The chapter is embarking on a mission to develop an Ocean Friendly Garden Programtailored for the East Coast with help from our West Coast Surfrider colleagues and East Coast water quality and landscape experts and anyone else who is concerned about clean water. This event was a great first step! Participants included Brielle residents, local teachers, surfers, members of a boy scout troop, retired citizens, and members of the environmental commission.
The Jersey Shore Chapter partnered with the Brielle Environmental Commission to host the workshop. Speakers Ben Pearson (at left, in the red shirt, advising Surfrider activists Paul Stenzel and John Weber on prying off a lid) and Sara Mellor from the Water Resources Program at the Rutgers University Cooperative Extension presented on the water quality issues impacting New Jersey, and solutions such as water conservation, pollution source controls, planting rain gardens, and installing rain barrels. Then the fun began. Rutgers brought along with them twenty-five 55-gallon used olive barrels, which they lead the group in transforming into rain barrels. It’s a lot easier than you think.
Future events are being planned by the Jersey Shore Chapter to promote Ocean Friendly Gardens in our local communities. Stay tuned to the chapter website for updates. We are looking for volunteers to help us out, as well as any ideas for community projects. So far we’ve had a great start! For more information about stormwater, rain gardens, and rain barrels in New Jersey, please see www.water.rutgers.edu.
More photos from the event are at the Jersey Shore Chapter’s facebook page, and at by clicking here.
- by Eileen Althouse, Jersey Shore Chapter, Chairperson of the OFG Committee
P.S. from the Editor: Pamela Berstler from G3/The Green Gardens Group joined me at one of the Jersey Shore's Raptoberfest events: the nation One Foot At A Time campaign. Pamela mused in a recent blog post about Monmouth County being a prime spot for finding dinosaur fossils and that future humans discover plastics as the lasting thing we leave behind.