- Chevron Reef
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Chevron Reef, also known as Pratte's Reef, is an artificial reef constructed in 2000 in Santa Monica Bay, offshore from Dockweiler State Beach. It is the first artificial surfing reef in the United States and was the second to be built worldwide.[1]
Contents
Location
Located north of the El Segundo jetty and two hundred yards south of the Hyperion sewage treatment plant 1-mile outfall, known locally as "The Shitpipe",[2] the reef lies approximately one hundred yards offshore in fifteen feet of water.
History
In 1984, the California Coastal Commission approved a proposed 900-foot jetty to protect a marine terminal and underwater pipelines at a Chevron facility in El Segundo, California. The Surfrider Foundation fought the decision and an agreement was made that the company would pay $300,000 to build an artificial surfing reef if it could be proved that the jetty caused a substantial decrease in surfable waves.[3]
Research demonstrating the jetty's negative effect on surf quality was completed in 1994, but the $300,000 from Chevron took until 1999 to be paid out. Plans proceeded and the reef was dubbed Pratte's Reef in honor of Surfrider co-founder Thomas Pratte, who had been influential in fighting the Chevron jetty approval and died in 1994. In the fall of 2000, 110 geotextile bags were dropped into the water to create the artificial reef. It did not have as much of an effect as hoped and an additional $200,000 grant from the California Coastal Conservancy was secured to fund adding another 90 bags at the site in spring 2001.[4]
In retrospect, the reef was not large enough to focus the swells into nicely breaking waves.[5] Surfrider environmental director Chad Nelson said in an interview that "when the surf gets big, it breaks outside the reef" but noted that the reef used the greatest volume of sand it could within budget constraints.[6]
References
- ^ Cohen, Jon (August 1999). "Making Waves". Wired. http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/7.08/kahuna.html. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ^ "Shitpipe". Surfline.com. Archived from the original on April 1, 2011. http://www.webcitation.org/5xzARhhJj.
- ^ Benning, Jim (February 2001). "Surfing // Wave of the future". Outside. http://outside.away.com/outside/magazine/200102/200102disp4.html. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ^ Frost, Garrison (2003-04-13). "The Lessons of Pratte's Reef". The Aesthetic. http://www.theaesthetic.com/NewFiles/prattes.html. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ^ Peterson, Lee (2005-01-18). "Experts: 'Size matters' in creating a surf reef". Los Angeles Daily Breeze. http://www.calcoast.org/news/coast0050118.html. Retrieved 2007-11-11.[dead link]
- ^ "Artificial Surf Reefs?". Surfer. http://surfermag.com/features/oneworld/reefnelson/. Retrieved 2007-11-11. "When the surf gets big, it breaks outside the reef. But we only had a limited amount of money to work on Pratte's, so we built the biggest thing we could, and we built it on the cheap. We got a lot of deals and good will to build that thing, but it's way too small."
External links
- Surfrider Foundation: Artificial Reefs
- Artificial Reef overview from Surfline magazine
Categories:- Reefs of the Pacific Ocean
- Artificial reefs
- Geography of Southern California
- Geography of Los Angeles County, California
- Surfing locations in California
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