Showing posts with label beach litter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beach litter. Show all posts

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Good Reads

I picked up my first bag of trash off the beach in March 2010. I wrote my first blog post in May 2010. It seems like a lifetime ago. I guess in some ways it is.

One thing that's kept the fire burning has been discovering other amazing people also fighting to change their world. Nonprofits and organizations, sure. But most heartening has been regular folks, bloggers, other people with their own lives to balance, who nevertheless take their time to do something that reaches beyond them.

It's impossible, in one post, to note all the people whose writings have touched me and kept me going. But I feel it's high time to try, at least a little bit. So, here goes:
  • The first person I "met" was Sara Bayles. She writes The Daily Ocean. What started as finding -- and hating -- trash on her Santa Monica beach recently became an epic South Pacific voyage studying plastic pollution up close. She's now back home, and her serialized travelogue -- as well as the ongoing saga of hundreds of lbs. of beach debris -- is a must-read.
  • Through Sara I discovered Danielle Richardet of It Starts with Me. She and her family pick trash -- and cigarette butts -- off Wrightsville Beach, NC. To date, she is nearinghas reached 30,000 cigarette butts. 30,000 pulled off one beach, by one family! A true inspiration, and always a great read.
  • Closer to my part of the world, I follow the lazy (and not so lazy) courses of countless rivers & streams in central and eastern Massachusetts with Suasco Al, The Trash Paddler. Every trip, Al carts off dozens of cups, bottles, wrappers, etc. that others have left behind in pristine wilderness. Tens of thousands of pieces over 4 years now. Read it for the trash, read it for the beautiful scenery & descriptions, just read it!
  • I recently discovered Ellen of The House Behind the Other Houses. Hailing from eastern Massachusetts, Ellen is constantly cleaning up "The Ugly Strip" in her neighborhood. But she does much more. She posts plastic-bag walls of shame; gardens & cooks some mouth-watering looking yummies; and brings life back to her asphalt jungle one small garden plot at a time. It's good stuff, and makes me smile to read it.
  • My world is the coast, and yet until too recently I never really stopped to look at it. Or to understand it. But I've learned to appreciate the way that wind, wave, and dune live and breathe. And I've been grateful for things Somerset Coast, across the "Pond," has been able to teach and show me. A wonderful blog for anybody interested in how coastlines form, change, erode, adapt. How they live.
  • Earth Korps is another new find for me. Their goal is "simple": to save & heal the 300-mile, polluted Shenandoah River that runs through Virginia and West Virginia. These folks will pull over half a ton of debris out of the river in one cleanup day! They don't mind getting dirty, they bust their backsides to make a difference, and their story deserves to be told & spread.
  • In the same vein is Chad Pregracke's Living Lands and Waters project. Less a blog than a way of life, Pregracke runs barges up and down the Mississippi River and major tributaries, pulling out countless tons of debris, which is floated on barges to salvage shops and dumps. It started as just one guy, hoping to make a difference. As just one example of the difference he's made, to date he and his crews have pulled over 55,000 tires from the waters.
  • A delightful and enigmatic blog, Catch What a Whale Shouldn't Have to Eat is updated almost daily by an anonymous blogger living somewhere in coastal North Shore Massachusetts. The breadth of what they find, the artistry in the images, and the desire to know more about this person and their work will keep you coming back.
  • Massachusetts has the Trash Paddler, Washington state has Garbage Scows. Another explorer committed to "taking only trash, leaving only swirls." And from the looks of it, they've got their job cut out for them.
  • I can't finish without a nod of appreciation to the Two Hands Project. Australia-based, but touching the world, the concept is simple: return the idea of global coastal cleanups to the awesome power of one person and their own two hands. They're most active on their FaceBook page. Check it out, thumb through the photos & the stories, and get inspired to do big things, two hands and a few minutes at a time.
There are more, many more that I read gladly. But these sites above are the ones that I go back to over & over because they inspire me. They make me want to pick up my trash bag and camera and do what I can. They remind me of the key truth: If there's something you love, if there's something you care about, you're not alone.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Collection Report July 1, 2011, Part II

