Home & Garden
Traders Cove To Host ReClam The Bay Shellfish Nursery
The nonprofit organization is working with Brick Township on a new interpretive center and upweller at the park.

BRICK, NJ -- There's construction underway at Traders Cove Marina and Park.
No, it's not the recently announced plan for a restaurant overlooking the bay; this construction is guaranteed to please environmentalists.
ReClam The Bay, a nonprofit organization that works to raise environmental awareness while also helping to raise millions of baby clams and other shellfish as participants in the Barnegat Bay Shellfish Restoration Program, is working with Brick Township to create an interpretive site at Traders Cove.
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Ground was broken for the project on May 23 and the kiosk for the interpretive center was constructed "in record time," said Charlie Brandt, spokesman for ReClam The Bay.
The interpretive center, which will include an upweller, also referred to as a clam nursery, is projected to open to the public on July 5, Brandt said. In addition to baby clams, the nursery will have baby oysters and baby bay scallops. The nursery will be available to the public all times that Traders Cove is open to the public, he said. It is part of ongoing efforts to educate the public about the environmental benefit of shellfish filtering, feeding and cleaning of estuaries.
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"Our mission is to involve the general public so they will understand that the quality of the water in our estuary, and the quality of the shellfish we eat, are really their responsibility," the group says on its website. "By involving the public in the care, feeding and life cycle of these fragile creatures, we believe that our citizens will better understand how working with the shellfish can help to clean up our environment and keep it clean."
When the interpretive center opens, ReClam The Bay shellfish Gardeners will be available at the site on Wednesdays at 10 a.m. each week starting until October, when the baby clams will be returned to the bay. Visitors will be able to hold the clams, and learn from the members of ReClam The Bay why these tiny animals are so important to the bay’s survival.
The initial work at the site includes pluming the nursery, which enables the pumping of 60 gallons of bay water into the nursery tank every minute. That water brings with it the phytoplankton that the clams and oysters will feed upon as they grow rapidly during the summer months.
The site will also have a Giant Clam, like those seen at other upweller sites and in front of businesses and organizations that support ReClam The Bay.

Come see and touch baby clams and oysters at their nursery. Learn about them and Barnegat Bay with the help of volunteers from ReClam The Bay. This free family activity takes place weekly June through September at the following sites:
MONDAYS, 10 a.m.
Seaside Park, 24th and Bayview
WEDNESDAYS, 10 a.m.
Cattus Island County Park, 1169 Bandon Road, Toms River at the Ocean County Parks & Recreation Dock
Traders Cove Park & Marina, 40 Mantoloking Road, Brick (set to open July 5)
THURSDAYS, 5 p.m.
Surf City Yacht Club, 10th at the Bay, South Parking Lot
FRIDAYS
Mantoloking Yacht Club, Bay & Downer avenues, 10:30 a.m.
Barnegat Light Nursery, Boat Ramp, 10th & Bay, 11 a.m.
Old Coast Guard Station, Pelham Avenue & the Bay, Beach Haven, 9:30 a.m.
Morrison’s Marina, 525 2nd St., Beach Haven, 11 a.m.
Little Egg Harbor Yacht Club, Norwood Avenue & Bay, Beach Haven, 9 a.m.
SATURDAYS
Holiday Harbor Marina, 115 Admiral Way, Waretown, 8 a.m.
For further information call the Rutgers Cooperative Extension of Ocean County, 732-349-1152. For more information on ReClam the Bay, visit their website by clicking here.
(Joe Manz of ReClam The Bay digs preparing for the pipe to carry water to the clam nursery. ReClam The Bay photo)
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