This year, I was quite shocked at the amount of garbage and human-created debris polluting our cottage lake. Every quick jaunt in the canoe revealed sunken aluminum cans, floating plastic bottles, golf balls thoughtlessly shot into the lake for entertainment with the shoreline marred by abandoned debris of all kinds. I ended up signing up for a program called Clean Muskoka Together, a district wide initiative where volunteers are provided with safety gloves and specially marked bags for collecting recyclables and waste. These bags can then be left at various municipal waste stations at no cost for proper disposal.
As part of my own kit to tackle the garbage problem, I adapted a piece of homemade equipment to make extraction of items from the lake bottom a bit easier. Back in 2017, I had made a 12 foot, two-piece canoe pole out of some spruce lumber and a carbon-fiber ferrule.
But by far the most disappointing find was the incredulous amount of golf balls simply shot into the lake. While there is a lakeside golf course at one of the resorts where a small bay forms a water hazard, these balls were found in areas no where near the course and had obviously been shot into the lake for just the heck of it. Scooping the balls out required a proper golf ball retriever tool. In the end, a total of 46 were removed from multiple regions of the lake.
Online research into golf ball toxicity reveals that they take centuries to degrade all while shedding irretrievable microplastics into the watershed.. Well before then, heavy metals (especially zinc) leach from the inner core and add toxicity to the aquatic ecosystem, poisoning plants and fish.
- 3, five-gallon buckets
- 11 pounds of sunken scrap metal
- 6 foot piece of vinyl siding
- 46 golf balls
- 6 tennis balls
- 35 sunken aluminum cans
- 13 single use plastic bottles
- 2, five-litre water jugs
- 2 glass wine bottles
- 31 feet of sunken line / rope
- broken real estate signs
- 2 waterlogged PFDs
- a punctured 2 person inflatable raft
- broken 40" foam bodyboard
- sunken buoys and rubber dock edging
- numerous bits of food wrappers, plastic bags, snagged fishing lures, bits of dock foam, punctured inflatable vinyl floaties, plastic beach toys
Calculations revealed I paddled approximately 66 km during these multiple trips effectively travelling 3 times the perimeter of the shoreline as part of the cleanup effort.
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👏 Thanks ever little (litter) bit counts
ReplyDeleteGreat job! My first trash spear was smooth and too much fell of too easily. My second point was a sharpened length of all-thread. All thread even comes in stainless now. Thanks for making it cleaner. I've never made one longer than four or five feet. Now that I've seen yours I may make an extension for it. Thanks!
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