Following on from Part I's photoblog, here's what I pulled up from the sands of Bay View beach on July 1. First, Zone N:
243 finds:
  • Building materials: 1 (window frame)
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 57 (56 scraps, 1 cup)
  • Fishing misc.: 22 (7 rope, 9 rope twine, 2 scraps of gear, 4 claw bands)
  • Food-related plastics: 23 (4 bottle caps, spoon, gum, 3 straws, 14 food wrappers)
  • Food-related metal/glass: 12 (3 bottle caps, 3 sea glass/scraps, 3 foil wrappers, 2 cans, s'more stick)
  • Nonfood/unknown plastics: 46 (20 bags/scraps, balloon, toy shovel, 6 string/twine, 2 strappings, guitar pick, sewage treatment plant disc, degraded squirt bottle nozzle, 4 scraps <1", 9 scraps >1")
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 60 (51 filters, 9 packaging)
  • Paper/wood: 18 (cups, napkins, scraps)
  • Misc./unique: 4 (shreds of fabric)
A couple of the standouts:
Hundreds of thousands of these little
2" discs remain on the loose
Years' worth of sunshine & waves
to make plastic look like this
More washups from an apparent
May incident in Canadian waters
243 is an awful lot of pieces of garbage. Especially as 85% of it is plastic. And while clearly there's a lot of local garbage now being left, plenty is still washing in with the tides. Bits that have been floating for years, bits that have been floating for maybe just a few weeks. Every day, more joins it. I often wonder how much of Bay View's beachgoer trash washes out with each tide, to mix with the rest of the soup.

So, from Zone N on to Zone S, the quiet zone south of the semi-private area of beach:
60 finds:
  • Building materials: 1 (chunk of asphalt)
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 12 (scraps)
  • Fishing misc.: 15 (3 rope scraps, 7 rope twine, 1 scrap of gear, 2 claw bands, 2 shotgun shells)
  • Food-related plastics: 4 (bottle cap, straw, 2 wrapper scraps)
  • Food-related metal/glass: 2 (bottle cap, glass scrap)
  • Nonfood/unknown plastics: 13 (bag scrap, balloon, glove, 3 bits of string, 1 strapping, 2 scraps >1", 4 scraps <1")
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 13 (10 filters, 2 packaging, 1 lighter)
  • Paper/wood: 0
  • Misc./unique: 0
A completely different scene in Zone S. Only 1/4 the debris of the northern zone, and a quarter of that was washed-in fishing gear. Clearly either nobody's visiting Zone S now, or the advancing dunes & compressed shore mean that high tides fully scour & wash away a lot of debris. I'm going to have to spend time at Zone S during high tide to see just what's up.

So. One week, 303 new pieces of garbage added to the list. On a quiet shore in Maine.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Collection Report June 7, 2011

Catching up again. The meat of this report already went into my final tally for the year, but I still want to get it written up, if briefly. So. June 7, 9:15AM. And it seems that Parks & Rec got a little creative with the log forest that rolled in during late May.
A totem pole?
Weather was slightly cooler for this week. But there was still plenty of evidence of beachgoers. What evidence?
Bonfires
The burn-it-all ritual
(See the aluminum? It does burn away)
A poor showing
That last shot isn't just ugly. It's dangerous:
How much plastic/foil is
now shredding a seabird's belly?
So there we go. Beach weather, for the most part, is back. With all its fun, sun, and sundries. What does that mean for this, the very last week of Year 1 in my Bay View tally? First, Zone N:
146 finds:
  • Building materials: 0
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 59!
  • Fishing misc.: 3 (claw band, lobster trap coating, twine from rope)
  • Food-related plastics: 8 (straw, burnt bit, 2 bottle caps, oil/sauce cup, straw wrapper, pretzel bag, Hillshire Farm cheese wrapper)
  • Food-related metal/glass: 14 (5 bottles, 1 bottle neck, 5 cans, 3 bottle caps)
  • Non-food/unknown plastics: 13 (game target, bag, film, dessicant, pen cap, faded toy crab, price-tag tie, 6 scraps <1")
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 32 (26 filters, 1 plastic tip, chewing tobacco box, 4 cigar ends)
  • Paper/wood: 14 (Bud Lime box, 11 tissues/napkins, 2 toy price/name tags)
  • Misc./unique: 3 (2 smore handles, string)
Where could 59 pieces of styrofoam come from?? Well, 52 seem to have come from this one thing:
Crushed cooler
Out of one, many.

