Showing posts with label polystyrene pollution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label polystyrene pollution. Show all posts

Monday, October 18, 2010

Collection Report Oct 7, 2010

As promised, the collection report from October 7. From my first steps on the beach, I knew the majority of my finds were going to be fence slats. I just didn't know how many:

Zone N
Zone S
But even with roaring waves & brutal winds, there were plenty of other goodies as well. Here's Zone N:
252 finds:
  • Building material: 104 (fence slats)
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 50 (!!)
  • Fishing misc.: 9 (6 bits of rope, two trap tags, 1 lobster trap, heavily bashed)
  • Food-related plastics: 6
  • Food-related metal/glass: 5
  • Non-food/unknown plastics: 28 (inc. balloon, piece of another balloon, "Tattoo" tag, white bow, happy face, umbrella base, and a bandaid)
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 41 (25 local & 16 floaters)
  • Paper/wood: 4
  • Misc./unique: 5 (quarter -- who says this doesn't pay??, firework bit, 2 blobs of candle wax, half of plastic recycling tub washed in from New Brunswick, Canada)
Couldn't quite believe how many scraps of styrofoam I kept finding. Everywhere I looked, more little balls of polystyrene hiding amid the kelp, or down in some tiny hollow where the wind couldn't reach them.
Foam mix-and-match
Plus, of course, all the usual suspects...
Banner day for misc. plastics
On to Zone S:
186 finds:
  • Building material: 133
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 25
  • Fishing misc.: 5 (3 buoys/buoy scraps, 2 bits of rope)
  • Food-related plastics: 3
  • Food-related metal/glass: 1 (rotted scrap of aluminum can)
  • Non-food/unknown plastics: 10 (inc. two toggles, balloon scrap, magazine packaging?)
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 8 (2 local + 3 "floaters" + 3 cigar ends)
  • Paper/wood: 0
  • Misc./unique: 1 (half of a Zodiac XDC deepwater inflatable boat -- not brought home!)
The foam frenzy of Zone N carried (unshockingly given the wind) through Zone S. It brought polystyrene bits both small, and not so small.
More foam fiesta -- trending blue in Zone S
Some storm ripped rope straight thru yellow buoy
All told, on October 7 I collected 438 pieces of debris. Even taking out the 237 bits of fencing, the rest of the numbers are still topsy-turvy from the height of summer: almost no food plastics, compared to 75 bits of foam & styrofoam. On the other hand, there were constants too: the ever-present cigarette, the colorful scraps of plastic that were all once intended to make life a little brighter, easier, more interesting.

When I started this so many months ago, I never really expected to find half a boat. But I find that little surprises me anymore. If man has made it, a specimen of it is probably in the sea, right now. Just waiting to surface again when the time is right.

All more proof that a beach without sunbathers is still daily visited by the waste of the modern world.