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Balgowlah Heights Clean Up

By Northern Beaches Clean Up Crew Join Me

About Northern Beaches Clean Up Crew

Northern Beaches Clean Up Crew is run by volunteers and is a non-profit charity where no one gets paid. We meet the last Sunday of every month at 10am on one of Sydney's northern beaches. Do a good deed for the planet and make some new friends at the same time! 
One easy thing you can do to help saving our environment is to clean up rubbish. Pick up plastic, Styrofoam and other items from your local beach or area. Trash ends up in the ocean where it pollutes the environment and kill wildlife. Plastic in the ocean breaks down into such small segments that pieces of plastic from a one litre bottle could end up on every mile of beach throughout the world. It take 1,000 years for plastic to degrade and one million sea birds and 100,000 marine mammals are killed annually from plastic in our oceans. 44 percent of all seabird species, 22 percent of cetaceans, all sea turtle species and a growing list of fish species have been documented with plastic in or around their bodies.
Please say no to plastic: Say no to soy fish containers, plastic bags, plastic straws and plastic bottles as a start. Bring your own coffee cup to the café and if you have forgotten it, get the takeaway coffee with no lid or give yourself a break and sit down and have your coffee in a porcelain cup. You can make a huge difference for this planet by changing some small every day habits. Thank you on behalf of the planet, oceans and the future of our children. To learn more about what we do, find us on Facebook and Instagram or on our website www.northernbeachescleanupcrew.com

Date and time

Sunday 29th September 10:00 - 11:45

Occurs: Monthly

Location

See the map on our website, but we're meeting in the grass area close North Palm Beach Surf Lifesaving Club

Landmark: See details in the event

Council: Northern Beaches Council (NSW)

Site Type: Beach/Coastal

Event Info

Meeting Point: Come and join us for our September clean up at Tania Park, Balgowlah Heights. We'll meet in the grass area on the field at Tania Park - see map on our website. We have gloves, bags and buckets. We'll clean up this area to try and catch all the litter before it flies over the cliffs and in to the ocean. Some of us can focus on the lookout area, grass areas and others can walk along the bushes. We will clean up until around 11.30 and after that we will start to pack up. We appreciate any help we can get, no matter how small or big. No booking required - just show up on the day. We're a friendly group of people and everyone is welcome to this family friendly event. It's a nice community - make some new friends and do a good deed for the planet at the same time. For everyone to feel welcome, please leave political and religious messages at home. There is a carpark, but it can be busy on Sundays, so check streets close by as well if it's full. Message us here if you are lost. All welcome - the more the merrier. Please invite your friends too

Site Supervisor: Northern Beaches Clean Up Crew

Contact Supervisor

My Achievements

My Updates

Podcast with our founder

Friday 7th May
To listen to a podcast with our founder, please follow this link:

https://www.whatcanwedopodcast.com/blank/episode/1cac05f9/northern-beaches-clean-up-crew-wants-you-to-live-your-best-plastic-free-life

A sea change needed to clean up Northern Beaches

Sunday 28th May

The extreme weather events dominating the 2021-22 summer and bringing continuous rain have also brought increased pollution to Sydney’s beaches and waterways.

These contaminants have arrived in many forms, from heightened levels of sewage and industrial run-off in creeks, lagoons and bays, to shorelines and river banks scattered with single-use plastics, food and drink containers and household junk.

Of particular concern are the small fragments of polystyrene foam, typically from eskies, coffee cups and broken buoys, that scatter along shorelines and appear as attractive morsels to birds, turtles, fish and other marine life, which mistake them for seafood.

Northern Beaches Clean Up Crew (NBCUC) is a voluntary non-profit organisation dedicated to keeping our beaches and waterways garbage-free and safe to swim. Manly Observer caught up with founder Malin Frick to learn how they combat the waste flotsam and jetsam along our shorelines and whether lifestyle changes can lessen future problems.

When did she launch the organisation and what was her motivation?

“Northern Beaches Clean Up Crew started in 2014,” she said. “It just started as some friends going for beach walks and at the same time picking up the rubbish that we found on the beaches…

“Since we always had passers-by join us when we picked up rubbish, I thought that a way to teach people to become more aware and join the beach cleaning movement was by starting a Facebook page, and from there it grew.

“Our aims now are educating people about single-use-plastic and how it impacts wildlife and environment, getting a community together for a good deed (we love making new friends and seeing how friendships grow within our group), and at the same time making the area cleaner. After all, who likes a dirty beach?”

Do the clean-up crew just focus on beaches, or do you cover waterways too?

“Since all winds eventually will lead litter to the oceans, we also started to clean up lagoons and creeks, trying to prevent the rubbish from even coming to the beaches. Now, we are cleaning up a mix between beaches, lagoons and creeks.”

