Building castles on the beach
Marisa O’Neil
On Saturday, Corona del Mar celebrated its first 100 years in the place where it all began -- the beach.
The Big Corona Beach Party featured sandcastles, boats, music and
plenty of food to amuse locals and visitors. The setting was
appropriate because the city’s history began along its coastline,
said Peggy Fort, executive director of the Centennial Foundation.
“The beach is one of our greatest natural resources,” Fort said.
“It’s one of the most beautiful parts of Corona del Mar and it’s a
great place to celebrate.”
The day started off with a sandcastle-building contest on the
shores of Big Corona. By 2 p.m., dozens of sand structures, including
mermaids, whales and two octopi playing checkers, dotted the beach
for more than 100 yards.
Bob Lank’s amateur sandcastle-building group called the Sandcrabs,
made up of his family and friends, entered three Halloween-themed
pieces. One of them, an elaborate, 6-foot-high spooky castle called
the “Transylvania Beach Club” won the grand prize.
They also built a Woody-style hearse with surfboards on top and a
sculpture of Count Dracula, Frankenstein, the Creature from the Black
Lagoon and a mummy sunbathing on the sand.
“We like doing this because it’s a great way to be with your
family,” Lank said.
Ava McKenzie, 4, and her 3-year-old sister, Alyssa, preferred the
giant mermaid sculpture to the creepy stuff. They came down to the
beach to see the castles and dig in the sand themselves with their
parents and their baby sister, Sasha.
“It’s fun to come down here when something like this is going on,”
their mother, Heather McKenzie said.
As the sun started setting and a slight coastal chill set in, they
weren’t sure if they’d stay on the beach for the fireworks show. But,
Heather McKenzie said they planned to watch it from their home atop
the hill.
The show was scheduled to be 20 minutes long and planned to
include more shells than even the Newport Dunes’ July 4 fireworks
show, which lasts an hour, Fort said. The fireworks would be set off
at the end of the jetty over the ocean, and the entrance to Newport
Harbor would be closed for the first time ever while the rockets went
off, she said.
But despite the fanfare and pyrotechnics, some beachgoers still
prefer the simple things. Laguna Hills resident Greg O’Donnell
brought his three young sons to the beach for the celebration, but
their favorite thing involved the beach’s natural beauty.
“They just really like climbing on the rocks,” O’Donnell said.
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