Building blocks of fun
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Bryce Alderton
Spray a little bit of water and pack some sand. Take a scalpel to
carve an alligator’s fingers, Shrek’s eyelids in the sand or the scales
that emerge on a dragon’s back.
From ogres to pyramids to dogs, sandcastle builders worked feverishly
in the three hours they had Sunday afternoon to create masterpieces in
the sand on Big Corona State Beach in the 40th annual Sandcastle Contest.
And although there were awards given, most contestants entered the
contest for the fun of it and to spend time with family, friends,
neighbors, and co-workers.
Some groups drove from as far away as Covina, Yorba Linda, and Upland
to participate in the event presented by the Commodores Club of the
Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce.
Covina resident Alvin Ko, 28, worked with his girlfriend, Yeegee
Castillo, 26, on The “Swamp Surfin’ USA” entry that eventually won first
place sand sculpture in the master’s category.
When asked how he felt about winning, Ko smiled and shrugged, “It’s
OK.”
Ko is a landscape architect who came up with the design for
Tustin-based Greenberg Farrow Architecture’s entry that depicts an
alligator taking a bite out of a surfboard with the surfer’s leg and arm
underneath the board.
“The most important part is the sprayers. If [the sand] gets dry, it
will just crumble,” Castillo said. “Luckily the sun isn’t out today.”
Irvine resident Dan Hoffman is an architect in the firm and said the
group had four or five ideas, but said the decision to build the
alligator was based on “conductibility.”
“‘We had some other fun ideas, but they would have been hard to
build,” Hoffman said.
Linda Vick remembers coming to the sandcastle contest and wanted to
relive the experience again, helping her friend Judy Shade and Michael
Merino Architects design its “Frog Eats Bug” entry that eventually won
second place for the master’s sand sculpture category.
Joel Segura of Michael Merino Architects was covered in sand and
pulled a bucket of water toward the Volkswagen Bug they were creating.
“We just came up with the idea this morning,” Segura said. “We wanted
to come up with something original.”
Shrek’s head and hands rose from the sand as the Paz and Byrne
families put the finishing touches on the recent movie ogre. Shrek’s
eyebrows were made out of seaweed the children fetched early Sunday
morning.
“We just sent the kids out this morning to get the seaweed,’ said
Blythe Paz.
The Paz and Byrne families, from Yorba Linda and Upland respectably,
have been making the trip to Corona del Mar State Beach for the contest
for three years.
Andy Paz welcomed the chance for the families to get together.
“We try to do many different outings as a group; we’re pretty close,”
Paz said. “[The design] was a joint effort. We were sitting at a table
and wanted something that would be challenging and something kids could
identify with.”
Kids stopped at nearly every castle or sculpture Sunday, gazing in
amazement and joy as the builders rushed to finish their creations by the
2 p.m. deadline.
Entries entered either the castle or sculpture category.
Blossoming from the sand grew the semblance of a medieval castle in
the form of the “40 Peaks For 40 Years” entry, which won first place in
the non-masters category for sandcastles.
The Africano family and friends used coffee cups, buckets, knives and
brass tools Marc Africano made to sculpt their castle.
Corona del Mar resident Greg Bonano watched Marc Africano write
“Devon” in the sand in front of the castle.
Devon is the girl to which the castle is dedicated. The family didn’t
want to mention much more than she is sick but healing and is a neighbor
in the Huntington Beach neighborhood Marc Africano and wife Michelle live
with their two children, Colton and Casey.
Marc Africano often takes his kids to Newport Pier to build castles
because “the sand is the best.”
“My son loves building [castles]. Look at all the smiles,” Africano
said. “This is one of the only things I do that’s a win-win situation
because it’s with my kids.”
The overall best winner was a sculpture titled “Working Lunch,” built
by the Weldon/McCool group.
The group members also designed an alligator with a person’s leg in
its mouth.
Another entry, titled “Welcome to Florida,” centered on the current
string of shark attacks in Florida and had a shark’s mouth open wide with
a swimmer’s leg sticking out.
“It was just for fun, we’re at the beach and it’s timely,” said Ray
Bullard, a 26-year-old architect with Thirtieth Street Architects of
Newport Beach, which came up with the design.
The most humorous award was given to “Melts in Your Mouth,” built by
the KTGY Group, depicting an M&M; relaxing.
* Bryce Alderton is the news assistant. He may be reached at (949)
574-4298 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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