sbccrestSt Bernard’s College Santa Monica is a Year Nine residential campus located on the Great Ocean Road at Eastern View, on Victoria’s West Coast. All Year Nine students from St Bernard’s main campus in suburban Essendon complete a four week program at Santa, which includes surfing, bushwalking, mountain bike riding, environmental projects, marine biology and oceanography.

Santa Monica is close to the iconic Bells Beach and adjacent to two Marine National Parks. We are on the migration route of Southern Right and Humpback whales, which regularly rest in the sheltered bays along the West Coast from July through to September. With the ocean at our back door – and with surfing forming a major part of our program - we have a strong vested interest in keeping our beaches and rivermouths clean.

Schools Project - St Bernard's College Santa Monica

Santa Monica students hit the beach again in August as part of the Surf Coast Marine Debris Project. Once again a large haul of cigarette butts and other plastic and glass items. The clean up day had wild and woolly conditions with big winds, solid swell and strong currents – beaches are changing shape overnight. We have also had an enormous amount of rain that has washed out all the stormwater and flushed the creeks and rivers into the ocean. The ocean has been quite discoloured for about ten days now – and it is still raining!

Photos to come, so check back soon!

 

 
Schools Project - St Bernard's College Santa Monica

IMG_8936The Santa Monica boys returned to the five km stretch of beach from Moggs Creek to Grassy Creek for their July clean up. We hadn’t collected debris on this stretch since way back in April so it was interesting to see what had been washed up. We highlighted cigarette butts as our focus this week – with a promise of a block of chocolate for the group for every 200 butts they could find! There is nothing like chocolate to motivate 15 year old boys – we ended up with 1010 butts in all.

Other than that there was the usual array of discarded bait bags and tangled fishing line – hooks and sinkers still attached – left by the surf fishermen who, as a group, need some educating about the impact of their negligence on the beach environment.

 
Schools Project - St Bernard's College Santa Monica

IMG_8486The Santa Monica Boys have been busy again. This month we covered a different stretch of beach, covering the 3.5 km from Aireys Inlet to Moggs Creek. We are now monitoring the coast from Aireys Inlet to Grassy Creek – about 8.5km, alternating which half of it we cover each month. Next month we’ll be back to the Moggs to Grassy section.

We got some interesting results. The mouth of the Painkalac Estuary at Aireys Inlet alone had a couple of hundred tiny pieces of plastic, most smaller than a 5 cent piece. The beach sections were pretty clean apart from where there is regular beach access. Note that there were a lot less cigarette butts this time because we didn’t take in Archway Beach, where tourist and backpacker buses stop for a break on their Ocean Road tours. Last time we found about 250 butts at this beach access alone. Students are planning to contact the Shire about this with some data and lobby them to provide bins for smokers.

Here are some pictures from the collection day.

Last Updated (Friday, 28 May 2010 12:03)

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Schools Project - St Bernard's College Santa Monica

Tangaroa_2St Bernard's College students started off the 2010 school year back at the beach, helping remove marine debris and submitting data to the National Marine Debris Database. Participants reported a beautiful sunny day with a big low tide  - so plenty of beach to scour and some enthusiastic boys (who had been promised a swim at the end!). Along with the very low tide, was a very big high tide the night before impacting on the amount of debris found, however students still collected 601 pieces of debris, weighing 36kg! The most common item was once again cigarette butts with a huge total of 231, making up over 50% of the debris collected! The  students have also increased the area they are covering – extending it to 4km, from Moggs Creek to Grassy Creek.

Next collection day will be in early March.

 

Last Updated (Thursday, 25 February 2010 19:27)