Friday, October 21, 2011

I'm Stinking in the Rain...

Well Southern California had its first rain of the season.  It was far from torrential, although to watch the local news one would think that somewhere a modern day Noah was herding animals onto his recently completed ark. In the end, the storm clouds shed enough of the wet stuff to achieve one noticeable accomplishment.  They flushed the storm drains.  Just like a toilet.

So that raises the question, would you swim in a toilet?  It sounds rhetorical doesn't it?  Who would actually desire a few laps in a human poo stew?  (Well, excepting those fetishists who find their nucleus accumbens tickled by such an adventure.)  And I am certainly not referring to a porcelain pool unnaturally blued by the first of 2000 flushes.

Straight up, who swims in their toilet?

Well if you are a beach bum or bunny or find yourself fancying a dip in Big Briny during your costal visit, you do.  Oh boy do you.

And nothing makes that clearer than a season's first rain in traditionally sunny Southern California.

Why?

Well when it rains in California's lower third, it generally does so sometime between winter and early spring.  Sure we get the occasional curve ball with a summer shower, but more often than not, Mother Nature follows a traditional script.  Why is this important to this narrative?  Well, the time in between the last rain of the previous season and the first rain of the next allows for all sorts of goodies to accumulate in the storm drains and river basins.  Goodies that stack upon goodies.  Which stack upon other goodies.  And by goodies, I mean crap.  And by crap I mean plastic bags, styrofoam cups, drinking straws, feces - human and animal, toxic chemicals, dead dogs, and everything that the local population is too lazy to toss in a rubbish bin.  All these goodies are left to congeal, fester and rot for months in stagnant puddles and/or baked under the hot sun.  They accumulate to a point where Mother Nature can no longer stand the sight and stink of our creation so she reaches for the handle and gives it yank.  She sends a winter storm our way.  And all those goodies, all that crap, are flushed right into the costal waters where we swim,  surf, and fish.  Trust me on this one, don't eat the local mussels - especially after a rain.  They are filter feeders...

Now beach goers are supposed to remain out of the ocean for 72 hours after the rain has passed.  I've sat in a tower during the first rain of the season.  I've watched as the storm drains slowly open.  I've watched as the storm moves inland and the trickle becomes a stream, and the stream becomes a sudden torrent of black water.  It is as if the storm drains are overwhelmed by a late night of binge drinking and succumb to explosive, projectile vomiting.  From their mouths issue an oily black fluid laden with chunks of the dry season's long lunch of refuse.  I've watched as this black river snakes its way through the ocean's aqua hue - first as a finger, then as a swath, and soon the entire costal waters become an oleaginous mass.

72 hours of look but don't touch.  Not everyone heeds the approach.  I was one such individual.

Two stories spring to mind.  The first finds me surfing at a river mouth - in the rain.  The surf was perfect.  The water, unsurprisingly, wasn't  When the human turd bobbed on by, I paddled away from it, but not out of the water.  Did I learn?  Nope, remember - two stories.

Years later I came upon spitting barrels near a pier.  The rain was heavy, the wind was off-shore but who cares, the surf again was perfect.  I hit the water.  I get shacked.  I got stoked.

As I walked home, I kept noticing a smell.  I kept noticing a bilge water smell.  It was like human waste and diesel, with some other chemicals to add to the overall bouquet.  It was on my wetsuit.  I scrubbed my wetsuit.  It was on my skin.  I scrubbed my skin.  I scrubbed my face, my hair, my everything but I couldn't shake the smell.  It was inside my nose.  It was inside my mouth.  The next morning I awoke to a horrific sore throat and a sinus infection to boot.  I wasn't stoked.  And this time I paid heed.

I don't swim during or after a rain.  I don't care how great the waves are, I'm staying out of the water (unless I have to make a rescue).  And not just for 72 hours, certainly not after the season's first rain.  I stay away for a week.  Minimum.  Instead, I take a walk on the beach.  There's always plenty of trash to pick up.

