Thursday, July 21, 2016

Mauch Chunk Lake (20-July-2016)


I was able to catch up on all my blog posts in the morning so I decided to head over to Mauch Chunk Lake for a paddle. I was interested to see what has accumulated since my clean-up early in the spring. 


Paddling up the lake I did not come across much trash at all, just a couple cans. This painted turtle was out basking and damsel and dragonflies were flying about. It was nice to see more wildlife than trash. 


When I crossed to the opposing shore I started finding cans on the bottom. I have paddled this shore many times and it I always find more. The odd thing is that they all seem to be older. Do I really miss that many or do they make there way towards shore with currents in the lake?


Only found half, this was also on the bottom. 


This has been in the lake for around 30 years. On land it would be in perfect condition still. It makes me wonder what causes it to break down in the water. 


These bags were right across the lake from one of the boat launches. The large trash bag most likely came from the trash can at the launch. Also found a lure when I got out to get the bag. 


Found a Tiger Swallowtail feeding on a very interesting flower. Does anyone know what this plant is? It was some type of woody shrub. 


Looking down the lake. Throughout this section I was still finding cans on the bottom, yet not much else. Either others are doing more to keep this lake clean or my efforts earlier in the year had a more lasting effect than I thought they would. 


After crossing back over to the park side of the lake I found a couple places where people left garbage after fishing. Still wasn't as bad as other times I have done this paddle. 


Near the end of this paddle this Green Heron tried avoiding me by hiding in a pine. I still was able to get its photo though. 


Wasn't anywhere near the largest haul I took off the lake, but it was still something. I can't express how nice it is to see less and less trash at a place every time I visit!
You too can help with taking out the trash! If you get out hiking take a grocery bag with you, give it a second use and fill it with trash while you are out! Every bit helps. You can also help contributing to this project here: Help Fund Taking Out the Trash

Like this project? Like it on Facebook: Taking Out the Trash in Eastern PA

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Tuscarora State Park (19-July-2016)


With being away for the last week I really needed to catch up on my blog posts. Penny though hadn't had a good walk since I left for NCJCS. With this in mind I decided to take her out for a hike before getting to my blog posts and of course it ended up turning into a clean-up. We headed over to Tuscarora State Park which isn't a far drive and we started at the boat launch. I figured if we stuck to the lakeside trails that are utilized the most I would be able to pick up a good amount of trash.


Fishing line was one of the most frequent finds on this trip. If you ever see it on a hike or while fishing please pick it up and dispose of it properly. Fishing line can be very detrimental to wildlife, birds can get entangled in it become severely injured and potentially die. 


Tuscarora has trash cans throughout the high use areas in the park. There is one not far from where I found this. I will never understand why people choose to leave things when it takes very little effort to dispose of it properly. 


The first pile of the day, all non-recyclables and all thrown away at the can near the boat launch. From here it was up the lake towards the beach area. 


This little fishing spot I have cleaned multiple times and the past couple it has just been a mess. On the left is the spot and on the right is everything I collected from it on this trip. 


I don't know how many times I have heard reports blaming the waterfowl for E. coli outbreaks at different parks. If you take a look around the beach areas you may find a more human cause for these. I found two diapers within sight of the beach at Tuscarora and this isn't the first time. Again, there are multiple trash cans around the beach and there is no reason for this. I reluctantly plucked these two from the brush with a stick and packed them into a bag. There was a third diaper along one of the trails that I could not get to. You would not believe how common these finds are in our state parks. 


Looking at the upper portion of the lake. 


This was the second pile of the day. A nice gentleman working for the DCNR kindly took the non-recyclables off of my hands and I packed up everything else into my car. I spent more time at Tuscarora than I wanted to, but Penny got a good walk and we were able to take out some trash. 

You too can help with taking out the trash! If you get out hiking take a grocery bag with you, give it a second use and fill it with trash while you are out! Every bit helps. You can also help contributing to this project here: Help Fund Taking Out the Trash

Like this project? Like it on Facebook: Taking Out the Trash in Eastern PA

Wildlands Conservancy and DCNR Joint River Clean-Up (16-July-2016)


The week before NCJCS started Rick Wiltraut from Jacobsburg Environmental Education Center asked if I would go along on a joint clean-up of the Wildlands Conservancy and the DCNR. It was during the week of NCJCS, but was on a day that I wasn't needed so I told him I would go along. We met at the Route 33 Access and I drove him and intern Cory up to the start point in Bethlehem at Sand Island. The Wildlands Conservancy had all of the canoes ready to go and their staff gave a safety lecture before we hit the water. I ended up paddling solo and that is how I prefer it on a clean-up, less people in a boat means more trash can be taken off the river. 


