Archive for the ‘National News’ Category

International Surfing Day – June 20th, 2010

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

International Surfing Day: Day to celebrate the sport of surfing while giving back and raising awareness for our oceans, waves and beaches

Join Surfrider Foundation Huntington/Seal Beach for a celebration of International Surfing Day. It is the longest day of the year and happens to be Father’s Day this year.

We will be at the Huntington Pier with Project Save Our Surf on Saturday June 19th and Sunday June 20th.

Who: Surfrider Foundation Huntington / Seal Beach Chapter, Project Save Our Surf & International Surfing Day
What: Beach Cleanup and 24-hour Surf-a-thon
Where: Huntington Beach Pier – Huntington Beach,  Activities: Join Surfrider Foundation,Vitamin Water, Surfing Magazine and Project Save Our Surf for a Beach Cleanup
When: Beach cleanup @ HB Pier June 20th 7:30 AM – 9:00 AM / June 19th and June 20th24-hour Surf-a-thon (ongoing until 12:00 PM) Bags and Gloves will be provided as well as other give-aways and prizes.

Huntington/Seal Beach Surfrider Website: http://hsbsurfrider.org/
Facebook Event RSVP: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=127210977305204#!/event.php?eid=127210977305204
Project Save Our Surf Website: www.projectsaveoursurf.org
ISD Website: http://www.intlsurfingday.com/

Hue Salon @ Bella Terra host Cut-A-Thon for Earth Day 4/25/2010

Friday, April 16th, 2010

 

Hue Salon is having their Earth Month Cut-a-thon for Surfrider.
 
$25 Haircuts, 100% of the profits go to Surfrider
 
Sunday, April 25th  10-2pm
 
Hue Salon
7821 Edinger Ave, Ste B-150
Huntington Beach, CA  92647
714-901-4830

Volcom L.E.A.F. ECOommercial Contest for High School Students!

Saturday, March 27th, 2010

Film Premier: The Cycle of Insanity: the Real Story of Water

Friday, March 5th, 2010

The Cycle of Insanity: The Real Story of Water is a short, animated film made by a collaboration of creative and dedicated volunteers at The Surfrider Foundation. Several local Surfrider Foundation chapters combined their talents and funds to create the film — and then actress Zuleikha Robinson of Lost, generously agreed to narrate it.

The premise of the film is that the water cycle we all learned about in the 4th grade has been dramatically altered over time, leaving us with a broken system that wastes water and energy, pollutes our natural waterways, harms critical marine life, and poorly deals with flooding and other water management problems. The film serves to take a holistic look at water management, highlight controversial problems, and suggest solutions that integrate multiple economic and environmental benefits. The intended audience includes entire communities: from homeowners and the general public, to public agencies and elected government officials.
CHECK OUT THE MUSIC VIDEO: vimeo.com/9929055

 

The Cycle of Insanity: The Real Story of Water – TRAILER 1 from Surfrider Foundation San Diego C on Vimeo.

Surfrider Foundation, San Diego Chapter requests the
pleasure of your company at the premier of our new short -
The Cycle of Insanity: The Real Story of Water.
The Loft – March 22, 2010 – 6pm, and 7:30pm.
RSVP to: water@surfridersd.org

The event is free and open to all Water and Public Agencies, Academics, City Councils, Press, Members, Students, and the General Public. Seating is available on a ?rst come, ?rst served basis, so please RSVP with number of people in your party and the Showing you plan to attend. If you are an agency, we encourage you to send your entire team. The event will be held at The Loft on campus at UCSD, inside Price Center. Happy Hour menu available all evening.

Parking is plentiful as school is on Spring Break. $1/45 min or purchase a $3.00 night permit and park in S, B or A spots after 4:30. We have a vision for water, and we want to share it with you. Understanding our vision is important to Surfrider. Come see The Cycle of Insanity: The Real Story of Water, the basis for our Know Your H2O Program.

The Dry Garden: ‘Ocean Friendly Gardens’ is a guide to reining in runoff – LA Times

Monday, March 1st, 2010

From Los Angeles Times 

The Dry Garden: ‘Ocean Friendly Gardens’ is a guide to reining in runoff
February 26, 2010 | 10:00 am

Last week I said Bob Perry’s book “Landscape Plants for California Gardens” was “all the book you will need if you live in the Golden State.” In a case of floored admiration for a book dedicated to California plants, I may have exaggerated because I now find myself recommending another book aimed specifically at gardeners here. This one addresses how to lay out your landscape. It is “Ocean Friendly Gardens” by Douglas Kent.

Green_KentGarden

Some of you may be familiar with Kent’s work as an Orange County landscape designer, or his 2003 contribution to The Times’ Home section on fire-resistant flora, or his all-too-timely 2005 book “Firescaping.”

His new volume, a slender 105 pages published by the Surfrider Foundation, turns from fire to water. What, you might ask, does the ocean have to do with gardening? In California, Kent would reply: Everything. All the rain that we don’t catch during the winter and all of the irrigation spilled into the streets from our sprinklers in the warm months end up as storm water. “Water running into the ocean is not inherently harmful,” Kent writes. “It is the stuff attached to it and the stuff it picks up on the way to the ocean that is. Fertilizers, pesticides, oils, cleaning solutions and organic debris all run off a landscape.”

In many ways, this is less a book than a manual on how to design and manage a garden that captures and keeps the water that it gets, either from rain or irrigation. Its design principles of conservation, permeability and retention are a lifeguard, argues Kent — one that protects the ocean from us.

Starting with a simple diagram of a standard suburban home, Kent breaks down a yard by how it will be used. In a simple drawing, patches of lawn immediately by the entrance and back door are designated “high use.” Perimeters become “low use,” and side gardens are deemed “medium use.”

From there he helps to calculate how much rain a homeowner can expect to run off the roof. Next, he shows us how to identify areas where it can drain and infiltrate.

For those who don’t like fine print, there are diagrams for just about every step from diffusion devices, debris catchments and then full-on planting schemes. This book is particularly helpful for those working on sloped sites. Those on flat ones may find themselves shopping for a bulldozer to create some topography that can double up as bioswales, dry creek beds and vernal ponds.

There is even a chart breaking down the pros and cons of different erosion controls for sloped sites. (Kent’s favorite appears to be terracing.)

Finally, there are chapters on fertilizers, lawn care and weeding. This part of the book is clearly not aimed at the driest of us dry gardeners. Yet “Ocean Friendly Gardens” shares a water-wise ethos with the native and Mediterranean gardening movements. This book strives to keep the things that we may apply to our yards where they belong and out of the ocean. Above all, it strives to protect the wild environment that drew so many of us to California in the first place.

– Emily Green