July 21, 2005
Last chance for low tide learning
King County's Beach Naturalist season wraps up this weekend
2005 Archived News
Bring a hat, some sunscreen and a curious mind and visit your local beach this
weekend for a guided tour of Puget Sound tidepools. This weekend will
offer the last chance to visit with King County Beach Naturalists
to explore local marine life during the season's low tides.
Beach Naturalists are citizen volunteers who care
about Puget Sound beaches and want to teach others how to protect
them. Wearing khaki vests and crab-emblazoned hats, they teach beach-goers
important beach etiquette, show off moon snails and anemones, and
reveal the answers to such mysteries as why barnacles stand on their
heads and what sea stars eat.
Look for Beach Naturalists at Richmond Beach, Carkeek Park, Golden
Gardens, South Alki Beach, Lincoln Park, Seahurst Park in Burien
and Des Moines Beach Park on the following weekends:
- Saturday, July 23: 11:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. (tide -2.7 at 12:58
p.m.)
- Sunday, July 24: Noon - 3:30 p.m. (tide -1.5 at 1:44 p.m.)
For proper beach etiquette, remember these tips:
- Walk carefully. Watch where you are stepping
and avoid eelgrass beds, which are nearshore nurseries for many
animals.
- Leave dogs home. Dogs are not allowed on most
Seattle beaches. Instead, take them to parks with designated "off-leash"
areas.
- Leave it at the beach. Don't take away rocks,
shells, seaweed, logs and other beach items that are food and
shelter for many critters.
- Let it be. Don't pull on animals like anemones
and barnacles that are tightly attached to rocks or pilings. Also,
if you move rocks to look underneath, gently put them back the
way they were. Rocks protect critters -- many too small to see
-- that live under and on top of them. Also, fill in any holes
you or others dig to protect the critters that live buried in
the damp sand and need cover.
- Remove trash. Remove the trash you bring and
the trash you find, especially fishing line and plastic six-pack
holders.
The Beach Naturalist Program is co-sponsored by Seattle Aquarium,
King County Department of Natural Resources and Parks, Forum for
WRIA 8 (the Lake Wash./ Cedar/ Sammamish Watershed), Forum for WRIA
9 (the Green-Duwamish and Central Puget Sound Watershed), King Conservation
District, Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation, Washington
Department of Fish & Wildlife, Puget Sound Water Quality Action
Team, People For Puget Sound, Russell Family Foundation and King
County Water and Land Resources.
For more information about the Beach Naturalist program, call
the King County Department of Natural Resources and Parks at 206-296-8359,
Toll-Free 800-325-6165 Extension 68359, TTY 800-833-6388 or the
Seattle Aquarium at 206-386-4365. Reasonable accommodations will
be provided to people with disabilities upon advance request.
Photograph provided by Beach Naturalist volunteer Machel Spence.