It did not take long for my boat to start filling up. The area along Sand Island and the old Bethlehem Steel Facility always hold a ton of trash. I would like to point out in this photo that the Wildlands Conservancy did provide separate bags for trash and recycling. The green bags used for recycling were also compostable and were something I had never seen before. 


The group that was along did an awesome job as well. Some groups I have been on the water with for clean-ups pick up only a few things per boat and call it a day. This group kept stopping and loading more and more into theirs. 


Here some of the participants are cleaning up in the shadow of the old Bethlehem Steel Facility. 


Not even to the end of Sand Island the front of my boat was getting packed. Already had one garbage bag tied off and the recycling bag was nearly full. 


Then we came across two things, one right after another, that I never like to see, but I am glad the group did. The first was the encampment above. It was made out of trash and branches, no one looked to be home. Many people do not realize that there is no adequate system in place to take care of those who end up homeless. With the time I spend by the rivers, I see these encampments often and I can tell you that the individuals that dwell in them do not have good lives. These camps are also detrimental to the riverbank as well. The trash is obvious, but these camps also displace wildlife, kill plants and can lead to erosion problems. This shouldn't be a problem in the modern world. 


This was the second thing we came across right after the encampment. This is a strainer loaded with trash. From the looks on some of the participants I could tell they had never seen anything like this before on the river. For me I've worked on worse this year. We took a few items out of here, but this is something that is not safe for a group to be picking through. I am going to try to return to this area in the near future to try to put a dent in the trash in this strainer. 


When we got to Freemansburg Island I paddled ahead and took the left channel down the the side of the island. I found some coolers and picked up a few more small items. The current on this side of the island pushed me way ahead of the group so I docked my boat at the end of the island and waited for them to catch up. 


Added a tire and a chair at this stop and my boat was pretty well loaded. 


The Jacobsburg staff had a good haul as well. Rick in the back Cory in the front. 


The last section was a bit tricky. Jet skis and motorboats kept passing by at higher speeds than they should have been with non-powered craft in the water. The trick with a boat loaded like this and a wake coming toward you is to steer into it so the bow of the boat is the first to hit the wake. If it hits you on the port or starboard side there is a chance you are going over. 


The group as a whole took a large amount of trash off the river. It is a start, but much more work needs to be done on this section. Thank you to Wildlands and the DCNR for making this clean-up happen. Special thanks to the Wildlands staff that were on the river! 


This Bald Eagle was a nice treat at one of the stops below Bethlehem.

You too can help with taking out the trash! If you get out hiking take a grocery bag with you, give it a second use and fill it with trash while you are out! Every bit helps. You can also help contributing to this project here: Help Fund Taking Out the Trash

Like this project? Like it on Facebook: Taking Out the Trash in Eastern PA

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

NCJCS Delaware River Clean-Up 2016!


As I have stated in previous posts, the Northampton County Junior Conservation School is a one week residential summer camp for ages 14-17. The week includes a variety of programs which take the participants out into the field to learn about different conservation related topics of study. I was a student in 2000 and have been helping with the program for the past 16 years. The highlight for me is always the canoe trip and river clean-up. The past several years, during the week of camp, the conditions on the Delaware were unsafe, meaning the river was flowing too high and fast to safely navigate. Because of this we had to instead paddle either the Lehigh or Longpond. This year the conditions were perfect on the Delaware and we were able to return for a large clean-up. If you are familiar with the Delaware and are looking at the photo above you may be thinking... "that's not the river." and you would be correct. Before taking the students out on moving water the Conservation School first teaches boater water safety on a lake. 


This year the water safety was preformed on Lake Nockamixon in Nockamixon State Park. Here the students learned first through lectures on shore, then had to prove they could swim 300 yards while wearing a personal floatation device (PFD) and then had to demonstrate what they had learned in the lecture on the water. By the end the students showed they can enter and exit a canoe safely, were able to steer, follow paddle signals, follow whistle signals and preform a boat over boat rescue with canoes. In this photo Tyler Sacks is preforming a boat over boat rescue with one of the students. This year all of the students did an excellent job and showed they were ready for the river!


