Fighting shoreline erosion with a natural buffer - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:53 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Fighting shoreline erosion with a natural buffer

An ecological landscaping company from Nova Scotia is in P.E.I. this week, heading up a project to create a natural buffer zone against erosion.

Logs, hay bales, plants protect shore cliffs in erosion protection experiment

Dozens of volunteers turned up to help build the natural erosion barrier near Augustine Cove. (CBC)

An ecological landscaping company from Nova Scotia is in P.E.I. this week, heading up a project to create a natural buffer zone against erosion.

Two watershed groups are involved, along with community members and the UPEI climate lab. They are building protection along a 120-metre section of eroding cliff near Augustine Cove, on the Northumberland Strait west of Charlottetown.
Susan Sorenson would like to learn more about how to control erosion near her own cottage. (CBC)

The crew takes dead trees and hay bales and stacks them together, thenplants vegetation amongst them to anchor them all to the soil.

It's the first time this kind of natural method has been used on P.E.I., instead of a rock wall.

Susan Sorensen is one of dozens of volunteers who turned out to help. She is facing erosion problems at her cottage, but doesn't want a rock wall.

"It was wonderful to come and learn that there was an alternative," said Sorensen.

"There are small steps that we can take, like we need not cut right up to the edge of the shore."

Creating a stable shoreline

Volunteers pile up brush and hay bales to help support the cliff. (CBC)
Rosmarie Lohnes created the landscaping company Helping Nature Heal 14 years ago. Since that time it has been working on repairing the Nova Scotia coastline.

"By the end of three years, it's unbelievable how much has grown," said Lohnes.

"By five years we really don't have to do anything. It's a stable system again."

The South Shore Watershed Association hired Lohnes with a $30,000 federal grant. The Bedeque Bay Environmental Association is also helping out, as are staff of the UPEI climate lab, including Derek Ellis.

"We know that erosion is a problem here on P.E.I.," said Ellis.

"If we can mitigate that using these natural techniques, and it works, then let's do it!"

The main building of the barrier will be complete Thursday. How well the barrier works will be monitored over the next few years.