Back Bay deserves protection
- Share via
My relationship with the Back Bay goes back to 1962 when my family
first moved here, building a house just one street away from the
bay’s tidelands. Since then, I have spent untold hours kayaking in
her brackish waters, biking her perimeter and hiking every bluff,
slope and drainage in an effort to understand this landscape and the
animals and plants that depend on it.
During these past 40 years of informal exploration and observation
I have had many wonderful experiences on the west bay side of Upper
Newport Bay, watching burrowing owls catch grasshoppers in the open
fields, trapdoor spiders pulling prey into their secretive silk-lined
holes, gray fox pups nervously leaving the safety of their den for
the first time.
Sadly, I have also watched all of these animals, and more, slowly
disappear from the Back Bay. Each year as more and more visitors come
to the bay, the number of “volunteer” trails increase and widen,
habitat becomes more fragmented, homes for wildlife are eliminated,
and erosion into the Bay increases.
I have also spent a great deal of time in Everglades National Park
and Audubon’s Corkscrew Swamp in Florida, wetland ecosystems that
face the continuing challenge of balancing the needs of wildlife with
those of a visiting public eager to view that wildlife and recreate
close to nature. I have seen firsthand how effective well designed
boardwalks and trails can be in allowing visitors access to sensitive
wetlands without compromising the protection and restoration of that
resource.
The Back Bay faces the same set of challenges; the question is how
will we meet those challenges? Will we continue with the status quo
and watch our list of endangered species grow, as nature declines on
the west bay? Or will we follow the lead of other great parks and
create a system of boardwalks and trails that gives people the access
they want while protecting and restoring the nature they love?
JIM COKAS
Newport Beach
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.