Ebony Beach Nude

Ebony Beach Nude




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Ebony Beach Nude

Places in Nature to Go Nude
Black’s Beach San Diego,
California


The American Association for Nude Recreation is the largest, most long-established organization of its kind in North America. With roots dating to 1931, we have grown from our humble beginnings to an organization that has served over 213,000 individuals throughout the United States, Canada, Mexico and beyond. These members enjoy their own backyards and pools with family and friends, as well as over 180 nudist resorts and affiliates.

Location:
Nearest City: San Diego ,


State/Province: California

Country: United States



Disclaimer: Nude in Nature public locations are submitted by users and are not vetted or verified by AANR or its affiliates. Nude recreation, clothing-free status, or safety is neither implied nor the legality of going nude or nudity in any public location listed here on AANR.com. As conditions are always subject to change, persons are always directed to verify the current legal status of any location(s). Any person(s) whose image may appear herein are assumed to be in public settings without a reasonable expectation of privacy at the time the image(s) is taken. Further, images are believed to be in the public domain unless The Organization is apprised with a takedown notice in the manner provided in our Terms of USE.


The American Association for Nude Recreation is the largest, most long-established organization of its kind in North America. With roots dating to 1931, we have grown from our humble beginnings to an organization that has served over 213,000 individuals throughout the United States, Canada, Mexico and beyond. These members enjoy their own backyards and pools with family and friends, as well as over 180 nudist resorts and affiliates.
American Association for Nude Recreation 1703 North Main St. Suite E
Kissimmee, FL 34744
Phone: 800-879-6833
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American Association for Nude Recreation
When the PGA Tour stopped at the Torrey Pines golf course for the U.S. Open in 2008, it was impossible to miss Black’s Beach, perhaps the most famous stretch of nude beach coastline in North America.
That’s because Torrey Pines is located about a hundred yards above the two-mile stretch of nude beach in La Jolla, California. During the tournament top golfers like Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson, both Southern California natives, were asked if they ever had made the steep trek down to the beach. Both issued quick denials but were obviously familiar with the beach. Everyone, it seems, has a Black’s Beach story or two.
In its 1970s heyday, Black’s Beach attracted up to 60,000 visitors on warm weekend days, outdrawing nearby attractions such as the San Diego Zoo and SeaWorld. Back then, nudity was condoned by the city council, but was outlawed in 1977 in a public referendum after religious zealots rallied support against it.
But the anti-nudity law has been rarely enforced because it hasn’t been a priority for either city lifeguards or state park rangers at Torrey Pines State Reserve. In 1999, officials began to enforce the long-standing but rarely enforced anti-nudity statute on the southern end of the beach, south of the Torrey Pines glider port.
Most nudists rarely ventured south of the glider port, which sits high atop cliffs more than 300 feet above the beach, not far from the most frequently used trail leading down to the water.
Black’s Beach is popular among surfers, who like nudists are willing to make the steep, winding trek among mostly dirt paths to reach the beach. The trip deters most gawkers.
Black’s Beach is one of few nude beaches where it’s possible to go on a four-mile, round-trip run, surf nude, and enjoy a beach atmosphere that harkens back to the 1970s. Though the beach sits below some of the world’s priciest real estate, development is not a concern because of the steep cliffs and the existing glider port and golf course.
Conveniently located off Interstate 5, not far from the University of California-San Diego, Black’s remains one of San Diego’s top tourist attractions. For nudists, it ranks at the top of the list.
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© 2022 San Diego Reader. All rights reserved. No part of this site may be reproduced without our written permission.
For the record, I’m not a nudist. I feel too fat, am too vain; and in my mind, way too hairy. Besides, like most Americans, I’ve got a secret puritan lurking deep inside my liberal DNA.
Yet for some reason nudity keeps inserting itself into my professional life.
To supplement my freelance journalism work, I once provided media consulting to the late Will Walters. Will was the young San Diegan who took his life in 2016 after losing a prolonged court battle aiming to hold accountable five police officers who, at the 2011 LGBT Pride festival, arrested him for nudity, even though he had on a leather kilt and underwear when the cops nabbed him. (The city attorney declined to prosecute.)
I assumed I’d written my last article about nudity after Will hanged himself. But a year-and-a-half later — with Will gone and the lead defendant in his case now elevated to San Diego’s police chief — I find myself writing on a subject with nudism at its core: Black’s Beach.
