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Forever Humboldt partnered with PacOut Green Team for a morning of beach cleaning. Thank you for volunteering! To see all the photos, visit flic.kr/s/aHsmH1PRT7
Why do these end up in the sea? Is it the same people that throw these in, that throws cans of used oil overboard? Found a 20 l can of used oil on the same beach.
With a little help from the Coast Guard, marine litter collected at beaches through the season, is transported to town for further handling by the waste disposal company. Removing marine litter takes collaboration between many different participants. This batch was around 160 bags, and a colection of larger stuff, like fish boxes, oil cans, styrofoam pieces, etc. 95% plastic.
About 50 participants led by NASA Kennedy Space Center's Employee Resource Groups picked up about 20 bags of trash and other large debris along the center's shoreline before turtle-nesting season as a community service. Sea turtle-nesting season begins in about one month. Unlike what might be found along a public beach, all of the debris that litters Kennedy’s restricted beaches washes ashore after being discarded at sea. Of the 72 miles of beach that form the eastern boundary of Brevard County, Florida, about six of those miles line Kennedy. Photo credit: NASA/Bill White
Marine debris from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch at Kahuku Beach in Oahu, Hawaii on September 5, 2010.
170315-N-ME988-383 SOUDA BAY, Greece (March 15, 2017) Hospitalman Joey A. Balino helps clean Agioi Apostoloi Beach at a community relations event during a port visit for the amphibious dock landing ship USS Carter Hall (LSD 50). The ship is deployed with the Bataan Amphibious Ready Group to support maritime security operations and theater security cooperation efforts in the U.S. 6th Fleet area of operations. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Darren M. Moore/Released)
We're partnering up with PacOut Green Team for a morning of beach cleaning from 9 -10 a.m. at Samoa Beach/Bay Street.
Los Bagels light breakfast will be provided.
Heal the Bay's eighth annual Coastal Cleanup Education Day, a lead up event to Coastal Cleanup Day. Partners from Southern California Edison and National Geographic were on hand for a press conference unveiling teacher environmental literacy guides that cover the topics of fresh water, ocean, energy and climate change.
Approximately 700 elementary students from under served communities arrived at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium for environmentally focused games, lessons and activities. These future environmental stewards--many of whom had never visited the ocean before--explored the beach, got up close and personal with the living species in the Aquarium touch tanks and even cleaned up the beach.
6 school groups collected 109 lbs. of trash and 5 feet of cigarette butts!
September 11, 2012. Photos by Southern California Edison
Tiny plastic bits of marine debris from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch lay on the sand at Kahuku Beach in Oahu, Hawaii on September 5, 2010.
amber organised a beach clean up for us on saturday. we documented how much trash we collected while beach-goers stared wondering what the do-gooders were doing at their filthy beach.
arrived at the beach and took a walk. it looks like there is a lot less litter than usual. much plastic, many small bits. The leader of the community clean thought this might be debris from fireworks, probably a smoke bomb
A small beach was cleaned by kayakers. The resulting heap needed ferrying to the nearest place for further transport.
Heal the Bay's 21st Annual Bring Back the Beach Benefit Dinner was held May 17th, 2012, at the Jonathan Beach Club in Santa Monica, California.
A beach clean up initiative led by our own Team Nila volunteers who are also part of the Litter Club. The Litter Club is a group comprised of hiking enthusiasts with a passion for nature. Seeing the beaches which they love strewn with trash has spurred them into action, organising weekly beach clean ups along the beaches of Pasir Ris and Punggol for the past year.
A large chunk of coral grown on plastic fishing net photographed in Oahu, Hawaii on September 8, 2010. This item along many others was collected by volunteers of B.E.A.C.H from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch during earlier beach clean-up events.
A beach clean up initiative led by our own Team Nila volunteers whom are also part of the Litter Club. The Litter Club is a group comprised of hiking enthusiasts with a passion for nature. Seeing the beaches which they love strewn with trash has spured them into action, organising weekly beach clean ups along the beaches of Pasir Ris and Punggol for the past year.
