Monday, October 3, 2016

Green Lane Park (24-Sept-2016)


This trip did not start out as a clean-up. I went with a friend Joe Greco to a couple sites around Montgomery County looking for birds. When we got to one of the stops at Green Lane Park I realized I had an opportunity to work on cleaning up an area that is normally underwater. In a previous post I mentioned that there were a few items at this spot that I wanted to remove, but couldn't due to boating restriction. On this trip this portion of the lake was dry and I was able to walk out to them. I spent some time searching for a TV I had spotted when looking for Ibis the last time I was here and it was nowhere to be found. I hope that someone else removed it from the lakebed. I looked for other trash while Joe scanned the horizon with his spotting scope for birds. 


Cans were the number one item. To me getting all of the trash out of this area that I could was important. When the water is low birds utilize these mud flats for feeding and this particular site sometimes sees some rare avian visitors.


Joe out on the mud flat with his scope. By the time I got to where he was he had a Merlin in the scope perched on the far side of the lake. It was too far for me to get a photo of it.


I was not prepared for a clean-up and didn't have any bags on me. This was everything I was able to collect. I used the bags and containers I found to pack out the cans. There is much more out there, most of which is still inaccessible because it is on the edges where the mud hadn't hardened yet. 


As we were driving between locations we spotted this American Kestrel perched atop a pole. I was able to snap this before it flew off. 


This Fritillary Butterfly was resting on one of the hiking trails we took at a location just out of Green Lane Park. It is common to see wing damage at this time of year and it could be from birds that were trying to turn the butterfly into a snack. 


I see bucks from time to time, never though, have I found one just laying in the woods. This one was only about thirty feet off of the trail and just watched us for awhile before getting up and running off. This may also have been the largest buck I have seen, certainly the largest rack. 


These vultures were along the roadside in a small group. On the left is a Black Vulture and on the right a Turkey Vulture. In all we did not find that many birds, I was happy to get out to at least some of the trash I couldn't get to on previous trips.

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

Schuylkill River: Perkiomen Creek to Riverfront Park (23-Sept-2016)


This was a clean-up I had been wanting to do all summer. It is dedicated to Stephen Kacir a friend and supporter of this project that passed earlier this year. Kacir was an avid birder, herpetological enthusiast, scientist and an all around good person. He was the first person since I started this project to ask me to clean up specific sites. He cared about the parks in his area where he would go bird watching and wanted to see something done about their condition. At the beginning of the year I did make it to Riverfront Park, the one Kacir told me was in the worst shape. Jeffrey Greco and I did a pretty thorough job of cleaning up the park then and I knew by this point in the year it would most likely be just as bad again. I didn't want to do just a small park clean-up though. I looked at some maps and decided to do an eight and a half mile paddle from the last dam on the Perkiomen Creek to Riverfront Park on the Schuylkill River. I hope to make this an annual clean-up in honor of Kacir and in coming years I will be asking for help from others. This time I did not know what to expect and ran it alone. The above photo is where I launched on the Perkiomen Creek. Before I set out I cleaned up around the dam and as you can see from the pile on shore in front of the canoe there was a good amount of trash there. 


As you can see I didn't get far before I had my first large item. It looked like someone had made a fort on the island right below the dam out of this large tarp. Removed it and an assortment of recyclables from the island then started my trip down the Perkiomen Creek. 


With water levels low everywhere I have been lately I didn't know how much walking I would have to do before I made it to the Schuylkill. Luckily there were only a few shallow sections on the Perkiomen and most of the float on the creek was like the above. 


Most of the trash I pulled off of the Perkiomen was found like this. After the dam and the island I did not find all that much on the banks. 


This is where the Perkiomen joins the Schuylkill River. If you click and enlarge the photo you may be able to see the Bald Eagle in flight at the top of the tree line on the right. 


Spotted this TV shell lodged in a strainer. It was really wedged in and at first I wasn't sure I was going to be able to remove it. Right after this I went to get a bottle that was behind some overhanging vines next to the bank. I started to use my paddle to fish the bottle out from the vines and almost immediately I was surrounded by wasps. I received a couple stings and left the area in a hurry. I was not able to retrieve the bottle before I got out of there. I never like leaving trash behind, but this was still the start of the trip and I had enough stings already. 


In previous posts I have shown photos of parasitoid wasps. This is a photo of an unlucky caterpillar that a parasitoid wasp laid eggs inside of. The eggs hatch inside the caterpillar and the larvae eat away at the host. Eventually they emerge from the host and pupate. The white objects on the caterpillar are the pupa.


On my regular river trips with my kayak this car seat would be a piece that I would have to leave behind. With the canoe I was able to load it right up and take it down the river.


Could see this item from a distance, wasn't sure what it was though. Upon closer inspection I still didn't know. It looks like a base to something, anyone have any clue to what it went to or what it held up? 


What a way to paddle. The canoe was starting to fill up and I still had miles to go.


