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California beach camping banned thanks to excess of ‘human waste’

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Overnight camping at a beach along California’s central coast is banned due to an excess of “human waste,” officials said this week.  

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The California Coastal Commission announced Thursday that overnight camping and campfires will be banned at San Carpoforo Beach for the next two years. 

Beachgoers walk along the shore as a campfire glows on the beach at San Carpoforo Creek on California Highway 1 near Ragged Point on Saturday, May 1, 2021, in Big Sur, CA.  (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

San Carpoforo, or “San Carpo,” is located off Highway 1 in northern San Luis Obispo County, about a four-hour drive south of San Francisco. It is the only free beach campsite in the Big Sur area – a fact not widely known until recently. 

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The Commission detailed the deteriorating quality of the beach in a staff report recently made available. The report noted that more visitors frequented the campsite once word spread it was free. A lack of resources for the U.S. Forest Services to monitor the site and a lack of trach cans, restrooms and fire rings have led to higher levels of trash and debris, the report said. 

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“The beach has no restrooms, very limited parking, no potable water, and no trash containers or collection,” the Commission wrote in the staff report.

The area is home to a number of endangered animals, such as the western snowy plover, which have been negatively impacted by the beach’s deteriorating conditions. 

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While the ban is in effect, the U.S. Forest Service will devise a plan to “reset” and figure out a way to allow camping in the future. Day use of the beach is still available for visitors.  



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