Welcome. Edgartown News was born from the simple fact that I have ink and Dektol in my veins and I need to write and photograph more than I need air or food, and from my love for this little town where I grew up and raised my family, the town I have left a few times but can't quite shake for good. Here you will find the wanderings and musings, photographs and commentary; the people, places, and happenings - past and present - of a small island town: my home town.

Sunday, July 25, 2021

Devoid of Life

My typical end-of-day routine during the summer (and the reason I put up with the madness) is to bike the mile-and-three-quarters up to the Bend in the Road, swim a 1/4 mile, walk back to my bike, chatting along the way with people I know (or don't know), and bike home; my mini-triathlon. On Saturday I decided to do a little snorkeling, partly to get a better view for some underwater photography. So I flippered and snorkeled, face down, my usual 1/4 mile stretch. Okay, I didn't love wearing all the stuff, and I now know that swimming without having things strapped all over my body is much  more enjoyable, but what was most distressing was the fact that in that 1/4 mile swim I didn't see one living creature.

When I was a child, and when my own children were young, these waters were teeming with ocean life: minnows, pipe fish, whelks, spider crabs, sand crabs, hermit crabs, horseshoe crabs, and more. Many a happy beach day was spent collecting specimens for our salt water aquarium. 

My first thought was that the preponderance of swimmers had driven everything out. 

And then I remembered the mountains of sand that line this beach many recent winters - spoils from the dredging of nearby Sengekontacket - from the Bend down into Cow Bay, otherwise known as "beach replenishment." 

Yes, unfortunately, those mountains of sand have washed down into the water and smothered the ecosystem. Not just in the immediate environs, but all along State Beach, assisted by the daily tides. 

Why is this allowed to happen? Killing off an entire ecosystem, for what? And not only is the ecosystem at State Beach deader than a doornail, but this is stage two of a destructive process, stage one being the dredging up of entire shellfish beds in the pond and leaving the once living grasses, shellfish, worms, and other micro-organisms to rot in a pile of sand.  

Why, why, why?

Does anyone even care? (besides the shellfishermen I've spoken to, whose concerns are mostly ignored)

File this under Poor Martha.   

State Beach, Bend in the Road, marine life, beach replenishment
An underwater view off of State Beach. Deader than a doornail.

State Beach, Bend in the Road, marine life, beach replenishment
These striations must be mineral deposits of some kind. 

State Beach, Bend in the Road, marine life, beach replenishment
Nothing lives here. So sad. 

State Beach, Bend in the Road, marine life, beach replenishment
These mountains of sand are surely the culprit (file photo from January 2014). 

State Beach, Bend in the Road, marine life, beach replenishment
Mountains of sand as far as the eye can see, all the way down to Cow Bay.
A nice sandy beach, but at what cost?

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