GrokSurf's San Diego

Local observations on water, environment, technology, law & politics

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    GrokSurf's San Diego by George J. Janczyn is produced under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License. Anything on this blog copied and used elsewhere online must include attribution and a link to the original on this blog, or a citation with the URL if reprinted on hard copy.

     

     

Archive for March, 2010

Monday is World Water Day

Posted by George J. Janczyn on March 21, 2010

“The international observance of World Water Day is an initiative that grew out of the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) in Rio de Janeiro.

The United Nations General Assembly designated 22 March of each year as the World Day for Water by adopting a resolution.This world day for water was to be observed starting in 1993, in conformity with the recommendations of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development contained in chapter 18 (Fresh Water Resources) of Agenda 21.

States were invited to devote the Day to implement the UN recommendations and set up concrete activities as deemed appropriate in the national context.

The Subcommittee welcomes the assistance offered by IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre to contribute to an information network centre in support of the observance of the Day by Governments, as required.” (from the World Water Day website)

Click here for information about San Diego’s Walk for Water observance

Ever-insightful, Emily Green looks askance at such namedays:

“Who in their right mind thought, “Hey, we’re wrecking the world. I’ve got an idea! Let’s name a special day (week, year) … How about we grow up, fire the event organizers and get down to 365 programs that actually work?” (click here for the entire opinion)

 

Posted in Water | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

California Ocean Wastewater Discharge Report

Posted by George J. Janczyn on March 21, 2010

 

Posted in Environment, Water | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Reminder: landscape watering restrictions are still in effect

Posted by George J. Janczyn on March 20, 2010

Now that things are drying up after the rains and more precipitation in the immediate future looks iffy, people are probably thinking about watering their landscaping (you haven’t watered at all since December, right?).

Don’t forget the rules for landscape irrigation that are still in effect:

Landscape irrigation is limited to no more than three assigned days per week. Those days are:

* Homes with odd-numbered addresses can water: Sunday, Tuesday & Thursday
* Homes with even-numbered addresses can water: Saturday, Monday & Wednesday
* Apartments, Condos and Businesses can water: Monday, Wednesday & Friday

Until May 31, you may only water before 10 a.m. or after 4 p.m. Landscape irrigation using sprinklers is limited to no more than seven minutes maximum per watering station per assigned day (does not apply to drip, micro-irrigation, stream rotor, rotary heads, hose end sprinklers with timers or valves operated by a weather-based irrigation controller).

Click here for the complete drought level 2 restrictions.

 

Posted in Water | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Homework is past due: Environmental Quality Report Card for San Diego

Posted by George J. Janczyn on March 20, 2010

The San Diego News Network yesterday completed publication of a ten-part “blog” series analyzing the Environmental Quality Report Card that was published by a coalition of 11 San Diego environmental organizations last Wednesday Mar. 10. From part 10 of the series:

“The San Diego region faces a broad variety of environmental challenges. Residents here rely on the San Diego Mayor and City Council to create and enforce policies that enhance and protect the quality of the ocean we swim in, the water we drink, the energy we use, the air we breathe, the parks and open space we play in, and the wildlife that shares our region.”

“The report card quantitatively grades City officials on decisions related to environmental health in 2009. The results of the analysis are surprising and disturbing. Some officials – like Councilmembers Donna Frye and Todd Gloria – scored exceptionally well, while others scored poorly or failed in almost every category.”

“Mayor Jerry Sanders and a number of councilmembers received poor or mediocre grades.”

Click here to view part 10 of the series, which summarizes the Report Card findings and includes links to the Report Card and the nine other articles in the series.

 

Posted in Environment, Water | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Friday spot check: Ocean Beach north jetty

Posted by George J. Janczyn on March 19, 2010

The Ocean Beach north jetty is, in my opinion, one of the more interesting breaks in the San Diego area. It definitely has its own peculiar character, although being at the mouth of the San Diego River, the shifting sandbar will cause the break to vary.

My other choice for most interesting would be Big Rock in La Jolla, with its reef creating a crazy, sucking takeoff and drop, then race to make the very hollow tube section, followed by a sweeping cutback to stay with the shoulder.

But at the OB jetty, when it’s breaking, you often get a long, hollow, fast-peeling tube that is a challenge to make (if only you could go 60 MPH) where even a smaller wave can throw a solid punch–if it hits you the right way it’ll knock you right off your board.

At the jetty often you’ll get just part of a long wave that breaks up into sections…which helps moderate the sometimes crowded situation because it allows 3 or 4 surfers to get a piece of the wave without infringing on the others’ space. Sometimes there are some jetty-specific peaks if you hang out right next to the rocks.

The downside of shooting video at the jetty is that it breaks so far out, especially at lower tides. My video camera has 20x optical zoom, but at maximum zoom it barely gets acceptable shots (I’m still looking for a relatively inexpensive HD camcorder with over 30x optical zoom AND a viewfinder, but so far there is no such thing, short of a $3,000+ professional camera).

Here’s what it looked like Wednesday morning:

 

Or click here to see a larger screen version.

Click here to see the entire Friday Spot Check series.

 

Posted in Friday spot check, Surfing, Videos | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Adobe Falls fire in Del Cerro was caused by arsonist

Posted by George J. Janczyn on March 19, 2010

Back in November, I reported that the Fire Department told me the fire at Adobe Falls was probably caused by transients. Today, the San Diego Union-Tribune reports that a man has been charged with arson in the case. Click here for the full story.

Posted in Environment | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

San Diego water and Navajo Community news roundup

Posted by George J. Janczyn on March 18, 2010

Indirect Potable Reuse Project Monthly Update / San Diego Public Utilities Dept. : “A request for proposal for designing, procuring, installing, operating, and testing of the Advanced Water Treatment Demonstration Plant to be located at the North City Water Reclamation Plant was issued Feb. 4, 2010….”

