By Beth Sullivan
Early this past week, while a giant
blast of frigid air descended on the mid west, we were graced with a
lovely respite, days in the 60s , sun and a few last days to pretend
winter was not on its way.
Two of us intrepid (crazy) Avalonia
Stewards decided to paddle out to Sandy Point. The breezes were
light and the water was still warm, and there was a lot of activity
to check out on the Island.
A calm, warm, grey November day. |
All last spring and summer we
kayaked together to search for Horseshoe crabs and tag them. Then we
waited for shorebirds to arrive: Piping Plovers, Oystercatchers, and
Terns. We watched them build nests, counted eggs, helped set up
roping and signs to protect their fragile beginnings. We thrilled
with every report from the USFWS stewards who reported fledglings.
We also tried our best to educate the people who also love the island
as to why it was so important for us to dedicate our time and energy
to protect this special little piece of land and its inhabitants.
Dredging map of the navigation channel |
On this November day there was
different activity on the island, and we needed to check it out.
This time it was barges and pumps and generators and other heavy
equipment that we wanted to watch. In a joint effort by the Army
Corps of Engineers and with oversight by the US Fish and Wildlife
Service, the navigation channel north of the island and around the
western tip is being deepened. Over years of storms and winds, and
high tides removing the sand, the center part of the island has
diminished in height. There are times during super high tides in the
spring, it completely over-washes. If there are nesting birds in that
area, they are lost. Depending on the timing, they may not try and
attempt to re-nest. It is the sand that the island has lost, that
has filled in the channel.
Hurricane Sandy changed the contour of Sandy Point |
Deepen the Channel- Raise the Island
This effort is not just about
deepening that channel, but also restoring height to that lowest
portion of the island. As the big barge maneuvers its way slowly
along its course, it pumps huge volumes of water and sand through a
large diameter pipeline, that extends more than half the length of
the island: all the way to the low over-wash area. After only a few
days and nights of work, there are mountains of sand piled high in
the area. Other machines move and spread it out. The operators of
these machines are working around the clock, bright lights illuminate
the site though the night. There is a short window of time to
complete the effort so that the habitat was not disturbed during the
fall migration of shorebirds or the spring movements of horse shoe
crabs.
Main barge with massive pumps sends sand and water back to the island |
Rough Weather Work
In less than
three months, months that can be the most brutal, weather-wise, the
channel will be dredged, sandy soils re-deposited and spread and the
island readied for the return of its inhabitants. The added sand may
not make much difference to the Horseshoe crabs, but by late March
and April when the first shore birds arrive, some of the Plovers will
seek sandy dunes where there are grasses and shrubs to partially
protect their nests. But others of them, and the Oystercatchers, and
especially the Least Terns, will find a higher ground, open sand, and
hopefully more safety from being washed away during high spring
tides. We will continue to depend on the USFWS stewards and
monitors, to protect and preserve the island, and we, Avalonia
stewards will await the spring activity before we head out again.
Newly filled areas are being visited by opportunistic gulls; before long it will be Piping Plovers visiting. |
Photographs by Beth Sullivan. Maps
from USFWS.
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