The styrofoam scraps and clamshells; beer bottles, beer cans, cigarettes stuffed neatly into the sand; straws, wrappers, and price tags -- This is a full-on summer signature.

Which, I suppose, is little surprise. So what happened down the shore at Zone S?
57 finds:
  • Building materials: 0
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 26
  • Fishing misc.: 1 (claw band)
  • Food-related plastics: 1 (coffee cup lid)
  • Food-related metal/glass: 0
  • Non-food/unknown plastics: 16 (4 firecracker/flare caps, 2 strings, 2 bits of fuzz, 2 bag/film scraps, tiny ball/bead, 5 scraps <1")
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 9
  • Paper/wood: 4 (cup, 3 napkin scraps)
  • Misc./unique: 0
A wild difference between Zones N and S. Pretty good proof of where the people spent their time the past week. Yet all the blown-in styrofoam suggests just how far lightweight plastic will travel given half a chance.

All told, this last week of my Year 1 at Bay View ties things up and brings them nicely full circle. Summer is back. And I find myself missing the magical solitude of winter on a Maine beach.

Year 2, here we come!

Friday, June 24, 2011

Collection Report June 2, 2011

After far too long, the last couple collection reports of my first full year at Bay View beach, Saco, Maine are on their way.

June 2, 10:30AM. Moody skies on this first collection post-Memorial Day. Even if I didn't know the date, two big clues that unofficial summer had started:
The trash bins are crowning
and:
The half-burned bonfires are back
This was an odd day. A mix of local debris, such as a little nest of cigarette butts all clustered together, buried in the sand by a lingering chainsmoker; and washed-in debris, such as the plethora of fresh & far-traveled lobster claw bands that I mentioned in this post.
Fancy meeting you here
And then there's this:
Surely a good story here
So, on to the details of what was a busy day. Zone N:
174 finds:
  • Building materials: 2 (asphalt chunk, slat)
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 65 (27 from one cooler, 11 colored bits, 2 big clamshells, 25 plate/clamshell pieces)
  • Fishing misc.: 18 (8 claw bands, 5 rope, 3 twine from rope, monofilament in seaweed, shell wadding)
  • Food-related plastics: 4 (bottle cap, straw wrapper, Hershey's wrapper, sour candy wrapper)
  • Food-related metal/glass: 12 (3 cans, 2 burned cans, scrap, 2 bottle caps, gum wrapper, 3 sea glass)
  • Nonfood/unknown plastics: 21 (6 bag/film, prescription bottle, 2 rubber bands, "hoodie" tag, water gun cap, another cap (?), 4 scraps >1", 5 scraps <1")
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 40 (38 filters, plastic filter, cigar pack)
  • Paper/wood: 9 (wooden duck (?), 6 food labels, weight warning, cardboard disk)
  • Misc./unique: 3 (nonfishing woven rope, 2 metal necklaces)
65 pieces of styrofoam and a wooden duck cutout. You can't make this stuff up.

