Posted by email from International Coastal Cleanup Singapore (posterous)
Tag Archives: international coastal cleanup
Kallang Basin photos from Waterways Watch Society
Posted by email from International Coastal Cleanup Singapore (posterous)
Singapore Science Centre photos at Labrador Beach
The Singapore Science Center Photos are up on Flickr! See: http://www.flickr.com/photos/30732487@N08
Posted by email from International Coastal Cleanup Singapore (posterous)
Fast Action at Punggol Beach!
tackled this man-made beach – they were so excited that they almost
forgot to record the data!
Thanks to Sembawang Secondary School. They came, collected and left a clean beach behind!
Lim Chen Kee
North East Zone Coordinator
International Coastal Cleanup Singapore
Posted by email from International Coastal Cleanup Singapore (posterous)
Kallang Basin – Results Are Out!
Kallang Basin – click here for details.
Photos from Tampines District Scouts at Pasir Ris Beach
More photos from the Cuon Scouts (Greenview Secondary): http://picasaweb.google.com/cuonscout/2008ICCS
Posted by email from International Coastal Cleanup Singapore (posterous)
Pandan Mangroves – Results Are Out!
Pandan Mangroves – click here for details.
Long intense hours for the Data Manager
Posted by email from International Coastal Cleanup Singapore (posterous)
56 car parts and more than 10,000 plastic bags at Kranji mangrove
The Kranji/Buloh mangrove cleanup 2008 was held at Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve (SBWR). The 265 participants for the cleanup come from National University of Singapore (NUS), Singapore American School (SAS), and Emaar International School (EIS).
3.4 tonnes of trash was categorised and collected during the two-hour long cleanup. The most common items collected were plastic bags (10,375), straws (3,222) and styrofoam pieces (2,492) food wrappers (1,778). Typically, Kranji mangroves turned up a car and a van bumper amongst the 56 car parts.
The enthusiastic Singapore American School ventured deeper into the mangroves to remove historical trash from the site. The trash bags loaded up by the sites very quickly so our alert Trash Transfer Team activated immediately to start bringing the heavy to the final Trash Collection Point.
The coordinators from the National University of Singapore did a detailed job this year, allocating each of their many Site Buddies to pre-allocated groups of volunteers – whom they had called for a reminder about the meeting time in campus. The highly motivated participants were a mix of staff and students from the very large campus, and they worked alongside for the first time.
The trash transfer to the final bin point this year secured the services of the Sungeo Buloh Wetlands Reserve's pickup as the reserve's traditional super-trolley finaly broke down!
We left with high spirits, happy once again that we had chipped away at the influx of marine trash that threatens our precious mangroves.
Posted by email from International Coastal Cleanup Singapore (posterous)
Cheong Wei Siong & Wang Zhihong,
Site Coordinators, Buloh-Kranji mangrove,
North-West Zone,
International Coastal Cleanup Singapore
Styrofoam dominates at Lim Chu Kang
Lim Chu Kang beach and mangroves were visited by a total of 69 participants from Coca Cola Singapore and Republic Polytechnic this morning. Participants worked from 9am to 10.30 a.m in a site dominated by styrofoam bits (1,419) and plastic bags (1,289) and there quite a number of large nets and ropes as well.
The odd items included a Snoopy toy, a dead rat and a bra. A dead flower crab and five dead horseshoe crabs were removed from the site. All in all 435.5 kg of trash was collected, categorised and weighed.
It was heartening to work alongside enthusiastic participants, especially since this is the first time Republic Polytechnic took part in ICCS. At the end of the cleanup, participants discussed cleanup results from last year and thought about what we could do at the individual, company and school levels, based on these data.
There was a heart-stopping moment when we learnt that the bin at Lim Chu Kang road end was privately-paid for. Negotiations were successful however, and grateful organisers left behind their cache of Coke Zero and mineral water. As we left, the scene at the jetty was one of coke-drinking uncles!
See all the photos from the Lim Chu Kang cleanup at http://flickr.com/photos/habitatnews/sets/72157607388657463/
Dewi Anggraini,
Site Captain, Lim Chu Kang mangrove,
North-West Zone,
International Coastal Cleanup Singapore
Posted by email from International Coastal Cleanup Singapore (posterous)