This is one of my favorite photos of the trip. In the background is a Belted Kingfisher flying, on the log is a Cormorant and flying towards the log is a Green Heron. All are common along the river, but hardly ever could I get all three into one frame. 


From this perspective it is hard to imagine being so close to larger cities. In some of the sections I paddled through, the only reminder that there are other people around is the trash found on the river banks. 


This young Common Merganser didn't mind me floating by. Its siblings swam further down the bank, but it stayed on the rock and posed for a photo. 


In the long strait sections of river I wasn't finding too much on the banks. Above is a chunk of foam on the left and a river beer I plucked from the water on the right.


The strainers I came across did have a lot of trash. The problem here was the amount of aquatic vegetation that they had also caught. Some trash items I couldn't reach just because I couldn't paddle through the duckweed and other debris. 


I had been taking the right side of the river, until I got to a somewhat large island. There I took the left channel and found more items caught in strainers and calm water between them. 


I passed below a bridge under construction and it seemed as soon as I did the amount of trash on the riverside greatly increased. The wasn't much of a current past that point and that could be the contributing factor for all that I was finding. 


Getting close to Riverfront Park, this Osprey flew overhead. It looked to be scanning the water for a meal. I didn't get to see it dive, but it came in close for this shot. 


With the canoe nearly full, I didn't know if I should make anymore stops for larger items. Then I noticed this kids basketball hoop and I had to make the stop. After this I definitely couldn't take any larger stuff. 


This Great Blue Heron was surrounded by trash on his perch. I didn't want to disturb him and I don't think I could have paddled through to get to the trash anyhow. There was only one clear channel where it looked like larger boats may have passed through so I took that and had to ignore that trash I saw floating in the duckweed. 


This was a surprise. I can't determine the species from this photo, I can tell it is a type of Map Turtle and one that is not native to Pennsylvania. We do have native Map Turtle species, but in this case there are characteristics of this ones carapace that tell me it is not from PA.  


Not far after the last Map Turtle, I found another basking with a Red-Eared Slider. Again I can't determine the species of this Map Turtle, yet I know it is different from the previous one. 


After passing by a lot of trash in the duckweed I had to try for some. I paddled as hard as I could into it in the direction of the trash. Going through it was like slowly applying breaks to the canoe. I was able to make it to a few items and I couldn't go any further. Had to back paddle out to the open channel. 


Not far from Philadelphia this was not a surprising find. Second eagle of the day, I preferred the first. Once passed the islands of duckweed I collected more smaller items from both sides of the river before bringing the canoe into the launch. 


I was glad to be at the end. I don't think I could have picked up much more and the canoe was getting difficult to paddle.


I do think Stephen Kacir would have been happy with this haul and with all the birds I saw along the trip. After I put all of the non-recyclables next to trash cans furthest from the river I did do a small walk around a portion of the park and collected more trash until my ride arrived. Several park visitors came up to me while I was there and thanked me for the clean-up. I made sure to tell them about Kacir and let them know he is the one that needed to be thanked. This may be my last visit to Riverfront Park this year, I will return though. I understand why Kacir cared about this park. It is a window to the wild right in the middle of a city. 

I would like to give a special thanks to Joe Greco for picking me up at the end of the trip and to Andrew Curtis for letting me borrow a canoe! The help is much appreciated and hopefully the both of you can go along on this trip next year!

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, September 28, 2016

Appalachian Trail: Lehigh Gap (22-Sept-2016)


Hit the trail in Lehigh Gap and started up the mountain. It has been about a year since my last hike up at this location and I thought there might be an accumulation of trash. Last year there was a lot. There are multiple trails to the top and I started on one that begins right at the parking lot. I found that in some sections it was really overgrown and I only picked up a couple pieces of trash on this portion. 


Last year there was litter strewn about these rocks and on this trip I found nothing. This was still on a portion of the overgrown trail and I didn't know what to expect ahead. This is also where the views of the Lehigh River and Valley start getting good. 


What little trash I did find on the way up, weren't the easiest items to get, like this Gatorade bottle someone threw back into Green Briar. 


When I connected with another one of the trails there still wasn't much trash to be found and it was starting to get hot.


The views on this hike really are some of the best around. Looking down river on the Lehigh. I have paddled all of the sections of the river that can be seen in these photos. The view to me brings back many memories of my trash collecting river trips. 


Looking up river towards Carbon County. At this point I started to find a few more items, mostly  water bottles and cans. 


I checked out a few of the areas around the top that in the past were a mess. Found some stuff, but it wasn't bad at all. 


It got a bit too hot out on the rocks and I started heading down. Took a different trail back to the lot and along it I found the most trash of the day.


Compared to other hikes this one didn't yield much trash at all. I am sure others, like hiking clubs have worked to keep this area clean. I will be going back to hit other trails that I missed on this trip and to go further up the mountain to see the conditions. 
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