, safety and supplies. They are Heal the Bay’s face to the public at our monthly events.

If interested, contact Eveline Bravo-Ayala. Volunteers must attend orientation and training (and be a little bossy).

Orientation:

Nov. 12, 2012, 7-9 p.m.
Heal the Bay office

Training:

Nov. 17, 2012, 9 a.m.-Noon
Will Rogers State Beach



October is National Seafood Month, and it’s time to celebrate our favorite fishy foods, but also to reflect on how best to select the food we put on our plates.

Each time we go to a supermarket or restaurant we are confronted with a choice about what food items to buy. Concerns over mercury levels and a growing desire to eat local, sustainable foods have made this decision harder than ever.

Salmon? What exactly does this mean when you read it on a menu?  The truth is that it could be farmed or wild, and any one of six different fishes from two different genera from opposite ends of the Earth.  Not so simple anymore, huh?  Let me help you out a bit. 

There are two basic types of salmon: Atlantic and Pacific.  The Atlantic salmon is in the genus Salmo and originally came from the Atlantic Ocean (I say originally as they are now farmed all over the world).  These fish hatch in freshwater rivers and then head to the ocean to grow and mature.  Once they are ready to spawn, they will swim back up the river from which they came, spawn, then head back out into the ocean.  They may repeat this process several times over their lifespan. 

Pacific salmon, on the other hand, are in the genus Oncorhynchus, and come from the Pacific Ocean.  Unlike their Atlantic Ocean cousins, they die after their one and only spawning event, and this is where the trouble begins.  All farmed salmon is Atlantic salmon, and it is now farmed all over the world including places like Chile and British Columbia (read “Pacific Ocean”). 

Not only are these salmon farms destroying the ecosystem with all of the waste they produce and all of the diseases and parasites they harbor, but on occasion the Atlantic salmon will escape and make their way into the same rivers to spawn as the native Pacific salmon, where they can outcompete the single spawning Pacific salmon, as well as disrupt the delicate arctic ecosystem they have invaded.  When the Pacific salmon die, their bodies’ nutrients are released into the nutrient-deprived arctic, beginning the explosion of life that occurs in the arctic during the spring and summer months.  Without these nutrients the arctic ecosystem would be unable to function properly.

Furthermore, the healthy omega-3 fatty acids are virtually nonexistent in farmed salmon.  They are fed a pellet of chicken parts, corn, and ground up fish, amongst other things, instead of the omega-3 rich marine crustaceans they consume in the wild.  Also, farmed salmon is dyed its typical bright orange or else it would be an unappetizing drab gray.  There are a host of other reasons why farmed salmon should never ever wind up on your plate, and I will be happy to inform you further if you still need more reasons to avoid this poor excuse for natures mighty wild salmon.

So when looking for salmon, always make sure that it is wild Alaskan.  Not only is it much healthier for you, but it tastes so much better and is not destroying our ocean ecosystem.

–Aquarium Education Specialist (and avid fisherman), Nick Fash

 

Sustainable seafood choices are available at Heal the Bay partners, including the local Santa Monica Seafood and your neighborhood Whole Foods Market.

Find more seafood facts at fishwatch.gov



Angelenos are once again being asked to stay off the roads this weekend as Caltrans closes a portion of the 405 freeway to demolish the north side of the Mulholland Drive Bridge. The second phase of the mega project, known as Carmageddon, inspired staff at our Santa Monica Pier Aquarium to remind locals to visit our locals – of the marine life variety,that is! Programs manager Tara Crow put a blanket invite out on Facebook to the Westside crowd. She even went the extra mile (surface streets only), designing her own Carmegeddon logo:

Carmaquarium!

“What you doin’ this weekend Westside? ” Tara wrote. “Avoid the traffic and come hang out with the local sealife at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium between 12:30-5 p.m. We’ll have shark feeding, story times, crafts, puppets and all sorts of other activities to keep you busy.”

Facebook fans bit – and raised her one –taking liberties with a Boy George hit of the 80’s. (Full disclosure here: the opening lines of the chorus were re-written by my husband, which prompted our education director Tara Treiber to rework the lyrics to the second half of the chorus. Sing along with their combined efforts: “Carma-carma-carma carma carma-aquarium–with fish that glow, fish that glow, Swimming would be easy if your seaweed were like my dreams – red, brown and green, red, brown and gre-e-e-een.”)

So hum a few bars and make your way to the Aquarium this weekend for a rockin’ good time beneath the Pier. We’ll even reward you with a free Heal the Bay wristband and a sticker for your bumper!

