Someone is missing their guitar. A big mattress and a mini fridge were also found as was an autographed baseball.
Results from the annual California Coastal Cleanup Day on Saturday, Sept. 23, are trickling in and even with just half of the expected reports tallied so far, organizers with the California Coastal Commission estimate 25,570 volunteers picked up at least 126,605 pounds of trash at events across the state – including some items that left folks scratching their heads.
Add in what could be recycled and some 67 tons have been counted so far.
California Coastal Cleanup Day, now in its 38th year, is the state’s largest annual volunteer event. Cleanups took place up and down the coast, from the Oregon border to the Mexico border, and as far inland as Lake Tahoe.
Gatherings big and small were held throughout the South Bay, Los Angeles, Long Beach, the Inland Empire and Orange County to collect trash from beaches, parks, rivers and waterways before the pollution could be washed to the ocean.
In Los Angeles County, with a handful of sites yet to give results, Heal the Bay tallied 5,359 volunteers who plucked at least 11,010 pounds of trash from 76 miles of beaches, rivers, trails and even under water.
Orange County Coastkeeper helped coordinate cleanups at 30 sites both inland and along the coast – an estimated 4,150 volunteers removed more than 17,380 pounds of trash, according to early results.
“Orange County’s beaches are for everyone to visit, enjoy and protect,” Irene Cordero, cleanups coordinator for Coastkeeper, said in a release. “California Coastal Cleanup Day gives people who love our ocean a chance to protect it, no matter where they live.”
At its biggest cleanup at Huntington State Beach more than 300 volunteers removed 283 pounds of trash from the coast.
The timing for the cleanups is especially important, as California braces for a forecasted wet, El Nino winter. Rains wash trash and debris to the beach, much of it…
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