A year ago this week, we were still
shaking our heads over the enormity of the impact of Super Storm
Sandy. The hurricane force winds combined with extreme high tides,
and a huge storm surge hurled water and debris throughout the Dodge
Paddock at the end of Wall Street in Stonington Borough.
Water surging into the parking lot. |
No one ever remembers the water
being so high and so forceful. Boulders were tossed like pebbles,
and logs burst through the old seawall like battering rams. The
breach allowed more debris to flow in. The higher marsh and meadow
were covered with all manner of litter: logs, boards, docks ropes,
glass and plastic, as well as about a foot of seaweed and other
vegetation. The small brackish pond was completely flooded and
the drainage outflow, a clamshell covered culvert, was broken, filled
and slammed shut with rocks too big to move. Water flowed all the
way back toward the houses on Main Street, and Wall Street was under
several feet of water. It was almost too unbearable to witness and
impossible to try to figure out what to do first.
The breach in the seawall. |
Debris on the Meadow. |
The obstructed clamshell drain pipe. |
The water did recede some on its
own. It flowed out the same way it flowed in, leaving behind a
terrible mess. Avalonia volunteers and a contractor with a small
tractor were able to move rocks and create a trench to uncover the
clamshell and dig it out enough to let some of the flood to flow out. This reduced the level of water throughout the preserve. Again
volunteers banded together to clear a huge fallen tree and collected
bags of litter and trash and made piles of wooden material. Another
contractor with a larger machine came in and did a day’s work
moving the vast mat of vegetation and organic debris off the meadow
and piled it along the undermined seawall . He moved the boulders and
large logs and in some areas was able to move sand and gravel in ways
to recreate some dune structure that had been destroyed.
The drain pipe dug out and working. |
The CT DEEP stepped in to give more
help and support and was able to grant emergency permission to
accomplish much of the work. This kind of effort in a coastal zone
often requires extensive permitting, but due to the emergency nature
of the situation after Sandy, they helped us expedite matters.
Things seemed
to stay on an even keel for a while, but spring storms reclosed the
clamshell. In June we had massive rainstorms that refilled and
flooded the Paddock. With summer and mosquito season imminent,
the DEEP agreed to step in once again to create an emergency “swale”:
a ditch out to the south side of the preserve to drain the flood
waters. What a difference! Within hours the flood waters
receded. Within a few days the meadow and marsh began to dry out.
After June rains, more flooding. |
Creating the swale to release the flood waters. |
Throughout the season the area
began to recover. DEEP has begun a program to eradicate the invasive
phragmities. The pond will remain a small, shallow, brackish
pond that will serve to hold run off from the town streets, but now
it will not flood to the height it had. Native plants will begin to
establish themselves along the perimeter and will also contribute to
the health of the area and create a better habitat for wildlife. As
the meadow grass grew back, it covered the scars left behind by
Sandy, and the area took on a look of health and beauty.
Cutting Phragmites. |
Looking at it a year later, some
scars are visible. The seawall remains broken and cannot be
efficiently repaired. Storms will continue to batter the shoreline.
Water may flow in with a big storm, but now it can flow out. A
healthy marsh and meadow can help buffer the impacts of storms and
surge. Wildlife will return to the Paddock.
There is still work to be done and
we are grateful to the CT DEEP for their help and generosity in
restoring the area. It will take a while, but there are already
lovely paths to walk again and the water views cannot be beat!
Enjoy!
The entry way to Dodge Paddock. |
Written by Beth Sullivan. Photos by Beth Sullivan and Binti Ackley.
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