René Torres, 35, says he’s a nudist. He first went to Black’s Beach in 2009. “It was with a friend while I was here on vacation; Black’s Beach was my first tourist spot in San Diego,” he tells me. “I had heard about it when I was in San Francisco and Miami.”
Torres is now a local. He’s a straight-up nudist — not a naturist. He explains the difference: “Naturists are more in tune with nature and hiking and being with and a part of nature,” he says. “That’s not me. For me being nude is personal — not about nature or the wilderness. It’s about being vulnerable and transparent.”
According to Torres, both nudists and naturists disrobe for reasons that are more spiritual than sexual. “Once you are actually undressed it’s no longer sexual,” he says. “Getting undressed is sexual. But being undressed in public for a while removes almost all the sexual tension and all sexual intention. It probably removes sexual attention too. You just feel like you’re you — nakedly yourself.”
Secluded section of beach beneath the bluffs of Torrey Pines, San Diego
Still, there’s no denying sex is part of the scene at Black’s.
Craigslist shut down its Casual Encounters platform in late March, citing a law Congress recently passed, which the company says now makes the legal risks of running hookup ads too high. Regardless, you can still find artifacts of recent Casual Encounters ads online. They come in the form or Google search results with remnant descriptions that lead only to dead hyperlinks.
Among the remaining digital breadcrumbs are these from would-be Black’s Beach sex seekers…
I may be the most clueless gay guy in San Diego, but a couple of visits to Black’s Beach did nothing to unveil to my eyes how the logistics of a sexual encounter, gay, straight or solitary could be pulled off. My best friend, whom I dragged along with me the second time I went, laid it out.
“Are you kidding?” he said sounding dubious about my ignorance. “They go in the water or in the bushes — jeez; grow up.”
It’s Easter Sunday. I’m at the top of Ho Chi Minh Trail above Black’s Beach with my best friend, Christopher Garcia, 35, who is possibly the world’s crankiest Millennial. He’s mad because he had to drive. He’s also pissed off there was nothing we vegetarians could eat at the barbeque place we just left but potato salad. It doesn’t help that I’m working during our beach day at Black’s. Unmoved, I begin looking for people to interview as we hike down the goat trail just south of Torrey Pines Gliderport’s dusty parking lot.
“You know, we’ve been down here before,” Christopher says. “Remember? When Jesse’s sister was visiting.”
It all comes back to me. A few years ago, our friend Jesse’s sister was visiting San Diego from a very small, very conservative town in Kansas. We drove her around La Jolla, ending up at the gliderport.
Showing an out-of-towner some local scenic beauty, we had driven around Torrey Pines State Reserve, UCSD’s North Campus, then south into the tony residential neighborhood of La Jolla Farms — ending up near the Salk Institute and the Torrey Pines Gliderport’s unpaved parking lot at the west end of Torrey Pines Scenic Drive, just off of North Torrey Pines Road.
We had been drawn to the we’re in today by the brightly colored wings of unpowered aircraft lilting in the clear air above the coastline. Back then, a spontaneous walk had turned into an impromptu and unexpectedly treacherous hike down a “goat trail” to a beach below the gliderport.
None of us realized then that nearby, just to the south of us accessible via La Jolla Farms Road right at the bend where the leafy street becomes Blackgold Road was a more famous hiking destination. “Ho Chi Minh Trail” is what locals have called it for decades. Now a movement to change that trail’s name to “Saigon Trail” appears to be succeeding.
Whatever you want to call it, that trail is the most celebrated of the several leading to San Diego’s nude beach.
By the time we’d arrived on the sand that day a few years back, Christopher had realized where we were. I still had had no idea. Though her stride seemed to hitch just a tad, our friend Jesse’s 23-year-old sister didn’t say a word or flinch as we moseyed along the surf just in time to encounter a completely nude man in his late 50s or early 60s emerging from a brush-shrouded spot. He and an equally nude woman of approximately the same age were camped out to sunbathe.
Today Christopher and I return with full knowledge of what lies beneath. Some tell me the relatively short, very vertical, and winding trail that begins about 150-200 yards in a southerly direction from the gliderport and breaks off to the west from La Jolla Trail doesn’t have a name. Others say it too is called Ho Chi Minh.
Christopher launches Grindr on his phone. Grindr is the gay version of Tinder, the GPS-powered dating and hook-up app, except Grindr came before Tinder. He shows me his screen. There’s a swarm of guys at Black’s Beach logged in on Grindr. Just about all of them are “looking.”
The G-rated stretch of Black’s Beach is the city-governed portion onto which you arrive coming down the trail just below Torrey Pines Gliderport. North about a 10-minute walk a formation of rock juts out into the water. Now I’m nearing the state-operated side of Black’s — officially Torrey Pines State Beach — nude sunbathers come into site. Fewer than 75 people appear to have thought the weather’s warm enough.
