Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Rutherford Trip Documents "Pristine" Beach



In Cameron Parish, Southwest Louisiana, 15 miles east of where the Calcasieu River lets out into the Gulf in an area known as the “Cajun Riviera,” sit Rutherford and Hackberry Beach. Last summer, Acadian Group members led by Chair Harold Shoeffler set out on a beachcombing trip there, and along with shells, interesting pieces of driftwood, and rosy cheeks, the group came back with some other curious items: a road sign from Mexico, a perfectly good hand saw, some fresh (and not so fresh) coconuts, and a crab trap or two.

Rutherford beach has no hotels, marinas, casinos, or any other large developments, and what few camps existed there were mostly wiped out by Hurricane Rita. As a result, there is no one to sweep the beach for tourists or residents, and the trash that rolls in with the tide begins to accumulate. Rutherford is a perfect example of what a “pristine” beach along the Gulf looks like in 2012—plastic bottles, shoes, garbage of all sorts from shrimp and oilfield boats…basically anything that gets thrown out into your local waterway will eventually work its way into the Gulf, and either sink or wash ashore. There’s also the issue of water quality. According to a recent report by the NRDC, Cameron Parish beaches are the worst in the nation for contamination—nearly 44% of all water samples taken there were over the safe limit for levels of bacteria. Grand Isle fared a bit better, with only 8% of samples taken showing unsafe levels.

On June 30th of this year, a small group of Sierra Club members and their friends and families set out to document the abundant types of trash on the coast. Here’s what they found: on average, each 10 yard stretch of beach—from shore to grassline—contains 19 plastic bottles, 6 glass bottles, 15 plastic fragments, 4 metal containers or fragments, 2 plastic toys, a half a light bulb, 3 shoes, and about 5 feet of nylon rope. Other interesting items included a broken cooler, caulk guns, fishing nets, a push broom, giant pieces of yellow foam, a propane tank, a broken fishing basket, and one of those little rubber bracelets people wear to show their support for some cause (we’re betting that the cause wasn’t “Protect the Environment, Don’t Litter”). All of these things were found along Hackberry beach, an area adjacent to Rutherford that has no car access and therefore has very little human activity.

The Sierra Club is dedicated to helping to educate the public on the poor state of our beaches, and steps we can take to start to clean them up. The Acadian Group will be sending out a press release about its findings to raise awareness and hopefully recruit new members to help in the cause. If you’d like to do something, call or write us at one of the contacts listed on this website.