Marine debris on display collected by volunteers of B.E.A.C.H from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch during earlier beach clean-up events in the Big Island and Oahu, Hawaii on September 8, 2010. Littering and dumping at sea and land are resulting in an accumulation of marine debris in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre which than washes up on Hawai'i's beaches. With the help of volunteers Beach Environmental Awareness Campaign Hawai'i (B.E.A.C.H.) a non-profit organization systematically collects and categorizes marine debris on various beaches on Hawaiian beaches.
My travels around the UK by car for three weeks with my son. June/July 2019 England.
On a drive through Poldhu on the Lizard peninsula in Cornwall on a wet, cold summers day.
Poldhu is a small area in south Cornwall, England, UK, situated on the Lizard Peninsula; it comprises Poldhu Point and Poldhu Cove. Poldhu means "black pool" in Cornish. Poldhu lies on the coast of Mount's Bay and is in the northern part of the parish of Mullion.
Poldhu Point became the site of one of the main technological advances of the early twentieth century when, on 12 December 1901, a wireless signal was sent by Thomas Barron in Poldhu to St John’s, Newfoundland, and received by Marconi. The technology was a precursor to radio, television, satellites and the internet, with the earth station at Goonhilly Downs a nearby example.
In January 2016 Poldhu Cove was inundated with thousands of pink plastic bottles, brought onto the beach with successive tides. The National Trust said it believed a container had gone overboard from a ship, during the stormy weather.
The site is famous as the location of Poldhu Wireless Station, Guglielmo Marconi's transmitter for the first transatlantic radio message on 12 December 1901. Marconi received the transmission on Signal Hill, St. John's, Newfoundland. The station was built partly on cliff top pastures that had been enclosed in 1871 and partly on medieval fields belonging to a nearby settlement, Angrouse. The fifty acre (200,000 m²) plot was bought in 1900 and building work ran from October 1900 to January 1901. During the work two Bronze Age barrows were flattened and a bronze dagger and urn were recovered.
For More Info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poldhu
About 50 participants led by NASA Kennedy Space Center's Employee Resource Groups picked up about 20 bags of trash and other large debris along the center's shoreline before turtle-nesting season as a community service. Sea turtle-nesting season begins in about one month. Unlike what might be found along a public beach, all of the debris that litters Kennedy’s restricted beaches washes ashore after being discarded at sea. Of the 72 miles of beach that form the eastern boundary of Brevard County, Florida, about six of those miles line Kennedy. Photo credit: NASA/Bill White
Mogadishu, Somalia - 06 June 2015 - In honor of World Environment Day, the UN Somalia team joined together to clean up the MIA beach in Mogadishu. Over 70 bags of trash were collected.
Photo credit: Cassandra Nelson
Marine debris from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch lays at Kahuku Beach in Oahu, Hawaii on September 5, 2010.
Heal the Bay's 21st Annual Bring Back the Beach Benefit Dinner was held May 17th, 2012, at the Jonathan Beach Club in Santa Monica, California.
Here’s a picture of garbage we collected by the side of the road………and some stuff in bags, too (ha ha ha).
I found one syringe and a bunch of straws and tiny ziplock baggies and bottle caps and tampon applicators and a whole assortment of other junk. But that's just what I found.
So, uh, who wants to go to the beach?
Heal the Bay's 21st Annual Bring Back the Beach Benefit Dinner was held May 17th, 2012, at the Jonathan Beach Club in Santa Monica, California.
About 50 participants led by NASA Kennedy Space Center's Employee Resource Groups picked up about 20 bags of trash and other large debris along the center's shoreline before turtle-nesting season as a community service. Sea turtle-nesting season begins in about one month. Unlike what might be found along a public beach, all of the debris that litters Kennedy’s restricted beaches washes ashore after being discarded at sea. Of the 72 miles of beach that form the eastern boundary of Brevard County, Florida, about six of those miles line Kennedy. Photo credit: NASA/Bill White
Heal the Bay's 21st Annual Bring Back the Beach Benefit Dinner was held May 17th, 2012, at the Jonathan Beach Club in Santa Monica, California.
Heal the Bay's 21st Annual Bring Back the Beach Benefit Dinner was held May 17th, 2012, at the Jonathan Beach Club in Santa Monica, California.
Marine debris from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch at Kahuku Beach in Oahu, Hawaii on September 5, 2010.