Abandoned shade canopies are trashing Texas beaches

Abandoned shade canopies are trashing Texas beaches

discarded shade canopies

Abandoned shade canopies litter the Port Aransas Beach on July 5, 2022. Jason Jones photo

The flurry of photos started arriving yesterday morning – shot after shot of what looked like giant metal crabs, their spindly legs bent into unnatural positions.

Hundreds of them lay mangled and abandoned on the sandy beach near Port Aransas, a day after the Fourth of July weekend.

shade canopies

The abandoned shade canopies look like giant metal crabs. Jason Jones photo

“I’ve already seen two dozen of these shade structures littering the beach,” my friend Jason Jones texted, his anger palpable through the text messages he kept sending me. “They’re everywhere.”

A few minutes later, more photos arrived, each one showing more invasive metal crabs.

“They really do need to ban those things,” he wrote. “They’re not made to be disposable.”

Shade canopies are cheap

Every Walmart and Academy sells them. The cheapest ones cost $40 or $50. In today’s world, they’re disposable.

abandoned shade canopies

Some of the abandoned shade canopies are mangled, others were just left behind. Jason Jones photo

Jones told me he quit counting after spotting 300 of the flimsy structures discarded on the beach between the first two access points. A crew in a pickup truck was gathering as many as they could, but they would be quickly overwhelmed.

“It’s everything from broken ones to ones that are still set up,” Jones told me this morning. “They just leave them. Man, it’s horrible.”

Related: Trash is piiling up on Texas beaches – please help clean it up

It’s part of a broader problem. I don’t understand people who leave garbage at the beach. Don’t they go to the ocean because it’s pretty? Who wants to sit next to a pile of plastic bottles, snack wrappers, wrecked beach toys, or shade canopies?

Help keep beaches clean

According to the Port Aransas Adopt-a-Beach website, thousands of pounds of trash are removed from area beaches each year. Some of the refuse washes in from offshore, but most is left by beachgoers, the website says.

That’s why the city has installed trashcans and dispensers where you can pick up reusable mesh litterbags at nearly 20 beach locations.

shade canopies

Some of the abandoned shade canopies were dragged to trash cans, others were not. Jason Jones photo

Please, when you go to the beach, limit what you bring. Take your trash with you when you leave. Better yet, pick up some of what other folks have left behind, too. (Remember the motto Take Three for the Sea.)
And please – think about what you buy. Do you really need that shade structure if you’re only going to use it once? Maybe we can get along with less. That’ll mean a more beautiful planet for the next generation.

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It took one hour to make the Pennybacker Bridge overlook a little cleaner

It took one hour to make the Pennybacker Bridge overlook a little cleaner

Jeff Sheldon pauses during an hour-long trash cleanup at the Pennybacker Bridge overlook Wednesday to enjoy the view. Pam LeBlanc photo

 

One hour, six bags of trash and a moldy old rug.

That was the haul after an hour-long sweep of the trail at the Pennybacker Bridge overlook on the northwest corner of Lake Austin at Loop 360.

I visited the spot for the first time a few weeks ago, and was dismayed to find it littered with plastic bottles, beer cans, discarded face masks and food wrappers. I mentioned it in a post on Facebook, and a few friends suggested that we gather for an informal trash cleanup.

We did that today. It didn’t take long, and picking up trash (at least two pieces a day) is part of my list of New Year’s resolutions.

This is not pretty, folks. Ugly graffiti covers many of the limestone rocks at the overlook. Pam LeBlanc photo

We’ve named our little group the Cycling Cleanup Crew, and we plan to organize a quick cleanup at various locations around Austin roughly every month. Care to join us? Check back here. I’ll post details. All you have to do is bring a trash bag and gloves, and the willingness to leave our Austin greenspace a little cleaner than you found it. Participants are encouraged to arrive by bicycle.

Today, Dan Pedroza (whom I met while riding my bicycle across Iowa a few years ago), Jeff Sheldon (whom I met while picking up barbecue at the amazing Stiles Switch), and Margaret Licarione (whom I met for the first time today), and I made a quick run up the overlook, gathering trash like we were hunting for Easter eggs. It appears that people drop trash off the edge of the cliff (“I’m done with this bag of Fritos, guess I’ll just pitch it over the edge!”) while they’re up there enjoying one of the best views in Austin, and most of the detritus is precariously lodged in bushes on the cliff, just out of safe reach. What we really need are some rappelers to pitch in.

I removed at least three long tinsel garlands from trees at the site, along with a dozen or so broken Christmas bulbs. I love Christmas as much as anyone, but nothing says “I don’t care about the environment” like hanging cheap junk in trees on the side of the road and not cleaning it up afterward. Most of it winds up blowing off and spoiling our green space. Please don’t do it.

Margaret found an old rug in the woods, half buried in the trampled dirt. We pried it out and hauled it away.

Today’s cleanup didn’t take long, and it felt great to get outside and leave a tiny corner of Austin nicer than we found it. Want to join us? Check my Facebook page for upcoming details.

Jeff Sheldon, left, and Dan Pedroza, right, hoist an old rug into the bed of my truck. Pam LeBlanc photo

 

 

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A takeaway from chasing kayakers up the Texas coast? Our beaches are trashed

A takeaway from chasing kayakers up the Texas coast? Our beaches are trashed

We found trash at nearly every campsite where we stopped along the coast. The only exception? Small barrier islands. Pam LeBlanc photo


One thing I noticed as I chased the 3rd Coast Cowboys Epic Kayak Journey up the Texas coast the last two weeks?
Trash.
From the first night, when I camped at Mansfield Cut, the passage between North and South Padre Islands, to the finish point at Walter Umphrey State Park near Port Arthur, nearly every place we pitched a tent or delivered supplies to the team was fouled with discarded plastic bottles, food wrappers and beer cans.
Hopping from boulder to boulder on jetties, I spotted trash in every nook and cranny. I found toilet paper in the sand dunes, where endangered sea turtles nest. So much trash, along with a collection of old tires, was strewn around one spot on Bolivar Peninsula where the paddlers camped that it looked like a dump. (And, in a way, I guess it was.)

