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December 5th, 2007

News: CRA Bond Bids Considered
November 28th, 2007

News: 118 Pies, Going, Going, Gone
November 19th, 2007

News: Cedar Key Boy Captures Meteorite
November 15th, 2007

News: CKAA Concern about Poaching
November 13th, 2007

News: Big Dock Reconstruction Begins / Updated Nov. 14
November 13th, 2007

News: Halloween 2007 in Cedar Key
October 31st, 2007

News: Down with the Old, Up with the New
October 25th, 2007

News: Living Shorelines vs. Seawalls
October 24th, 2007

News: Vandals at Anchor Hole
October 22nd, 2007

News: Cedar Key Seafood Fest on a Roll
October 20th, 2007

News: Bids in to Fix Big Dock
October 16th, 2007

News: Otter Creek Tractor Accident Injures Child
October 15th, 2007

News: Meet Father Georges
October 12th, 2007

News: Woman`s Club Seeks Help with "Support Our Troops"
September 28th, 2007

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Living Shorelines vs. Seawalls

Living Shorelines vs. Seawalls

Jim Hoy

Living shorelines, as alternatives to seawalls and bulkheads, were the subject of presentations by three speakers at a meeting in Cedar Key, October 24. Living shorelines may be fostered oyster reef, aquatic plants of other "soft" methods of fighting erosion of waterfront properties.


A speaker used this photo as an illustration of a hardened and lifeless method of fighting erosion.

The three speakers, all Florida Sea Grant extension agents, were Christina Verlinde, Brian Cameron and Scott Jackson. They covered technical, social and regulatory aspects of developing living shorelines. Cedar Key officials City Attorney David Coffey and LPA member Linda Seyfert , and a number of interested citizens heard various way of protecting the shoreline while developing productive habitat for aquatic wildlife.

Dr. Brian Cameron described Project GreenShores in St. Andrew Bay where 30 acres of marsh and 12 acres of oyster reefs have been restored. In another area an old bulkhead has been removed and sea grass beds established. Cameron emphasized the importance of community participation in restoration efforts.


Scott Jackson demonstrated how sea grass can be propagated in a nursery prior to transplantation along a beach.

Scott Jackson expanded on the importance of community involvement. He told of the Grasses in Classes program in which grade school children grow sea grass in small ponds and later transplant the grass along beaches. One school (of many in the program) grew ten thousand plants and put them out, creating a four acre sea grass bed.

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