On to Zone S:
81 finds:
  • Building materials: 3 (2 asphalt scraps, plywood scrap)
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 40 (10 cooler bits (?), 11 colored bits, 19 misc)
  • Fishing misc.: 6 (Canada band, rope, 4 twines from rope)
  • Food-related plastics: 5 (Heinz label, 2 mini straws, 2 milk cap seals)
  • Food-related metal/glass: 0
  • Nonfood/unknown plastics: 20 (5 odd shredded tubes, golf ball, pen, 2 strappings, twine, 3 bag/film, 7 scraps <1")
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 4
  • Paper/wood: 3 (2 firework sticks, paper wipe)
  • Misc./unique: 0
40 more pieces of styrofoam, most probably from the same cooler, etc. that started crumbling apart up in Zone N. Wonder how much plastic pollution one styrofoam cooler can create? This much.

I also started finding something that stumped me. (Which is getting harder to do.) Check it out:
What the heck?
Each looks about the size & weight of the cap to a ball-point pen. But they're not. 2" long, hollow, gray, hard plastic. Fairly intact on one end, but each one is exploded on the other end. Rusty inside, as though a piece of thick steel wire/cable was inside; unless it's powder residue? Any thoughts?

Anyway, this one week I collected 255 new pieces of trash. From a lazy, fairly quiet beach in southern Maine. On a day when winds prevailed from the west, and probably had already blown quite a bit back out into the bay.

Summer, she is back.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Collection Report Dec 8-9, 2010

Welcome to Bay View beach, on a sunny 28-degree December 8.
Bright sun helps when it's 28; as do 3 layers
It had been another week of heavy storms and winds from the SE -- from the ocean. High tide was near, and nature was very much on display.
December on a deserted beach can be magical
But, just like the previous week, there wasn't much garbage to see. A stroll along a clean beach is always a nice treat. Still, I didn't dare to hope that "I didn't find it" meant "It's not there."

I decided I had to come back to check out the low-tide line; that way I'd know for sure what was there. So, I did. The next day, December 9, was my birthday. And at 9:30AM on my birthday (at a balmy 21 degrees!), I arrived back to Bay View to this:
Really?
Really???
I guess there is just no cutoff date for thoughtlessness. But I can't get my head around hot chocolate, a Pepsi from the local Pizza Hut, and half a dozen raw eggs on a 20-degree night.

Well, what can you do? As it turns out, that was about the only new junk there was to see. All the expected low-tide-line debris? Barely a scrap.

So, as with December 8, I used the time to soak in more of nature's works.
Sea trees du jour
"Cobbled" together by nature, just cuz
Anyway, business at hand. The Zone N haul:
28 finds:
  • Building materials: 1 (chunk of asphalt)
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 1
  • Fishing misc.: 1 (scrap of lobster trap)
  • Food-related plastics: 2 (lid, whole Pepsi cup from Pizza Hut, w/ straw)
  • Food-related metal/glass: 7 (sea glass)
  • Non-food/unknown plastics: 5 (kite string reel, 2 wrapper scraps, end-of-finger bandaid, white scrap)
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 4
  • Paper/wood: 5 (egg carton, coffee cup, cup sleeve, 2 gum wrappers)
  • Misc./unique: 2 (long pink string, waistband)
Pretty much nothing to say about this lot. What about Zone S?
21 finds:
  • Building material: 4 (chunk asphalt, chunk of burned asphalt, 2 bits of bathroom tile)
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 0
  • Fishing misc.: 5 (bits of lobster trap coatings)
  • Food-related plastics: 0
  • Food-related metal/glass: 10 (2 aluminum scraps, 2 sea glass, 6 fresh glass)
  • Non-food/unknown plastics: 1 (small blue scrap)
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 1
  • Paper/wood: 0
  • Misc./unique: 0
Again, little ooh/ahh factor. Except perhaps:
Life, the universe, & everything?
OK. So, two weeks of storm, wind, & tidal madness that does this to a bench at Ocean Park, a mile to the north:
Glad I don't have to dig this out
Yet over two days I find only a few dozen objects, many of which came from some local miscreants.