Jimmy Harvey sets up his tent on a small barrier island in Matagorda Bay. Islands like this were mostly trash free. Pam LeBlanc photo

As we made our way up the coast, the only places not buried in trash were the islands accessible only by boat. There, bright green grass waved in the breeze, and gray and white pieces of driftwood stood out like bones.
I’ve never understood the mentality of litterers. Do they think it’s someone else’s job to clean up after them? Do they think trash disappears? Do they think pristine beaches and fields look better caped in discarded tents (yes, we saw that), Fritos bags and broken coolers?
People fishing seem to be particularly piggish. I found bait packages, fishing line, broken awnings, single-use grocery bags and snack containers.
I brought spare trash bags with me on the second half of the trip, so I could pick up some of the refuse. Not a pleasant pastime, and it hardly made a dent, but I’m kind of obsessive-compulsive. It made me feel a teensy bit better.
Think about it. If every person who visited a park or beach picked up a few extra pieces of garbage left by someone else, we could make a difference.
Please, Take 3 for the Sea.

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Trash is piling up on Texas beaches – please help clean it up

Trash is piling up on Texas beaches – please help clean it up

I picked up lots of trash at North Padre Island National Seashore this weekend.

If you need convincing that we’ve got a plastic problem on our planet, take a stroll on the beach.
When a weekend scuba diving trip got cancelled, I headed to the Texas coast to dip my toe in the surf.

Some of the trash had washed in from the ocean.

I got distracted between sets of leaping through the waves at North Padre Island National Seashore. Fishing nets, ropes and other flotsam had washed up on shore, and beach goers had left plastic bottles, empty plastic sacks and broken bits of plastic toys all over the beach. Pulverized bits of colorful plastic, along with enough plastic bottle tops and utensils to fill a backyard swimming pool, littered the edge of the dunes. I found a couple of dead seagulls, too, and wondered if their bellies were full of plastic chips.

I know some of the junk had floated in from the ocean, but plenty of it was tossed there by lazy beach goers. I’ll never understand the mindset of someone who ditches their single-use items in a national park – or anywhere. I wish I could load it into a dump truck and deposit it in their front yard, or fill their car with it.

I found a bunch of plastic sacks. Pam LeBlanc photo

A sign posted near the beach encourages visitors to take away more than they bring. As I walked up and down the beach, I picked up some of the trash. Imagine if everyone took away more than they brought.

And it’s not just Texas beaches. During a recent trip to the Dominican Republic, a walk on a beach turned up a bunch of plastic doll heads. (Creepy!) A trip to surf camp in Costa Rica last summer introduced me to a whole beach coated in pinky fingernail-sized chips of plastic.

I wonder if any of the dead birds had eaten plastic. (Sorry, I know this is not pretty, but it is reality.) Pam LeBlanc photo

I can’t stand to see beautiful places choking in garbage. We’ve got to all do our part to use less plastic in the first place, and properly dispose of what we do use.

Remember that saying? Take Three for the Sea. Any time you’re at the beach (or lake or river or back country) pick up three – or 103! – pieces of trash.

Our most beautiful places appreciate it. And I do too.

 

 

 

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One Austin paddler pulled more than 500 balls from Lady Bird Lake

One Austin paddler pulled more than 500 balls from Lady Bird Lake

Geoff Waters has collected more than 500 balls from Lady Bird Lake since March. Photo courtesy Geoff Waters

Geoff Waters has scooped 534 balls from Lady Bird Lake in the last six months.

That’s a lot of balls, and most of them – 402, to be exact – were tennis balls that probably escaped the clenches of a dog playing fetch from the shore.

Waters paddles the lake frequently while training for endurance canoe races like the Texas Water Safari and the Yukon River Quest. He got in the habit of plucking errant orbs from the water back in March. He and another local paddler, Mike Gordan, turned it into something of a game, filling their boats with balls as they logged laps up and down the lake.

“I had been seeing a lot as I was going around the lake but couldn’t get to shore to get them in my skinny 19-foot boat,” he said. He took a smaller boat out and in one day alone raked in 192 balls.

Others in the paddling community saw what they were doing and started collecting balls, too.

The vast majority of the balls were tennis balls. Photo courtesy Geoff Waters

This week, Waters hauled his load of balls to the curb for large trash pickup. Besides the tennis balls, he had collected 38 ping pong balls, 18 store-bought dog balls, 14 Nerf balls, 14 softball or baseballs, eight bobbers, seven racquet balls, three Whiffle balls, one croquet ball, one Christmas tree ornament and 28 other miscellaneous balls.

And it’s not just balls.

“I only take pictures of the balls because it’s become a little game, but for every ball I pick up, I’m usually picking up two plastic water bottles or other pieces of trash,” Waters said.

He’d like to see others do the same.

“It’s just a mindset of picking trash out of the water,” he said. “If you see something floating on the water, you snag it.”

Better yet, don’t let the balls find their way into the lake in the first place.

“Hey, quit treating tennis balls as something disposable to just leave in the lake,” he said. “If Sparky’s getting tired, don’t make that last throw.”

 

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

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