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Today and last week I boated across Tomales Bay with the intention of seeing what sort of plastic debris I could find and haul out.
Given my last post about the oyster farming debris I dug out of the shore of Tomales Bay and packed out, I did not think I’d find nearly so much.
How wrong I was.
Last week, a little north of the area of my last visit on the SE shoreline of Tomales Bay, I beached my boat and began to walk the wrack.
I stopped counting oyster grow-out bags after 20.
There were so many, I had to make 3 trips back across after loading my boat as tall as I dare. Digging the heavy bags out of the mud high on the beach was exhausting. Lack of energy and daylight prevented me from making another 3-4 trips that I figured were needed to remove all the bags littering the sand, plants and water.
Today I went back to the same area with photography in mind. I wanted to be sure to record the impact of mariculture on our shared bay. To be honest, I also did not want to feel like I’d been hit by a truck, as I felt the day after 8 hours of picking up trash last week.
In four trips across Tomales Bay in a small sit on top kayak, I hauled out 160 grow out bags, along with lots of other bottles, wrappers, foam etc. There is easily twice that many more in this one area. I wonder if the farm(s) that leave this mess there will begin to clean-up after themselves? If not, I am going to need lots of help.
Commerce makes a profit, consumers enjoy a meal. The earth pays a steep price never to be compensated.
When will humans learn that the unpaid compensation will be recovered one day in the form of a dead planet, no longer able to sustain humans as well as many other life forms?
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What follows are images that to me, are proof positive that the decision to let the oyster lease in Drakes Estero expire was the right choice. These same scenes repeated themselves throughout The Estero, though I never personally saw this many bags washed ashore on one boating trip in The Estero. I did see dozens of them that had been pulled out by the tides into Drakes Bay and deposited on Limantour and Drakes Beaches, as well as other nearby beaches. How many escaped unnoticed?
See earlier post about the nearly 6000 PVC pipe spacers I collected from Point Reyes beaches.
All of the images can be clicked on to see a larger image.
160 polyethelene oyster grow out bags left to the elements in Tomales Bay
Nudibranch dining on a grow out bag
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160 polyethelene oyster grow out bags left to the elements in Tomales Bay
160 polyethelene oyster grow out bags left to the elements in Tomales Bay
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Been there so long, pickleweed is growing through it.
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Nudibranch dining on a grow out bag
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been there so long it is buried
been there so long it is buried
been there so long it is buried
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NOT good!
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In West Marin of all places!
Calling this sustainable mariculture would be as crazy as saying The Inverness Garden Club sprayed Roundup® in a public area near Tomales Bay, without permits, telling no one.
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Next related post may be found here.
See the first post in this series “Save our Tomales Bay” here.