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Bay Friendly Yard Tip #3

Bay Friendly Yard Tip #3

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Dec 16, 2021 | Bay Friendly Yards

Bay Friendly Yard Tip #3 Tree Type Matters Choose trees that are hosts to the largest number of native species. Here’s our fave 5!   “Not all trees are created equal,” says Frank Piccininni, Director of Habitat Restoration at Save The Great...
Bay Friendly Yard Tip #2

Bay Friendly Yard Tip #2

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Dec 15, 2021 | Bay Friendly Yards

Bay Friendly Yard Tip #2 is to plant trees in clusters. The roots graft making them more storm-resistant. Trees are also stronger in groups. Cluster planting helps limit canopy size making them less vulnerable to winds. “Like people, trees need friends”,...
Champlin Creek Champions

Champlin Creek Champions

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Nov 29, 2021 | Creek Defender, Pollution, Water Quality

On the cold, blustery morning of Saturday, November 27th, Save The Great South Bay partnered up with Keep Islip Clean to conduct a clean up at the headwaters to Champlin Creek. Champlin Creek is one of the 50 creeks across the South Shore that lead into the Great...
Mugwort Removal at Native Species Sanctuary

Mugwort Removal at Native Species Sanctuary

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Nov 29, 2021 | Education, Fixing Habitats, Invasive Species

What a great way to show our thankfulness this past weekend as Save The Great South Bay teamed up with the South Shore Audubon Society to remove invasive species at the Michael J. Sperling Bird Sanctuary in North Massapequa. Under the direction of the ecological...
Bay Friendly Yard Tip #1

Bay Friendly Yard Tip #1

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Nov 13, 2021 | Bay Friendly Yards

Having a Bay Friendly Yard is one way you can help save the Great South Bay. Start by “leaving the leaves”, says Frank Piccininni, Director of Habitat Restoration at Save The Great South Bay. Here are a few reasons to leave your rake in the shed: Leaves...
Invasive Seaweed Spreading in Great South Bay

Invasive Seaweed Spreading in Great South Bay

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Nov 5, 2021 | Advocacy, Algal Blooms, Education, Lawn Fertilizer, Nitrogen Pollution, Pollution, Water Quality

The recent Japanese red seaweed invasion at Heckscher State Park had Save The Great South Bay supporters on high alert. We reported the obnoxious odor and presence of fouling seaweed to NY State Parks and NYS Department of Environmental Conservation who got right on...
Mayor’s Cup Races to Help Save The Great South Bay

Mayor’s Cup Races to Help Save The Great South Bay

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Sep 27, 2021 | Featured, Fishing and Boating, News

The 2021 Mayor’s Cup Charity Regatta & Soirée took place on Saturday, September 18 on the Great South Bay followed immediately by what is quickly becoming an annual favorite celebration at the Long Island Yacht Club benefiting local environmental non-profit Save...
Great South Bay Oyster Project Plants 5,000 Oysters

Great South Bay Oyster Project Plants 5,000 Oysters

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Jul 24, 2021 | Great South Bay Oyster Project, Water Quality

The Great South Bay Oyster Project made it’s mark with an initial planting of over 5,000 oysters in Save The Great South Bay’s recently established oyster sanctuary, helping rebuild marine habitat and providing essential environmental functions such as water...
A Swell App To Measure Debris

A Swell App To Measure Debris

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Jul 8, 2021 | Creek Defender, Fixing Habitats, Pollution, Water Quality

Want to help us collect data on debris? There’s an app for that. The Clean Swell app. At Save The Great South Bay, we are firm believers in the age old adage of you can’t manage what you can’t measure. Starting in 2021 and in collaboration with the...
Jet Skis Can Damage Marshlands

Jet Skis Can Damage Marshlands

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Jul 6, 2021 | Advocacy, Fishing and Boating, Fixing Habitats, Marshlands

Jet skis (personal water craft) are a lot of fun, and we love having fun on the Great South Bay, but full throttle jet ski riding in the marshlands can do some real harm to nature. Marsh sidewalls are sensitive and the propulsion from jet ski’s can cause them to...
Harmful Brown Tide Erupts Across the Great South Bay

Harmful Brown Tide Erupts Across the Great South Bay

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Jul 6, 2021 | Algal Blooms, Nitrogen Pollution

An intense and damaging brown tide has erupted across Great South Bay on the south shore of Long Island. Monitoring by The Gobler Laboratory at Stony Brook University has revealed that a brown tide has rapidly intensified to more than 300,000 cells per milliliter in...
Pump Out, Don’t Dump Out!

Pump Out, Don’t Dump Out!

by Robyn Silvestri, Executive Director | Jul 3, 2021 | Algal Blooms, Boat Sewage, Creek Defender, Fishing and Boating, Water Quality

To all our boater friends – help protect marine life of our Bay.  Raw sewage in our waterways causes pollution, algal blooms, possible diseases for shellfish areas, and can close areas for swimming. – pump out, don’t dump out. Our Creek Defenders...
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algal blooms Babylon Bay Friendly Yards Bellport Bay Blue Island Oysters breach Brown tide Carll's River Christopher Gobler clamming Clean up Creek Defender CRESLI fertilizer Fire Island Fire Island National Seashore Grassroots Environmental Education Great South Bay habitat restoration Hurricane Sandy Keep Islip Clean Michael Busch nitrogen nitrogenous waste nitrogen pollution NYSDEC Old Inlet oysters pesticides Save The Great South Bay Sayville SCERP septic tanks sewering SoMAS Steven Bellone Suffolk County The Army Corps of Engineers The Great South Bay The Nature Conservancy The New Inlet The Old Inlet Volunteer Water Matters water quality

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