Schools

Rutgers Students Plant New Orleans Dune Grass On Spring Break

A group of Rutgers students spent spring break planting 4,000 grass plugs across four miles of New Orleans coastline, in Katrina recovery.

NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ — Instead of relaxing on a beach somewhere, a group of Rutgers students spent their spring break planting 4,000 grass plugs across four miles of the Gulf of Mexico coast, to help New Orleans in its continuing response to the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina.

It's interesting because Katrina happened at a time when many of today's Rutgers students were too young to remember.

The students found themselves in one of the most meaningful experiences of their lives. The seven-day trip was one of eight student-planned and led service-learning projects this March, and one of 18 trips over the course of the year, sponsored by Rutgers University Alternative Breaks.

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“We drove from New Orleans to Elmer’s Island, a beach that is not open to the public anymore and serves as a bird sanctuary,” explained co-site leader Gianna Midure, a junior studying supply chain management and psychology.

The grass plugs, once rooted, would help protect the coastline from additional erosion and prevent sediment deposits containing fertilizers and other contaminants from reaching bird habitats.

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“We worked from early in the morning until dinnertime, so we actually got to see all of the progress we made,” said Midure. “It was really nice for our trip’s participants to see a visible representation of the service they were doing, it was like, ‘Wow, we did that.’”

Midure and her co-site leader, Tyler Dey, a sophomore studying animal science in the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, planned the trip in response to their curiosity and desire to learn more about the lasting damage from the history-making hurricane.

Site leaders Rutgers students Gianna Midure and Tyler Dey

The students participated in daily information sessions facilitated by their community partner, Common Ground Relief, an organization formed in September 2005 to provide disaster relief and service activities following Hurricane Katrina. The students learned about the human and ecological impact of the devastating storm, as well as the man-made influences which continue to threaten the area’s wetlands – a vital part of both Louisiana’s ecosystem and economy – that are being lost at an alarming rate.

“We chose this trip because it is something that I wasn’t really familiar with, whereas Tyler might have more experience with it,” Midure said. “I thought that this would be a good opportunity for me to learn as well.”

In addition to the grass planting, the students helped plant and care for cypress and yaupon trees, two species heavily affected by Hurricane Katrina, at Bayou Savauge, a national wildlife refuge maintained by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

The group also spoke with biologists at the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries. For Eva Tillett, a junior studying ecology, evolution and natural resources at the Rutgers School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, this experience was especially meaningful.

“This trip was really helpful for me, it allowed me to have a more personal connection to what I’m studying,” said Tillett, who wants to work for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. “I got to see exactly what the work was like, and what technology and information I need to focus on when I’m in my classes."

Students trudge through mud to find a suitable location to plant cypress trees at Bayou Savauge.

“If you had told me, ‘hey, we’re going to be stomping around in knee-high mud, planting trees alongside a bunch of spiders and snakes,’ I probably wouldn’t have done it, but it was actually the most enjoyable part of the experience,” Dey said.

All photos by Larry McAllister II and provided to Patch.

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