The 37th annual Earth Day will be marked locally by California State Parks on Saturday, April 21, with volunteers restoring native plants to parklands and cleaning debris off of local beaches. These projects, sponsored by the California State Parks Foundation, provide an opportunity for people of all ages to contribute to improving the environment while enjoying a day in the sun and learning about our local parks.
This year, for the first time, an Earth Day restoration project has been launched at Pigeon Point Lighthouse. Volunteers will be removing non-native ice plant, which has covered much of the grounds around the 135-year-old lighthouse. Already some native plants can be seen trying to grow in the ice plant, and more will be planted by the volunteers. Free historical tours of the Pigeon Point Lighthouse grounds will be offered for volunteers throughout the day.
As an added bonus, participants may also get a close-up view of migrating gray whales. This time of the year Pigeon Point is a prime location to see gray whales and their newborn calves passing close to shore on their long journey from Baja California to the Bering Sea. Recently there were more than 200 sightings of whales off Pigeon Point in a single day.
For more information or to register to help at the Pigeon Point Lighthouse, contact Avis Boutell at 650-726-8819 or [email protected]. Volunteers will meet at the lighthouse, on Pigeon Point Road, just off Highway 1, 20 miles south of Half Moon Bay and 27 miles north of Santa Cruz. The project will run from 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM.