The hot spot
Coral Wilson
The line to the beaches along West Newport started on Newport
Boulevard on Sunday afternoon. Drivers inched forward, anxiously
waiting to dip their toes in the sand.
The parties had died down, and there were no more signs of
fireworks, but people were reluctant to let the Fourth of July
weekend end and head back to work without a last visit to the ocean.
“After all the crowds pass, it gets smooth around here,” said Joe
Cerbasi of Newport Beach, who rode in on his bike. “Nice and slow, a
slow cruising pace. Everyone is in a good mood. That’s what I’ve been
waiting for all weekend long.”
The weekend brought in good weather and a lot of visitors, a
change from the recent gloomy weather, he said.
“It’s such a change,” Cerbasi said. “You see a lot of local faces,
and the beach is not very crowded, and then the Fourth of July hits
like a smack in the face. Summer’s here.”
Crowds reached more than 100,000 by mid-afternoon, more than
Saturday’s crowd of about 70,000 and about the same number of people
at the beach on Friday, said Mark Herman, lifeguard dispatcher.
But even with the high numbers of people, rescues and injuries
were limited, involving only minor cuts and a broken ankle, he said.
“The biggest thing we worry about on the beach is the combination
of alcohol consumption and people going in the water,” lifeguard Lt.
Boyd Mickley said.
The impaired judgment that comes with intoxication and the
unpredictability of the ocean could be a dangerous combination, he
said.
Some residents said sharing the beach with thousands of visitors
can sometimes causes problems. Karl Hartmann-Hansen of Newport Beach
said he avoided coming to the beach until Sunday because of the
crowds, but dealing with the traffic and parking had been a battle
all weekend. For those reasons, he said he prefers the beach in the
wintertime.
“It gets meaner out here in the summertime,” he said. “People are
rude. It’s the vacation attitude. People want what they want when
they want it. And they want you to get of the way.”
For 10-year-old Sean Sullivan of Newport Beach, it was just
another day at the beach. He said he walks from his house regularly
to ride the waves on his boogie board. He agreed that the beach is
nicer without all the people.
“There are a lot more people,” he said. “They take up all the
water.”
While some people played in the waves and the sand, others took it
easy, watching the world go by from their homes on the sand. Jennifer
Bell, 18, from Las Vegas, said just sitting on the porch of her
family’s rental house had provided plenty of entertainment.
“It was fun watching the drunk people fall on the sand from their
bikes,” she said.
Grant Fowlie, 23, and Sanders Kievman, 55, of Los Angeles, said
they had seen it all over the weekend -- bare breasts, drugs,
fighting and people getting arrested.
“It was wild on the Fourth,” Fowlie said. “It’s been crazy. In all
the years I’ve come here, I’ve never seen so many people.”
Facing the steady stream of people on roller blades, bicycles and
on foot, Cerbasi, a bartender, said he was working all weekend and
missed all the action. About to head back to work, he said he was
unbothered by the crowds and wished he could stay on the beach all
day.
“Everyone works so hard,” he said. “With all the hustle and
bustle, everyone has to take some time to enjoy. That’s what we live
here for, I guess.”
* CORAL WILSON is the news assistant and may be reached at (949)
574-4298 or by e-mail at coral.wilson@latimes.com.
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