Monthly update on conservation and water use restrictions / San Diego Public Utilities Dept. : “The San Diego County Water Authority is expected to announce FY 2011 water allocations in May. With regards to water waste enforcement, over 4,306 complaints were received during the first 9 months of mandatory conservation….”

Water use down 12.6 percent in February / Fact Sheet, Mayor Jerry Sanders : “Mayor Congratulates Water Dept. For National Outreach Award….”

Water-use reduction is credited to rains / San Diego Union-Tribune

Agencies to recognize top area water savers / San Diego Union-Tribune : “A contest recognizing homes and businesses that practice water conservation methods in their landscaping is being sponsored by four San Diego County water agencies.”

Emerald replaces her chief of staff / San Diego Union-Tribune : “Xema Jacobson is out as chief of staff for San Diego City Councilwoman Marti Emerald. Don Mullen, who has been a regular in San Diego council offices for years, replaced Jacobson on Wednesday….”

San Diego Walk For Water / San Diego Union-Tribune listing : event to acknowledge World Water Day

 

Posted in Regional water news roundups, Water | Leave a Comment »

Lake Murray area residents work to restore park playground

Posted by George J. Janczyn on March 17, 2010

These days in San Diego, one can’t avoid hearing of the city’s inability to pay for municipal services and infrastructure maintenance. “Brownouts” of fire crews, elimination of civilian employees in the police department, reductions in branch library operations, and reductions of lifeguards have been recently announced in the wake of the FY 2010 budget approved by the city council. So too, it goes for recreational facilities.

Just three old playground items remain offerering children little variety

At Lake Murray Park, located in the Navajo Community within the Mission Trails Regional Park system, a playground serving a large community of children originally built in the early 1990s has shrunk from nine pieces of play equipment to just three, because over the years the city removed aging equipment rather than repair or replace it. Residents also saw the playground deteriorate from hazards such as litter and sand contamination, while the sparse aging equipment attracted fewer users. Frustrated that the city would/could not fund any improvements, two local residents, Marilyn Olson and Tracy Dahlkamp, decided to organize a grassroots fundraising project to restore and improve the playground.

Tracy and Marilyn organized a nonprofit organization called Lake Murray Playground Project, setting a goal of raising $250,000 by 2011 to buy new equipment and perform upgrades to the playground area. The Lake Murray Kiwanis Foundation agreed to serve as the group’s fiscal sponsor. David Reed, a local landscape architect, donated his expertise for the playground redesign. With the help of others who became members of a steering committee to manage the organization, they officially launched the project last December with a fundraising event where they unveiled a proposed new playground design.

They’ve attracted funding and material support from local businesses (Windmill Farms, Keil’s Food Stores, Trails Neighborhood Eatery) and other organizations. The Union-Tribune caught wind of the project and published a story about it. So far, the city appears to be responding favorably to their idea, with Councilperson Marti Emerald publicly supporting their effort.

The Playground Project has its own website and Facebook fan page (as of this writing it boasts 310 fans).

The work by Tracy, Marilyn, and the many volunteers sets a great example by their positive, constructive response to the declining municipal services compounded by the latest city budget woes. Speaking to the initiative of these two women, Jay Wilson (Executive Director, Mission Trails Regional Park Foundation) told me “they may not know it yet, but they are this area’s next community leaders.”

Some future users of the playground

 

Another notable effort is under way at Ocean Beach. Recently, the city decided to cease maintenance of the fire pits at Ocean Beach and announced the intention of removing them altogether. Actually not just the fire pits in Ocean Beach but also in Mission Bay and La Jolla Shores (see http://www.savethefirepits.com/). OB’s Frank Gormlie (co-founder of the OB Rag) helped lead an effort to find individual sponsors to “adopt” fire pits and be responsible for their maintenance. Unfortunately, city policy may prevent them from doing so, as they’ve been told that such an effort would require a $1 million insurance policy, among other things, in order to comply with safety and legal requirements of public fire pit maintenance.

 

Posted in Government, Land use | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

San Diego water and Navajo Community news roundup:

Posted by George J. Janczyn on March 17, 2010

Protection for vernal pools OK’d by council / San Diego Union-Tribune, Mar 17, 2010 : “The city plans to use a $500,000 federal grant to create a new conservation plan for vernal-pool habitat.”

Vernal pools hold waters of life / San Diego Union-Tribune, Mar 16, 2010 : “About 3 percent of historical vernal pools remain in Southern California, typically on mesas that are popular for development projects. The rest have been bulldozed to make way for roads, homes and businesses.”

Despite Recent Warm Weather, Rain Still Likely / 10News.com, Mar 16, 2010 : “It’s not a guarantee it will rain in April and May, but the ingredients are still out there that could produce more storms.”

There’s no wine in Grantville / San Diego News Network, Mar 16, 2010 : “The general flavor of their [speakers at the city council meeting] remarks was that Grantville is “a place where you go, because you have to; not a place you go, because you want to.”

Navy Selects Global Water Group’s ‘Green’ System for Waste Water Treatment and Effluent Recycling / Earth Times, Mar 15, 2010 : “A transportable Waste Water Treatment and Effluent Recycling Unit, made by Global Water Group, Inc. (Dallas, TX, USA), has been selected by the U.S. Navy to support its San Diego-based Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) operations.”

Posted in Regional water news roundups, Water | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Surfing South Mission Beach at the jetty

Posted by George J. Janczyn on March 16, 2010

Is the swimming caution about the waves or the pollution?

 

 

Posted in Surfing, Videos | Tagged: | 2 Comments »

 
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