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City Crews Battle Big Waves, Flooding in Seal Beach

Following Sunday night flooding, officials extended the berm to stave off sets in excess of 10-feet combined with powerful swells.

Seal Beach officials slightly extended a berm to hold back massive waves today that caused some minor flooding while beaches further south coped with the pounding from the high tide.

Lifeguards and public works officials set up a berm in an area where there has been prior flooding.

“There was a little bit of trouble with spooling water at Ocean Avenue and about 10th (Street),” according to Marine Safety Department Lt. Chris Pierce.

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The sand sponged that up water by about 10 a.m., Pierce said. A berm put up for that troublesome area was extended to patch a new hole, Pierce said.

“We’ve had zero reports of property damage,” Pierce said.

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There were no rescues today, Pierce said, noting “the big cooldown” that “kept people out of the water.” The waves were also “a little crumbly,” which deterred even the most courageous surfers, he said.

Minor flooding occurred about 9:30 p.m. Sunday around the Seal Beach Pier at Tenth Street and Seal Way, said Seal Beach police Sgt. Ron Lavelle, but no damage was reported then either. The water washed up over the sand to the boardwalk, past where a 20-foot winter sand berm was removed last month.

Meanwhile, sets averaging six to eight feet high with some occasional 10-footers pummeled Capistrano Beach in Dana Point. The high tide bashed eroding sand, pushing it into the parking lot and knocking over concrete benches, according to Jason Young, chief of the county’s lifeguards.

The heights of the waves was “impressive,” but not nearly as awe- inspiring as “the swell coming from a long distance away so it’s extremely powerful,” Young said.

Flooding was reported in the Aliso Beach parking lot in Laguna Beach with waves pushing some sand inward, as well, Young said.

Waves also carried over into the parking lot at Capistrano Beach, he said.

“The waves are breaking on the boardwalk,” Young said.

Lifeguards performed seven rescues over the weekend while recording 1,200 “preventative actions,” which usually amount to warning beachgoers to stand back or get out of the water, Young said.

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