Huntington Beach Wetlands

A great place to visit and let the world go away!

Time For A Walk In The Wetlands

A recently opened tidal inlet at Bolsa Chica Wetlands, a multi-million dollar project, is helping restore this wetlands to its earlier state in which fresh salt water ebbs and flows daily from the ocean into the wetlands. In the fall and winter seasons, Lesser Scaups, Red-Breasted Mergansers, Ruddy Ducks and Common Loons come to visit. Tours are given on Saturday mornings, through several groups. Call the Amigos de Bolsa Chica (714) 840-1575 for tour information. A new trend in tourism involves participatory activities. If this is your thing, you can help clean up the Wetlands and make local friends on your visit to Huntington Beach. Saturday clean ups are sponsored by the Bolsa Chica Conservancy (714) 846-1114.

Walking The Wetlands
April and the sky was clear and cool

Walking The Wetlands
Great maps of what to look for in the wetlands

Walking The Wetlands
Sue's hair is blowing in the wind!

Did you know? - A wetland is an area of land whose soil is saturated with moisture either permanently or seasonally. Such areas may also be covered partially or completely by shallow pools of water. Wetlands include swamps, marshes, and bogs, among others. The water found in wetlands can be saltwater, freshwater, or brackish.  Wetlands are considered the most biologically diverse of all ecosystems.

Walking The Wetlands
So close to "civilization"

Did you know? - Due to their lack of potential financial benefits, wetlands have historically been the victim of large-scale draining efforts for real estate development, or flooding for use as recreational lakes.
Wetlands provide a valuable flood control function, building levees help replace natural flood controls. Wetlands were very effective at filtering and cleaning water, so to help with the ever increasing challenge of decreasing water pollution (often from agricultural runoff from the farms that replaced the wetlands in the first place), millions of dollars have been invested on water purification plants and expensive remediation measures.

The USA came to understand how biologically productive wetlands are, so the USA passed laws limiting wetlands destruction, and created requirements that if a wetland had to be drained, developers at least had to offset the loss by creating artificial wetlands.

Walking The Wetlands
Many specials of plants and animals are but a few feet away

Walking The Wetlands
How far can she walk? Miles and miles

Walking The Wetlands
Birds everywhere

Walking The Wetlands
Off she goes in a cloud of smoke and a hardy "Hi Yo Silver"

Walking The Wetlands
Trying to stay warm

Walking The Wetlands

Walking The Wetlands
Water flow is essential in the wetlands

Walking The Wetlands
Good solid engineering everywhere

Did you know? -  Once part of a 165,000 acre Spanish land grant, the Bolsa Chica presently consists of approximately 1550 acres of undeveloped coastal wetland and adjacent upland areas. Native Americans once lived on the upland mesas, gathering shellfish and other edibles from the wetlands. In 1900, the tidal nature of the wetland was essentially destroyed when the natural ocean inlet to the wetland was closed to improve duck hunting. Since then, the area has been used for agriculture, cattle grazing, military coastal artillery emplacements and oil production.

In 1973, as part of a controversial land swap, the State of California acquired approximately 300 acres of wetlands adjacent to Pacific Coast Highway. A portion of this was restored by the state in 1979 to become the Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve. The remaining acreage was retained in private hands. Planning for the construction of a massive marina, commercial and residential development was quickly underway. The plan was drastically reduced in 1989 through the settlement of a lawsuit filed by the Amigos.

In 1997 the state acquired 880 acres of Bolsa Chica wetlands and another 41 acres was acquired in 2005, bringing public ownership of the Bolsa Chica to over 1200 acres. Wetland restoration of nearly 600 acres of Bolsa Chica was begun in 2004.

In the summer of 2006 seawater flowed into the restored wetland for the first time in over 100 years. The Bolsa Chica wetland restoration was the largest coastal wetland restorations ever undertaken in Southern California.

Walking The Wetlands
Keeping societies junk out of the wetlands is a full time job

Walking The Wetlands
The mountains are 70+ miles away

Walking The Wetlands
New plants

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Keeping people out

Walking The Wetlands

Walking The Wetlands
Back in the carriage to head for home

Walking The Wetlands
A good exercise and a lot of fun