HarborLAB partnered with the Interdisciplinary Laboratory for Art, Nature, and Dance (iLAND) on Sunday to document, and elicit a creative response to, the restoration of marsh grasses, dune grasses, and other native life to White Island in Marine Park Preserve. Videographer Charles Dennis led the wonderful ‘iLANDing Expedition to White Island” as both guide and artist.
For HarborLAB this was an invaluable opportunity to build relationships with artists who care about ecology and might share their skills with the communities we serve. It was also a scouting mission to a new area of the harbor for us, Gerritsen Inlet, where we now plan to bring partner groups for beach cleanups and birding. We saw a great egrets, skillfully diving terns, reed-perching red winged blackbirds, an oyster catcher, a mated pair of Canada geese, herring gulls, great black backed gulls, black crested night herons, double crested cormorants, and an osprey atop, and circling, its nest platform.

Osprey platform. Rachel Carson’s book “Silent Spring” alerted the world about how the osprey and other species were vanishing because DDT insecticide spraying interfered with birds making strong egg shells. Now ecologists are helping helping ospreys to restore their numbers by building nesting platforms near food sources and away from harm. More here: http://www.nhptv.org/wild/silentspring.asp (Photo by Gil Lopez)
The intertidal zones held marshes of spartina, but we could see clumps of the grass being undercut by erosion from below. Dense stands of invasive phragmites formed a feather-topped fence just a few paces upland from the water. At the foot of the reeds were glinting and colorful assortments of sea glass, complete antique bottles and glassware, and porcelain shards. Of course there were seashells of every kind and scattered bones, bleaching in the sun. White Island itself had various plantings dotting its sands like new hair plugs. As Charles Dennis described the mammoth operation to restore the island’s ecosystem, one could picture an amphibious assault by ecologists like a green D-Day.
The inlet itself was alive with horseshoe crabs, eels, other fish, sea weeds, and jellyfish. There was a mysterious pulsing buzz underwater that was almost certainly mechanical, not organic.
HarborLAB is grateful to iLAND, NYC Department of Parks and Recreation, and volunteers Gil Lopez (a green roofing instructor and certified permaculture landscape designer), Mairo Notton, and especially Patricia Erickson for making it possible to enjoy this outing, which was coordinated on the HarborLAB end by Erik Baard.
- Gerritsen Inlet in early morning. Woman swimming in the distance. (Photo by Erik Baard.)
- Our fearless leader, Charles Dennis. Photo by DD Maucher of MoS Collective (www.moscollective.net).
- Clam shell. Purple wampum beads were highly prized and traded from our estuary’s “mints” far inland. (Photo by Erik Baard. )
- Skeletal remains. (Photo by Erik Baard. )
- The group prepares to launch. (Photo by Gil Lopez. )
- More pre-launch chatter. A very friendly bunch! (Photo by Gil Lopez. )
- Spartina patches eroding from below. We weren’t sure if these were part of a restoration or vestiges of the wild. (Photo by Erik Baard. )
- Patch of spartina clinging to eroding earth on a sandy beach. (Photo by Erik Baard.)
- iLAND group underway. (Photo by Gil Lopez. )
- Into the inlet. Keep White Island on your right for the circumnavigation! (Photo by Gil Lopez. )
- Osprey platform. Rachel Carson’s book “Silent Spring” alerted the world about how the osprey and other species were vanishing because DDT insecticide spraying interfered with birds making strong egg shells. Now ecologists are helping helping ospreys to restore their numbers by building nesting platforms near food sources and away from harm. More here: http://www.nhptv.org/wild/silentspring.asp (Photo by Gil Lopez)
- LeAnne Harvey, Community Relations Manager for Human Impacts Institute. Photo by DD Maucher of MoS Collective (www.moscollective.net).
- Sea glass (Photo by Gil Lopez)
- Photo by DD Maucher of MoS Collective (www.moscollective.net).
- Photo by DD Maucher of MoS Collective (www.moscollective.net).
- Photo by DD Maucher of MoS Collective (www.moscollective.net).
- Eventually all paddles must end. We were happy with every stroke of this trip! (Photo by Gil Lopez. )
You must be logged in to post a comment.