Thank you
Algalita and friends for the warm welcome home. The last few miles in, I sat on the bow ready to video any sea lions or dolphins sightings so I could send a picture back to Vicki
Rivenbark's class at Holly Tree School back in Wilmington, NC. The only thing we saw as we neared
Alamitos Bay was plastic trash making its way out to sea as we headed in. Things like Styrofoam
containers, chip bags, bottles, and even a
soccer ball accompanied by a bottle. But the most disturbing was actually witnessing a seagull pecking at a floating plastic bag. "It looked like we were back in the
gyre." Lindsey turned to me and said, "This is where it all starts." Thank goodness the
Algalita supporters were out there to distract us. It was all too
overwhelming to see so much trash in its origin- from land. It played out like a scene in "The Twilight Zone." I, personally, felt like our trip out into the
gyre was some kind of victory, only to return to business as usual. The j
aded twist to the end of our journey.
It's going to take a lot more people, like Marieta, willing to lend a hand not letting plastic pollution go out to sea.
I do have a better ending to our last night together though. We left Avalon early Tuesday morning after a dinner the night before at the The Lobster Pot. The waiter asked us where we would like to sit and Lindsey, spying a table for six elevated by a handful of steps into the back of a sawed off boat, said "How about there?" We all looked at the stern nestled up against the wall, shrugged, and climbed the stairs. Why not, what was one more meal elbow to elbow enclosed by the sides of a boat.
Bonnie Monteleone over and out
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