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San
Clemente's Ocean Festival
Story by Bill Thomas
Paris has
its Bastille Day; Boston, its Marathon; New York, its Easter Parade;
London, Guy Fawkes. What does San Clemente have to match these
great celebrations? The Ocean Festival! The next one, time-wise,
is right around the block.
Born in 1976 to founding mother Dorothy Fuller, credited for the
Festival's unique title "The Greatest Show on Surf,"
the offspring has reached a state of regal ascent as an extraordinarily
popular event. In that centennial year, the then-local Marine
Safety Captain, Sheridan Bayerly, wanted to use athletic competition
between and among lifeguards to make the public more aware of
the world of lifeguarding. Seeking Fuller's promotional help,
little did Bayerly suspect that his hope to attract families and
tourism to a modest ocean athletic contest would evolve into the
gigantic ocean-oriented circus taking place July 21 and 22.
Like the changing, frothing, forms waves breaking on the San Clemente
beach, each annual Ocean Festival is different. This year's celebration
offers fun, frolic, fantasy, festivity, and physical challenge
to all age groups and ability levels. Emphasizing total family
immersion, there's something for everyone, and much for all. There
are athletic events - swimming, racing, paddling, rowing - for
energetic bodies; ocean paintings and photography for the creativity
admirers; Woodies for the auto enthusiasts; face painting, story
listening, clinics, and water games for children; a beach band
for music lovers; food and drink for the famished; and for families,
sand sculpturing, water frolicking, beach ball bouncing, people
watching, and togetherness. Additionally, two thousand rubber
ducks will be leaving their relatively safe bathtubs for the race
from surf to shore with rewards for their winning owners.
The history of the Ocean Festival is 25 years of continuous growth
from a small gathering of lifeguards to an event celebrating the
beauty, uniqueness, recreation, and magnetism of an ocean setting,
ocean athletes who challenge their limits and expand their boundaries,
and a family outing. The many benefactors include not only local
attendees and event participants, tourists, and the workers who
make it happen, but especially the individuals and organizations
receiving the scholarships and grants provided by the funds raised.
It's a giving rather than taking event. It's become larger in
activities and attendance, even while sand on the beach has diminished.
The athletic competition has expanded from lifeguards demonstrating
physical prowess in their own ocean abilities and use of life-saving
tools to swimmers, runners, paddle-boarders, and boat-rowers of
all ages and professions. In the early days, star competitors
moved upwards to the United States Lifesaving Association's National
Championships. As the Festival gained popularity, lifeguards came
from as far as Japan and Australia. The best lifeguards in the
world tested their skills in local waters. Later, the competition
included junior lifeguards. Now, Ironman and Ironwoman competition,
swimming, paddling, rowing, and board and bodysurfing contests
attract hundreds of water sport achievers.
The popular
Dory Boat Races, 325-pound, fiberglass wood-rail rescue vessels,
with fixed seats and oar locks, fight waves up to six feet, head
to the same markers attempting to pass one another at every opportunity.
The spills, thrills, and instantly reactive abilities of the athletes
are crowd-pleasers. The Doheny Longboard Surfing Competition and
Tandem Exhibition are described by athletic coordinator Barrett
Tester as "...different, graceful, and romantic, providing
a whole new story on sporting events involving those who train
for and love the ocean."
One reshaped aspect of the Festival is the growing emphasis on
children. Rather than only watch daddy compete, free clinics are
offered in bodyboarding and bodysurfing. Bring only towels and
bathing suits; the rest is supplied. There's also a fishing derby,
and the rock wall will provide a challenging surface for climbing.
Clowns, face painting, and storytelling are featured in the children's
special pavilion, as well as gallivanting in the sand.
Over the years, the progressive focus on families has introduced
the Saturday night beach barbeque dinner with musical groups,
sand sculpting, and family games from Frisbee to football. Beachmaster
Dave Peter, officiating an efficient athletic show over the past
21 years, described one special Festival Saturday night with his
young family gathered around him watching a gorgeous San Clemente
sunset. "It was like a dream," he reminisced. His kids,
with many other San Clementians, grew up to become Festival competitors,
and now many of them are helping to run "...the really big
show."
"People make a place," said Mike Burke, who started
in l979. From past to present, there has been a continuous and
enthusiastic involvement of people from the early few to the 300
who will be volunteering for the 2001 version. "The Festival
is people connecting together. The result is a recognition of
how everybody can work hard together to make a success, be satisfied,
and then turn around and make it happen the next year," said
Registrar Shiela Martin, who first volunteered in 1992. Initiators
Fuller, Sheridan, and Miki Wolf were joined by Boyd Ames, and,
soon, by Mary Anna Anderson, who served as secretary, Board member,
and president. Others who added their skills early on and still
continue include former Marine Safety Captain Lynn Hughes, present
Captain Bill Humpreys, food distributor Rick Aron, businessman
Rick Anderson, Jo Ann Perkins, Mike Burke, Bob Novello, Rod Rodriquez,
among numerous other talents whose names would fill volumes.
Peggy Vance is an example. Arriving from Phoenix seven years ago,
she attended the festival, became a volunteer the following year,
and joined the 20-person Board of Directors. Now she is the current
Executive Director of the Ocean Festival. Her enthusiasm also
centers on people, especially the many sponsors, the untiring
efforts of willing volunteers, and the family focus. "We
try to keep it (the Festival) where it was, desiring to maintain
its high standards." She was quick to announce the newest
additions, including the "Instant Replay" concert, the
latest Bob Harlow T-shirt design, and the intent to raise $20,000
in grants and scholarships. Mary Anna Anderson, currently the
volunteer coordinator, credits helpers with everything from setting
up tables and tents to digging holes for electrical wiring, adding,
"The Festival brings out volunteer power and family participation."
There have been changes. Fuller and Anderson have seen many added
Festival features subtracted while some have remained. The pancake
breakfasts concocted by San Clemente lifeguards has remained a
winner. Fuller recalls joisting with pillow-tipped poles from
sawhorses. "One fellow almost knocked off his future father-in-law's
head with a too-tightly, wrapped weapon. I wonder if the wedding
took place." That event was dropped. "We replaced the
Polynesian dancing with Jazzercise thanks to Jeanie McPhee,"
she remembered. Fuller also reminisced about the short-lived chariot
races, where two well-muscled lifeguard teams raced one another,
each with a young woman atop their shoulders. "When one of
the riders broke her leg, we dropped that," she admitted.
She introduced jet skiing, featuring the Wavebusters. Sand sculpting,
first a failure, later prevailed. Judging rules changed after
the turbulence of a passing train destroyed the head of a sand-sculpted
seal. Now judges appear immediately after a work of art is completed.
Another Fuller-filler was skydiving, apparently a real crowd pleaser
until several descendents landed elsewhere than the intended targets.
Fuller also encouraged short-lived pre-Festival fundraisers such
as D(Dad's)-Day at the Beach and a huge chess match using four-foot-tall
paper mache' chess pieces. "Unfortunately, it rained,"
she admitted. Remaining in the Festival's agenda are King Neptune,
parking area shuttle buses, ocean racing of rubber ducks, among
many other Fuller legacies.
As to the continuing contribution of each succeeding set of Ocean
Festival Boards of Directors who make the Festival happen, Fisherman
Restaurant Manager Bob Novello, tenured from 1985, said, "Each
Board improves it, like piling a new log on the ever-burning Festival
fire."
Call (949) 000-0000 for additional information.
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