A Place I Want to see Before it's too Late - Glass Beach

wayoflife

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The biggest irony about this beach is that it was a dump up until the 1960's. In fact, there was even a massive cleanup effort made in the late 1990s and early 2000s and now, the polished glass pebbles are considered "artifacts" and illegal to remove. Still, people do it all the time and by the bag full and more than likely, it'll all be gone before you know it. So, this is now on my bucketlist of places I want to see. Here's a recent article about it that I found...

See this iconic glass beach before it’s too late
Thanks to people who ignore the rules, Mendocino County's Glass Beach is rapidly fading away

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There is a beach in Fort Bragg, California, that’s famous for the iridescent sea glass that shimmers on its shores. A dump until the 1960s, Glass Beach underwent massive cleanup projects in the late 1990s and early 2000s, but the glass from bottles and other items remained, worn smooth over time as it tumbled through the ocean.

Glass Beach is one of Mendocino County’s most popular tourist spots, as it’s one of the most abundant sources of sea glass in the world. But if you want to see this California treasure, go now, because it will likely be gone before we know it.

“Everybody is taking the glass and collecting it, so there’s not as much as there used to be,” said a clerk at Fort Bragg’s tourist information office.

In fact, even though removing sea glass from the beach is prohibited, rangers from California State Parks, which owns the beach, see people taking the smooth, pebble-like glass pieces home in Ziploc bags and buckets all the time. They try to stop people who fill up canisters as large as trashcans with sea glass, but there’s only so much they can prevent, they say.

The locals will tell you that the beach used to be covered in a foot of sea glass so smooth you could walk on it with bare feet, but these days there are sections of the 38-acre beach where glass is difficult to come by. Many say their only hope is to spread the word about the beach and what’s threatening it, crossing their fingers that people will begin minding the signs that say “glass collecting prohibited.”

For many, the destruction of Glass Beach is ironic, as it was the human penchant for destruction that created the beach in the first place. Without human waste, the beach would never have existed.

For now, Glass Beach remains—and here’s to hoping we humans can keep it that way.

Read the whole article here:
http://www.grindtv.com/outdoor/outposts/post/see-this-iconic-glass-beach-before-its-too-late/
 
dumb question ... is the glass a natural occurring thing or remnants from the dump?
 
The place was a dump up until the 1960's. What you're seeing is the remnants of broken glass bottles.
 
My girlfriend and I were just talking about this last night. We put it on our destination list when we head up north later this year.
 
.....the polished glass pebbles are considered "artifacts" and illegal to remove.


That's kinda funny because I participated in a desert clean-up out at Rasor Rd OHV a couple of years ago. The Ranger said we can't remove "historical artifacts." Leaving me to ponder, at what point does my trash become an artifact???
 
My wife and I have been collecting sea glass from Hawaii for years. It is amazing how beautiful the ocean can make discarded trash.

We made a trip to Mendocino and glass beach about 7 or 8 years ago. It really was cool to see. Plus there are a lot of good wineries on the way. :)

Sad to see that people are destroying it.

Edit: The pic is a small container I keep in my office and is NOT from Mendocino.
 

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Edit: The pic is a small container I keep in my office and is NOT from Mendocino.[/QUOTE]

Careful nobody mistakes those for desk candies!...:icon_crazy::cheesy:
 
My wife and I find some when we go to the beach on the east coast. People do sell it and can be very pricey. Very pretty.
 
The whole Mendocino Coast is pretty awesome. Here are a couple pics from Glass Beach from a couple years ago.

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There are actually trails north of there that start where Hwy 1 departs from the ocean. The Lost Coast Road or Usal Rd. or something like that. It's in the NorCal guide book by C. Wells.
 
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That is so cool!!!! It's sad that one person taking some glass just thinks no biggy but they don't think of the other thousands of people that are thinking the same thing. Ruining it for everyone.
 
On our honeymoon last August there was sea glass jewelry and trinkets for sale on Grand Turk island. Supposedly it's a natural thing there from what I read but they can print anything.
 
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