But here is the larger issue.  It rains and the result is that we shouldn't go into the ocean.  I'll repeat that.  It RAINS and we SHOULDN'T go into the ocean.   Does anyone not see how wrong that is?  It isn't the rain that is the problem here.  It's us.  We render the ocean inhospitable to human activity.  We render the fish stocks inhospitable to human consumption.  We spend all summer doing whatever ever the hell we want with no heed to the consequences.  Then comes the winter and the the piper must be paid.  Worst of all, folks, it is a closed system.  Sure two thirds of this plant's surface is covered with the wet stuff.  Yes, the abyssal plains and Mariana Trench run deep, but the ocean can only absorb so much before she starts throwing it back at us.  She can only take so much before she says, "If you are going to sicken me, then I am going to sicken you." It used to take so much more.  Now it only takes a rainstorm.  

I would like to believe that if we can create multiple ways to effectively wipe ourselves off the face of this planet, we are equally as capable of finding a way to wipe our asses without causing a major environmental impact.  There used to be a time not that long ago when the rains would bring nutrients to the costal ecosystem allowing them to flourish.  Rains still bring nutrients but now the guys who enjoy these munchies are the microscopic types.  The ones who cause the algal blooms commonly know as red tides (note: the term is misleading as the blooms are rarely red and have absolutely nothing to do with the tides).  

No biggie, right?  Wrong.  When these guys get together and party several things happen.  First the water turns an ugly shade of brown - almost a toxic shade if it could be so described.  Speaking of toxic, their hardcore partying produces a toxin called domoic acid.  Look it up.  Its effects are not pretty, especially on sea lions.  The bloom makes the acid.  The fish eat the bloom.  The sea lions eat the fish.  The acid rots the sea lions' brains making them unpredictable, aggressive, as well as dangerous, and may ultimately kill them.  And, if that isn't enough the blooms' population explosion ultimately deprives the water column of oxygen effectively rendering the area an anoxic dead zone to all the fish and their friends.  

All this not because it rains, but because of what we do before the first drops fall.

I do wonder what is the last straw?  I do wonder at what point will we as a global community finally say, "This shit has got to stop!  I'm tired of swimming in a sewer!"  I don't care if you are a flag waving member of the extreme left or right.  The affiliation is irrelevant.  Our actions effect us as a people.  Our actions effect us as an individual.  Our actions effect us.  Period.  We have created this mess.  We can resolve it.  Whether you are a wave rider or not, your actions determine our future.  That piece of trash that is getting sweaty in your palm?  Toss it in a rubbish bin, not it the gutter.  It may be a cigarette butt.  It may be a burrito wrapper.  It may be a number you have no intention of calling.  But this I can guarantee you, whatever it is, as small or as large as it may be, it will have an impact.  You don't believe me?  Just wait, it won't take long.  It will only take a rainstorm.

© Copyright 2011 David S. Carpenter.  All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

It Takes a Ramp

It time to hang this tower's can out front.  It has been closed for far too long.  And I get to do the hiring around here.

So with my return to Tower Tales, I bring a tale from the tower.  A first hand experience with the oh so wonderful public.  A word of warning.  This one has profanity, and a lot of it.  In an effort to make it more palatable to the masses I shall replace a familiar vulgarity with its recognizable euphemism, "eff".

You know.  For fuck.

It had been a busy day.  The warm weather, water, and sand combined with inconsistent moderate surf had kept us on our toes and, more often than not, cycling through our collection of shorts in order to avoid the much dreaded crotch rash.  A wet suit on the willy and thighs will turn said anatomy into hamburger meat over the course of a tower shift.  You can always tell the lifeguard rookies from the vets by the number of wet red trunks hanging from the tower railings.  None?  Well that fellow hasn't learned.  And he is probably walking bowlegged.

But I digress...

The busy day in question had finally paused to catch its breath and in doing so, allowed the lifeguards to do the same (and once again change suits).  I returned to my tower to grab a jacket in anticipation of the approaching evening's chill.  I looked up from inside my tower and noticed a large, fem-mullet sporting, forty-ish female setting up camp on my ramp.  Not by my ramp.  On my ramp.  In other words this tank-top Tammy had just parked her junker-in-the-trunker in front of the fire station.

No bueno.

Now I always endeavor to extend to the public the common courtesy of a smile and the assumption that their stupidity is actually ignorance.  Even though her clothes were wet telling of her recent swim, she probably hadn't seen us making rescues.  Her leaning against my railing with legs out-stretched must have appeared to her to be the perfect pose at the perfect location for the perfection she sought with respect to her tan.

I left the interior of my tower with a smile stretching across my face.  She turned her eyes, but not her head in my direction.

"Excuse me, Ma'am," I offered, "but unfortunately you cannot block my ramp.  I need to keep it open in case I have to make a rescue."

