Mission Bay: From Wetlands to Resorts to Largest Aquatic Park on West Coast
by Debbie L. Sklar / Times of San Diego / May 4, 2026
Mission Bay didn’t start as a destination. It started as water that refused to sit still.
Just inland from the oceanfront homes and boardwalk of Mission Beach, the waters of the bay stretch across what was once a wide, shifting tidal wetland. Before it became a center of recreation, the bay was part of a dynamic coastal system of marshes, mudflats and seasonal channels— land that helped shape the surrounding beach communities as they developed.
Early waters and wetlands
For centuries, the San Diego River spread across a wide tidal basin here, carving through a shifting wetland of mudflats, marsh channels, and seasonal flood zones. Long before development, this was part of a larger coastal ecosystem used by the Kumeyaay, whose presence in the region predates Spanish settlement by thousands of years.
By the mid-20th century, that landscape was already being redesigned.

On April 27, the mayor sent a memo to the City Council laying out three options for cutting costs at libraries:
Here are this week’s Repeal the Paid Parking at Balboa Park and Trash Tax petition table events:
By Marc Snelling
Editordude: We are continuing our celebration of the 50th anniversary of the popular vote in OB that established the Ocean Beach Planning Board with a series of “Memories.” Doug Card’s memory is first and its from 2016. Doug was a member of the very first Planning Board and played a key role in the days up to and after that election on May 4, 1976.
The San Diego Community Coalition publishes this email bulletin to keep our members and the general San Diego public informed about important Council and Planning Commission hearings and other city public meetings.
JW August reports:
It was all about pocketbook issues and the creation of the ‘Real Affordability Agenda’. “A promise of a good life for everyone back in reach” said one speaker, “if workers will unite”. Supporting a goal of “making billionaires and corporations pay what they owe” says the website, repeated by the protest speakers as well as multiple signs and tee shirts with an anti-capitalist theme.


One of the dozen events happening in San Diego County today, May Day, is in Chicano Park.
By Sean Bothwell / Guest contributor




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