-Randi Parent, Outreach Manager at Heal the Bay’s Santa Monica Pier Aquarium



Every day Heal the Bay’s dedicated staff gets to do what they love—whether it’s introducing a kid to the ocean, alerting beachgoers to avoid unhealthy water or galvanizing support for solutions to pollution. But none of our work would be possible without the financial support from people like you who care as much as we do about the health of our local waters.

We want to share the gratitude we feel everyday, so today we want to say “thank you” to:

 

Wells Fargo participated in a fundraising Chili Cookoff!

  • Our friends at KROQ-FM, who for the past few years have contributed nearly a quarter million dollars to HtB through proceeds from Weenie Roast ticket sales.
  • Heal the Bay board member Paul Stimpfl, Senior Vice President at Wells Fargo Capital Finance in Santa Monica, and Nichol Stuart who raised funds for Heal the Bay at Wells Fargo via the company’s “Good Works Program” and a chili cookoff (pictured right)! 
  • The folks at UMeTime who not only threw our volunteers a party at Coastal Cleanup Day, but also donated funds raised from their app’s launch party during Venice Art Crawl. And, wait, there’s more! The Silicon Beach company is also donating entrance fees from this weekend’s Carmaggedon II Pub Crawl in Santa Monica to help further our work.
  • Corporate Healers Wells Fargo, PVH Corp. (pictured top left) and Disney whose employee volunteers recently came and cleaned up local beaches while building team spirit at the same time.
  • The stylish yogis at Honu Yoga who are currently selling beautifully-designed turtle T-shirts with 20% of proceeds benefiting Heal the Bay.
  • Members of PHINS Water Sports Club who are raising money for Heal the Bay this Saturday at their first annual Catalina Charity Row.

Check back next week to see whom we’ll thank!

Want to see your name here? You and/or your company can also help support Heal the Bay’s work to keep our local waters healthy and clean. Learn how.



Congratulations Julia Louis-Dreyfus on winning your third Emmy® award last night. The Heal the Bay family is fortunate to have you as a board member!

Julia earned her latest Emmy for her performance on HBO’s Veep. She won her other two awards for playing Elaine on Seinfeld and the title character on The New Adventures of Old Christine.

But here’s our favorite of Julia’s versatile performances: Her address to the Los Angeles City Council before it approved a ban on plastic bags earlier this year.

“What is hideously ugly, gigantically dangerous and outrageously expensive, and yet we still use it every single day in Los Angeles? No, it is not the 405. It is plastic bags,” Julia said in public comment.

Whether she’s lending her star power to our annual Bring Back the Beach gala, advocating for clean water issues in publicity interviews or lending her voice at city council meetings, Julia remains down-to-earth and charming no matter the task.

As the actress recently told an interviewer: “I have taken my so-called celebrity and occasionally spent it down on causes or things that I’m passionate about. I’m not running for office. I’m not a scientist. But I’m a concerned citizen.”

Watch Julia crack up Los Angeles City Council members during her testimony in support of the plastic bag ban.

Emmy winners aren’t the only people who can support Heal the Bay’s work. You can too! Join us today.



Despite scorching temperatures, Southlanders showed up in droves on Saturday to pick up nearly 20 tons of ocean-bound debris as part of Heal the Bay’s 23rd annual Coastal Cleanup Day.

From Agoura Hills to Wilmington, 9,323 Angelenos worked together to protect what they love, scouring local beaches, inland waterways, regional parks and urban neighborhoods from 9 a.m. to noon.

 Heal the Bay’s efforts spanned 58 sites and 56 miles, mobilizing volunteers from local corporations, service groups, faith-based organizations, school clubs and youth sports teams who worked in tandem to gather and remove 38,598 pounds of debris. Cigarette butts, plastic bottles and caps, snack-food packaging, plastic bags and Styrofoam fragments were among the most frequently found items at cleanups.

 Among the unusual objects found at the September 15 cleanups: a dead rooster with its head cut off, likely a remnant of a voodoo or Santeria ritual (Santa Monica Beach); a dead cat found in a bag (Ken Malloy Harbor Regional Park); a rifle barrel, later confiscated by police (Torrance Beach). And in the “Only in L.A.” file: a tattered headshot of an aspiring actor found by divers on the sea bottom near the Santa Monica Pier.

Read our news release for more details.

If you missed Coastal Cleanup Day, no worries! Heal the Bay hosts monthly cleanups, every third Saturday 10 a.m.-Noon. Learn more.

Still feeling left out? Donations fuel our cleanups. Just $20 can help run a cleanup site in your neighborhood. Donate now.