"I need to relax, okay?!" she barked chasing my words away as though a pitt on the heels of a postman.

"Okay..." I responded, quickly gauging the volatility of the patron, and evenly continued.  "And just how long do you need to relax?  You are on my ramp and I would hate to knock you over if I had to run down and make a rescue."

"I'm a human being!  I just need 30 seconds, okay!  Is that too much to ask?!" She hadn't turned from her original position.  She was still facing away from me, while looking in my direction.

I actually started scanning the surrounding beach to see if Alan Funt was in the house.  Somewhere Candid Camera had to be rolling.

Hoping that thirty seconds would be enough (and knowing full well that it wouldn't) I acquiesced.  The détente between surf and swimmers allowed for it.  In the public arena, sometimes the deferral to another can quickly move a storm through the area.  And, heck, if I had to knock her over on my way to another rescue, so be it.

I returned to the interior of my tower.  She took root at the end of my ramp.  I sure you can guess where this is going.  It's like watching a film trailer and then going to see the film.  The trailer teased action you haven't yet seen so you know that bitching gun battle is right around the corner.  Where's the promised profanity, right?

Thirty seconds became a minute, and a minute became two.  I had given her a chance.  Mary Mullet had to go.

"Excuse me, ma'am..."

"FUCK YOU!" she bellowed, "I'm an effing human being, goddamnit!  Treat me like a effing human being!  All I effing asked was for one effing second to effing relax on your goddamn effing precious ramp and you can't effing treat me like an effing human being!  EFF YOU, you effer!  EFF-EFFING YOU, you EFF!!"

Um...okay.  Other than my set up, did you see that coming?  I sure as hell didn't.  Now normally, I admit, I can get kinda cranky when the public PERSISTS in being, well, the public.  In this instance, her unexpected tsunami of profane anger actually left me speechless.  And rather amused.

"Ma'am..." I calmly responded.

"No!  EFF you!  Eff you and eff your effing ramp!  I'm an effing human being, you effing asshole (oh, hey, she's mixing it up, opting for other vulgarities.  Good for her)!

"Ma'am..."

"You can effing go to effing hell for all that I care, you effing EFF! Eff you!"  Obviously she had thrown a c-note in the swearing jar and intended to cash it all in.

"Ma'am, I can see that you are upset, but I cannot have you stay on my ramp."  I replied, finally getting a word in edgewise.  I say I understated the case, don't you think?

"EFF you!  Eff YOU!  EFF YOU!  You are a heartless effing bastard!"

At this point, we have an audience.  The earshot public who had initially been acting as though they were not paying attention even though they absolutely were had now turned their chairs in our direction. They flagged down the passing ice cream vendors for munchies and sent the kids off to find popcorn.  This was quality entertainment and they weren't about to miss it.

Also not missing it was what must have been a friend if I can call him such.  As she kept pulling the pin on and hurling her eff-grenades as quickly as she could grab them, he approached.  Out of what could have only been embarrassment, he shielded his face with his hand.  And me?  At the top of my ramp I held the high ground.  With arms across my chest,  I smiled.  This sent her into an even more profanity-laced tizzy - one that I will spare you.

As her friend led her away she decided to send up Enola Gay.  "See that house over there?"  She shouted, jabbing her finger in my direction as though jabbing out my eye.  "That's my house!"

"Which house?" I asked, "There is a lot of them."

"That one!  The big effing one behind you!  That's my effing house!  And I'm having a effing party and you can't effing come!"

"Well there goes my evening plans."  I responded.

Yep, more eff bombs, but thankfully becoming fainter as she was pulled in the direction of the parking lot.

"Hey, isn't your house over there?"  I returned.  I couldn't resist.  She came back with the finger.  A salute from the captain on a sinking ship.  Give her credit, she rode that one to the bottom.

Now for those of you thinking that I omitted some inciting factor of my creation out of the above, I didn't.  This is something that can happen to any lifeguard at any time, unprovoked or otherwise.  It is part of being in the public arena.  We guard the waters to save lives.  It is how we earn those taxpayer dollars.  Yes, lifeguards are public servants, but we are not public door mats.  If the taxpayer has a need to clean some crap off of the foot, please go somewhere else other than our backs.  A therapist might be a good start.

© Copyright 2011 David S. Carpenter.  All Rights Reserved.