Why so little? Well, one of three reasons:
  • The Gulf of Maine is strikingly clean. 
  • The storms actually kept trash offshore.
  • The storms buried the debris under a foot of sand.
Which is it? I'm already working up a post answering that. But I'll give you a hint. It isn't #1.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Supermarket Bay View II

Following up a little tally I made in August. Here's an updated list of all the brands & foods for which I've found plastic trash littering Bay View beach:

Fruit Candies:
* Walmart Fruit Smiles - Raspberry
* Fruit Rollups
* Kellogg’s Fruit Rolls - Wizards of Waverly Place
* Yogos Crashers - Berry Melon Mania
* Welch’s Fruit Snacks - Mixed Fruit

Crackers:
* Austin - Peanut Butter
* Lance - Smoke House Cheddar
* Ritz - Peanut Butter
* Kraft HandiSnacks Crackers & Cheese

Chips:
* Kettle Brand - Salt and Fresh Ground Pepper
* Pringles Multigrain
* Cape Cod - Sea Salt & Vinegar

Grain/Granola Snacks:
* Rice Krispies Treats - Original
* Walmart Granola - Peanut Butter & Choc Chip
* Nature Valley Granola - (Unk. variety)
* Quaker Chewy Granola - Chocolate Chunk
* Quaker Chewy Granola - Smores
* Quaker Dipps Caramel Nut
* Sunbelt Chewy Granola - Chocolate Chip

Sweets:
* Hershey’s Bar - Original
* Airheads
* Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups
* Tootsie Roll
* Tootsie Roll Pops
* Betty Crocker - Scooby Doo Fruit-Flavored Snacks
* Good Humor - Ice Cream Sandwich
* Columbina Chomp - Orange
* Columbina Chomp - Lemon
* Ghirardelli Chocolate
* Jolly Rancher - Watermelon
* Jolly Rancher - Cherry
* Whoppers
* Twix
* KitKat
* Butterscotch
* Snickers
* Twizzlers
* "Crazy Candy" - unknown flavor
* Nik-L-Nip Wax Bottle

Condiments:
* Ketchup - McDonald’s
* Ketchup - Heinz
* Generic - Pepper pack
* Salad Oil - generic
* Grated parmesan cheese - Single Serv
* Taco Bell Border Sauce - Fire

Gum/Mint:
* Listerine Cool Mints
* Trident
* Wrigley’s - ?
* Wrigley's - Spearmint
* Hall’s
* Extra
* Juicy Fruit

Drinks:
* Sam’s Club - Water
* Capri Sun - Fruit Punch
* Capri Sun - Surfer Cooler
* Capri Sun Roarin Waters - Grape
* Shaw’s - Natural Spring Water
* Gatorade - Performance (Orange)
* Poland Spring - Water
* Price Chopper - Sparkling Water (Blackberry)
* Price Chopper - Sparkling Water (Raspberry/Blackberry)
* Coors Light
* Niagara - Water
* Rite Aid Pantry - Water
* Diet Pepsi
* Powerade - Mountain Berry Blast
* Miller Lite

Drink Flavorings:
* Crystal Light - Green Tea
* Crystal Light - Fruit Punch
* Generic - Raspberry
* Totally Light - Lemonade
* Koolaid Singles - Grape

Fresh Fruit:
* Banana
* Apricot
* Nectarine
* Apple - Macintosh
* Apple - Granny Smith #4017
* Apple - Empire #4124
* Apple - Fuji #4129
* Lemon - California #4958

Meats/Serious Foods:
* Little Caesar’s Pizza Heat Sheet
* Oscar Mayer - Lunchables w/cheese
* Hannaford - Turkey Club Wrap
* Slim Jim (OK, not a serious food and only questionably meat, but this is the best fit)
* Red Swiss Chard
* Bread (unknown brand)
* Stonyfield Organic Yogurt - Vanilla
* Gogurt SpongeBob - Strawberry


I'll repeat my comment from August, because it still applies: "We all know it's a plastic world. But when you start tallying the list of ordinary, everyday food packaging that winds up as permanent junk on a nice beach -- that's when you realize just how far down the rabbit hole we've come."