What are the most waste common items NBCUC collect in their clean-ups?

“The items we always find on our events (without a doubt) are cigarettes, bottles, cans, single-use coffee cups, soy-fish sauce containers, food wraps such as chocolate bar wraps, plastic straws and cotton buds. I know it may sound strange but there are many cotton buds on the beaches – it is because people keep flushing them down the toilets and they pass through the water cleaning process and end up in the ocean.”

What is the average weight of the waste after a day’s clean-up?

“I cannot really estimate an average weight for our clean-ups, because glass bottles can be really heavy and at times we find really big items like sofas, and even a broken motorbike!

“We sort and count all our rubbish at every clean up and enter that information in a marine debris database that researchers at universities have access to. That way researchers can estimate how many single-use coffee cups are littered every year.

“At some clean-ups we’ve picked up over 500 kilos of rubbish – but the amount varies. At Curl Curl Lagoon we picked up over 20,000 pieces of rubbish and included bicycles, office chairs, rolled up mats, etc.”

What are some of the strangest things you’ve found during a clean-up operation?

“An adult dinosaur suit on Freshwater Beach; a broken motorbike in the reeds at Dee Why Beach; an exercise bike buried in the sand at Dee Why Beach; office chairs; rolled-up mats; old doors; sofas; a broken-off ‘No Parking’ sign – including the pole!; a Buddha statue; a greenhouse; and half a boat!”

What do you do with the waste once it’s collected off the beaches?

“The items we find we try to repurpose if we can. Some crew members like to keep some of the treasures that we find – the greenhouse got a new home, an office chair got a new home, and toys and balls often get new homes by crew members. Bottles and cans, we take to ‘Return and Earn’ to be recycled.

“Bigger items like motorbikes and chairs, etc, we leave in a safe spot and contact the council where we left them, so they can be picked up. We try to recycle as much as we can.”

What measures could we adopt to prevent so much waste going into the sea?

“There are so many things that households and shops could do to reduce waste. Some of the easier things you can do is to challenge yourself to do a grocery shop without buying any items with single-use-plastic. Support local bulk-food shops such as Manly Co-Op, Naked Foods, Scoop and The Source, and also support local farmers’ markets.

“Always bring a reusable cup with you if you are intending to get a takeaway coffee. Ask restaurants if you can bring your own container for takeaway food – it saves the restaurant money and the planet litter. Recycle what you can recycle, take bottles and cans to “Return and Earn” machines – if you can’t get to a machine yourself, contact Re-Collect and they come and pick up your bottles and cans for you for free. You can donate the money to a charity, like Northern Beaches Clean Up Crew.

“The best thing we can do is to reduce our own single-use plastic footprint. If the items are never bought, they cannot be littered. As I often say, ‘If your bathtub is overflowing, you wouldn’t immediately reach for a mop – you would first turn off the tap’. That’s what we need to do about single-use-plastics.

“Refuse balloons, they are the biggest killer of seabirds in the world! There are way better options to show a celebration. You can, for example, contact Boomerang Bunting Northern Beaches and they will lend you their buntings for free. It’s reusable and doesn’t kill any wildlife or pollute the environment.”

NBCUC have recently been focusing on balloon-waste awareness, critical of the popular trend of releasing clusters of them into the sky to celebrate special occasions. In an Instagram post, dated 11 April 2022, NBCUC said: “Balloons are in the top three most harmful waste items to wildlife. Birds and turtles not only ingest balloons, they actively select them as food. This is because a burst balloon often resembles a jellyfish, the natural food sources of many marine species like turtles.

“Ingesting balloons, and the clips and strings attached to them, can cause intestinal blockages and results in a slow painful death through starvation. Marine animals don’t have the gastrointestinal pH levels to breakdown a balloon and for turtles, it may also cause floating syndrome. Trapped gases in the gut can cause a turtle to become buoyant, unable to dive for food—making them vulnerable to boat strikes and leading to starvation and severe dehydration.”

According to a joint CSIRO and Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) investigation, “balloons are the highest-risk plastic debris item for seabirds – 32 times more likely to kill than ingesting hard plastics… Balloons or balloon fragments were the marine debris most likely to cause mortality, and they killed almost one in five of the seabirds that ingested them.”


How do we join a Northern Beaches Clean Up Crew clean-up?

“Our clean-ups are always the last Sunday of the month at 10am, on a beach or lagoon on Sydney’s Northern Beaches. For our next event, see our website or social media accounts – Instagram and Facebook.”

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/northernbeachescleanupcrew/

Web

https://www.northernbeachescleanupcrew.com/

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/NorthernBeachesCleanUpCrew/

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