What to Bring
When to Time Your Beach Cleanup
While there is never a 'bad time' for a beach cleanup, it is best to maximize your impact by going after a rainstorm, or after major beach holidays like 4th of July or Labor Day when the greatest amount of trash ends up on our beaches. It is also a good idea to check the tides and go when the tide is receding exposing more beach and potentially more trash.
How to Approach Your Beach Cleanup
When cleaning the beach, it's sometimes easy to get overwhelmed by the amount of trash on a stretch of beach. The easiest workaround for this feeling is time block your beach cleanup and focus on just one section of the beach. Focusing on just one section allows you feel accomplished as you can make a noticeable impact. Some helpful cleanup tips:
How to Measure Your Impact
Record your trash data! If you've been to a Surfrider beach cleanup, you know we record the weight, the totals, and the types of trash collected at every cleanup. This data helps us inform local and national campaign initiatives (which includes legislative action, like plastic bans). If you feel inspired, we encourage you to record your solo trash cleanup data! How to record:
Don't Live Near the Beach?
No problem! Trash all over LA oftentimes ends up in our oceans as they wash from our streets, into storm drains, into the LA River and into our ocean. Cleaning our neighborhoods where we live stops the trash before it even finds its way to our beaches! We highly encourage neighborhood cleanups, no need to record your trash data.
Solo Beach Cleanup Wrap Up
Any way you feel inspired to help out be it on a planned solo beach cleanup or picking up trash on your next walk around your neighborhood -- you are playing a part in protecting our oceans and beaches! We thank you and hope you inspire others to do the same :).
Looking for more ways to get involved with Surfrider LA? Become a volunteer in one of our many programs or become a member (for as little as a $5 donation)!