Powerful Pacific swell threatens more dangerous surf to California
Newsy
Eight people were taken to hospitals for treatment of injuries after a rogue wave in Ventura smacked spectators and vehicles as it overran the beach.
Bulldozers built giant sand berms Friday to protect beachfront homes in one of California's coastal cities hit hard this week by extraordinary waves generated by powerful swells from Pacific storms.
Dozens of people watched the construction of the emergency barriers in the Pierpont area of the city of Ventura, where a rogue wave on Thursday smacked spectators and vehicles as it overran the beach and flowed into a neighborhood.
"We have had water down the lane once before but never like this," said Karris Kutivan, a 9-year resident of the scenic shoreline city about 60 miles northwest of Los Angeles.
"What it has taught me is I want to live by the beach, not on the beach," Kutivan said.
Eight people were taken to hospitals for treatment of injuries after the Pierpont incident, according to Ventura County authorities, who closed beaches, piers and harbors through Dec. 31.