On the river the number one goal was that everyone navigates the river safely. If you look at the previous post Andrew Gaerthe and I ran the same stretch the week prior and had all of the channels mapped out. I took the lead for most of the trip and Andrew filled in when I needed a break. The second goal of the trip was to remove as much trash from the river and its banks as possible!


Along the river the education doesn't stop. Do you know what this building along the Delaware is? The students can tell you it is the Merrill Creek Pumping Station. It has the ability to discharge large volumes of water into the Delaware from the Merrill Creek Reservoir during times of extremely low water in the river. Why would this be needed you ask? There are two nuclear power facilities in Salem, New Jersey, both draw their coolant water from the Delaware. If the river is not high enough, there is not enough coolant for these facilities and that can lead to a substantial problem. Merrill Creek is just part of an array of reservoirs that can be utilized to raise the river levels to the needed depths for the coolant processes to continue at these facilities. This is something that every citizen of PA or NJ should know about, but few do. This photo was taken on the preliminary and not on the NCJCS trip. 


Throughout the two day trip the students stopped when they saw trash. There were a few sections where they were instructed to keep on paddling due to time or hazards, but other than those they did a great job of sticking to the second goal and removing the things that don't belong on our riverbank. 


There were four Cormorants on these rocks just above Phillipsburg on the New Jersey side of the river. These three stuck around as all of the canoes paddled by. Most of the time Cormorants fly when you get anywhere near them on the river. The three above must either be used to boats passing by or just like the real-estate enough that they didn't want to leave. 



Environmental educator Rick Wiltraut holds a Common Map Turtle. Rick and two other staff members from Jacobsburg Environmental Education Center were along for the trip. In addition to removing trash along with us, they pointed out and talked about wildlife as we came across it on the river. Special thanks to Rick, Andy and Cory for your help!


Nearing the boat launch in Easton for lunch. In the front of the boat is Cameron, a student and my canoe partner for the trip. He did a great job not only paddling, but picking up trash as well. 


After lunch it was only a short distance down river to the campsite for the night. On the way there I spotted this fawn on one of the pillars to the 78 bridge. Don't worry it could easily get up the bank on the other side and was not trapped. Just past the bridge we all secured our trash filled canoes on the riverbank and headed up to Wi-Hit-Tuk Park for the night.


At Wi-Hit-Tuk, Steven Kloiber stopped by to do an entomological presentation on moths. He brought with him a vast array of pinned specimens and set up a sheet with light to attract moths and other insects in the area. 


The sheet did not attract as much as we had hoped for being down by the river, still a variety of insect species came in, including moths and some aquatics like the Giant Stonefly on the left. 


Staff members playing calls were also able to bring in five Eastern Screech Owls to the camp site. They did not stick around in one place long and this was the only one I was able to photograph. 


Back on the water the next morning. I spotted two green pieces sticking up out of a small strainer near the end of the island near Wi-Hit-Tuk. To my surprise it was the largest turtle I have ever caught anywhere. It could also be filled with sand. It was missing its carapace though.


At another island we stopped for the next educational lesson. Rick and Andy from Jacobsburg gave a short lecture on macroinvertebrates and the students then waded into the river to find some. They were taught how macros are used to determine water quality and used an index to figure out how the water in the Delaware compared to a stream they had sampled earlier in the week. Once the macro program was over we were back on the water.


I spotted this on the preliminary run and head staff member Thomas Figel went along with me to try to get it on this trip. We thought it would be easy, but we quickly learned this slide was broken and filled with sediment. The two of us couldn't even lift it up onto the rock next to it. I have to say I was disappointed we couldn't get this off the river. 


Another staff member Ryan found this when going for other trash. I helped him dig it out only to find there were large roots growing through it. Ryan was able to cut the plastic shell and we did get it out of there. The parts may have not gone together originally, but I was leaving the river with a full sandbox turtle!


It was close enough to a match. 


Andrew had just about the most impressive rig on the river for this trip. He definitely had the most tires. 


At the end we had 32 tires and a lot of other trash. Educator Wiltraut was so happy about the amount of trash we took off the Delaware he came up with his own trash removal dance which he is demonstrating here. Thank you to all of the NCJCS Staff and Students who helped to make this clean-up a success! There is a lot more to do, but you helped to make a big difference. Thank you also to the Jacobsburg Staff that were along as well.

You too can help with taking out the trash! If you get out hiking take a grocery bag with you, give it a second use and fill it with trash while you are out! Every bit helps. You can also help contributing to this project here: Help Fund Taking Out the Trash

Like this project? Like it on Facebook: Taking Out the Trash in Eastern PA