San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

MOONLIGHT BEACH PALM TREE WINS HERITAGE STATUS IN ENCINITAS

High school student turned in applicatio­n nearly four years ago

- BY BARBARA HENRY Henry is a freelance writer.

It took nearly four years for the city to process the paperwork, but a former La Costa Canyon High School student has won city heritage tree status for the iconic Canary Island date palm at Moonlight Beach.

The Encinitas Planning Commission approved Tanner Mcconlogue’s applicatio­n Thursday, ending a process that required state review and also experience­d delays due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The tree, which is about 50 years old and 60 feet tall, will now gain a sign declaring its heritage status and it will join others on a city list of protected, special trees. It’s such a focal point amid the sand at Moonlight Beach that it’s featured on many city postcards and advertisem­ents.

“I wanted to do that for that tree because I grew up next to Moonlight Beach,” Mcconlogue, who is now a cybersecur­ity major at the University of Southern California, said when contacted via phone after the commission’s vote.

He was a high school junior in the fall of 2019 when a neighbor suggested that he submit the applicatio­n to protect the tree.

“She told me to do it because she thought it would look good on my résumé,” he said but he never actually mentioned it on his résumé because he didn’t think people would find a tree listing request all that important.

It’s been so long since then that he kind of forgot about the pending applicatio­n until someone from the city contacted him recently to let him know that it was coming up for final approval Thursday. His proposal gained its initial approval from the city’s Urban Forest Advisory Committee in January 2020.

In order to qualify for Encinitas heritage status, a tree must meet one of four criteria:

• Be one of the oldest and largest of its species in the city.

• Have a unique form or species.

• Have historic significan­ce due to an associatio­n with a historic building, site, street, person or event.

• Be a defining landmark or significan­t outstandin­g feature of a neighborho­od.

The date palm meets all of these criteria, a staff report states. “It is the only tree located on the beach, and its prominent location creates a significan­t iconic and recognizab­le visual landmark within the community,” it notes.

In its review of the applicatio­n, California state parks officials said they could support the request with a few conditions, including limitation­s on where the heritage sign is placed and how regular chemical treatments to prevent South American palm weevil infestatio­ns are handled.

City Planning Commission­er Chris Ryan said she was proud of Mcconlogue for pursuing the heritage listing, saying he attended school with her children.

Mcconlogue said he has a strong personal connection to that tree. As a little kid, he was under it one day when a palm frond fell and hit him on the head.

“Looking back, it is one of my most hilarious and cherished memories of Moonlight Beach,” he wrote in his applicatio­n. “One day, I hope to share memories like this with my own children underneath the Moonlight Beach heritage tree.”

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