I ask two guys hanging out for an interview. They’ve been sunbathing in the buff since mid-morning. It’s shortly after 1 pm. One of the two agrees to chat and to be recorded. He’s visiting from France. His American friend was one of the guys logged in on Grindr. The American does not want to be interviewed. Amury, who was not on Grindr, says he’s happy to grant an interview, but only wants us to use his first name. Turns out he’s from Paris.
“I didn’t have any expectations,” he says in a thick French accent and impeccable English. “This place is very beautiful and wild. It looks very much like the beaches we have on the Atlantic Coast in Normandy — Omaha Beach in the north of France.”
Geographically, Amury says Normandy is a fair comparison to Black’s with its steep bluffs, clean water, and sparse vegetation — though Black’s is decidedly more desert brush than the grass and sand he knows from the beaches of Normandy.
“I love this geography,” he says. Equally enamored with the culture of Black’s Beach, Amury says he finds it also reminiscent of a famous European beach further to the south in France.
“There’s a mix of everyone here at Black’s Beach,” he says. “I feel very comfortable here. There’s gay, straight, black, Latino, white. There’s nude and not-nude. There’s families even — it’s so mixed. I thought it would be more divided, but everything seems to cross lines and comes together on the beach. It reminds me of a small French Riviera. I love it.”
But Black’s is much smaller than the Riviera, Amury says, “I would say there are about forty people here at Black’s today who are on the nude side and another eighty-five or a hundred the other side. I’m not here to come and have sex, but I’d say only a few of the guys are the look I would like to — what is the word?”
His friend shrugs and looks at his phone.
A different type of nature lover is equally drawn to Black’s Beach. Enthusiastic hikers can’t resist the area’s rugged, challenging — sometimes deadly — cliffs, crags, and ravines.
“The Ho Chi Minh Trail is a relatively strenuous and rewarding half-mile hike,” according to a popular outdoor-enthusiasts site. “In the 1960s, the surfers who frequented this trail named it after the trail in Vietnam.”
A San Diego Hikers Association writer rated the Ho Chi Minh Trail as one she would never forget, adding that it’s “not for the faint at heart. It’s steep and slippery; but the view at the bottom is pretty sweet.”
Occasional hiker, Rolawn Pinkney, 30, agrees on all counts.
“I went with a friend,” Pinkney says. “It was my first time. He’s a regular hiker who was visiting from out of town. He wanted to find a trail and go hiking; so initially we were supposed to go to Torrey Pines, but that place was closed and the guy at the gate redirected us to Ho Chi Minh.... I kind of had an idea there was a nude beach somewhere down there, but I wasn’t sure if this trail was going to that go there,” Pinkney says. “I’d say my hiker friend is a free spirit, but that’s not the same as a nudist.”
He recalls giving his buddy a heads-up that when they got to the bottom they might land on a nude beach.
“I think he was looking forward to that,” Pinkney says.
Pinkney’s and pal’s hike began at the Ho Chi Minh trailhead at the junction of La Jolla Farms and Blackgold Roads.
“[The trail] actually starts in a neighborhood, so you have to go between houses that are in this really nice residential area — you almost feel like you’re trespassing, because you’re literally walking through a break in the rows of expensive houses,” he says. “You’re like, whoa, is this GPS app correct? Or, are we going into someone’s backyard?”
But the app was correct. The pair saw several dirt paths branching off beyond the entry gates to the trailhead.
“Since we were both first-timers on the trail and we didn’t know which way to go necessarily, we just kind of followed along in the direction that other people were going and figured it out as we went along.”
Pinkney was surprised by how steep some points along the trail were. “ I was like, ‘is this for real?’ There were some really tight corners and places where you had to hold on with your hands and get dirty. I wasn’t really expecting to get that dirty!”
As he got closer to the beach, things got more treacherous. Pinkney was happy to see that generations of hikers before him had installed guide ropes. “I mean, I don’t want to overdramatize it, but that trail is tough,” he says. “It’s doable. People have carved out little, like landing strips I want to call them, along the way so you can veer off as you come down fast in a few places without falling down the cliff or getting hurt.”
Black’s Beach is also flyover country for hang gliders and paragliders whose jumping-off point at nearby Torrey Pines Glider Port offers a bird’s-eye view of the storied strip of sand, surf, cliffs, and bare bodies below. But, say pilots, the nude sunbathers of Black’s Beach are no reason to take flight at Torrey Pines.
“You’re too busy trying to be a responsible pilot to pay much attention to that,” one frequent flyer at
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