View Full Version : June Grass
TreeFrog
06-07-2006, 09:43 AM
Seeing the June Grass during my beach walk this AM led to searches in Dogpile and Google. Here are a few high points:
-The proper name for June Grass is Cladophora. Your search engine will have better results with cladophora.
-June Grass is an algae bloom. Throw in a little Red Tide and we're 2/3 of the way to an algae Italian flag.
-It grows in saltwater and freshwater
-The Gulf doesn't have a monopoly. Lake Michigan has an increase in June Grass since zebra mussels invaded there. Seems the zebra mussels filtered formerly murky water, allowing more light to enter, fostering the June Grass.
-It's a present in aquariums too. Aquarium people call it "Green Hair"
-It is supposed to help beach renourishment. It washes ashore and the sand sticks to it as it dries, helping the sand build up.
-As you might expect, it provides a habitat for small shrimp and other little creatures
-It seems to thrive in areas where there are sewer or irrigation outflows. More nutrients in that sort of water. Maybe the outflows from our dune lakes help foster it?
-Despite the name, some years it can last all summer. I'm sure long-time SoWalers can offer insight that I don't have on this, having only been here 2 years. Dogpile found an article from Ft. Walton where it was still around in August.
Lady D
06-07-2006, 06:38 PM
:clap_1: Very interesting TreeFrog! I say hooray for the June grass if it is responsible for renourishment of the beach! If that is the case, I hope the June grass is all over the washed away area of beach where we rent. Half of the width of the beach is gone. I welcome any help in it being renourished!
Smiling JOe
06-07-2006, 06:47 PM
:clap_1: Very interesting TreeFrog! I say hooray for the June grass if it is responsible for renourishment of the beach! If that is the case, I hope the June grass is all over the washed away area of beach where we rent. Half of the width of the beach is gone. I welcome any help in it being renourished!http://sowal.com/bb/gallery/files/2/1/6/IMG_6495.JPGThis is who is really responsible for the beach nourishment.
jdarg
06-07-2006, 09:41 PM
I was at the liquor store stocking up (it's ugly) and the booze rep that was hanging out said he was in PCB last week and "the green seaweed was jes turrible". He informed me that I would hate it.
He obviously doesn't know me.:lolabove: What a pansy.
Smiling JOe
06-07-2006, 10:17 PM
I was over that way this morning and PCB has June Grass, but it is a little more concentrated off the beach rather than in the break like it is here at the moment. I say, just fagidabodit or use it as a way to connect you to the earth and remind you that the summer is approaching and that you are at the beach, not at work. ;-)
Mermaid
06-07-2006, 11:17 PM
I was at the liquor store stocking up (it's ugly) and the booze rep that was hanging out said he was in PCB last week and "the green seaweed was jes turrible". He informed me that I would hate it.
He obviously doesn't know me.:lolabove: What a pansy.
jdarg, we can have seaweed fights on the beach. That's what my kids did years ago. They built sand forts and lobbed gobs and gobs of the green stuff at each other. It was a hoot watching them go at. I say, let's revive the tradition!!
jdarg
06-08-2006, 07:19 AM
jdarg, we can have seaweed fights on the beach. That's what my kids did years ago. They built sand forts and lobbed gobs and gobs of the green stuff at each other. It was a hoot watching them go at. I say, let's revive the tradition!!
We can recreate the "SEE-weed" picture- one of us can show the other "where the seaweed went" and everyone can snap our picture!!:funn: :funn: :floor:
peapod1980
06-08-2006, 08:58 AM
jdarg, we can have seaweed fights on the beach. That's what my kids did years ago. They built sand forts and lobbed gobs and gobs of the green stuff at each other. It was a hoot watching them go at. I say, let's revive the tradition!!
It's good for the skin, isn't it? We can look at it as a spa treatment!
aquaticbiology
06-08-2006, 09:27 AM
a few years ago i read somewhere that the indians used it as fertilizer so i gathered some and tried it out - made my tomatoes grow better and helped the soil to hold water - just wash it first since its maybe a little too salty right out of the ocean
best kept secret on the panhandle since its so needed for beach restoration
jdarg
06-08-2006, 09:48 AM
a few years ago i read somewhere that the indians used it as fertilizer so i gathered some and tried it out - made my tomatoes grow better and helped the soil to hold water - just wash it first since its maybe a little too salty right out of the ocean
best kept secret on the panhandle since its so needed for beach restoration
I'll bring some gallon size baggies and haul some home!
Miss Kitty
06-08-2006, 09:50 AM
Okay, I have asked this before. I haven't heard, but must believe that this is not the same green stuff we encountered a few times back in the '90's. The stuff I refer to was green and smelled really awful after sitting on the beach. Does anyone know what that was?
Mermaid
06-08-2006, 10:01 AM
Okay, I have asked this before. I haven't heard, but must believe that this is not the same green stuff we encountered a few times back in the '90's. The stuff I refer to was green and smelled really awful after sitting on the beach. Does anyone know what that was?
It was the same stuff my kids played WAR with. :funn:
kathydwells
06-08-2006, 12:59 PM
I was at the liquor store stocking up (it's ugly) and the booze rep that was hanging out said he was in PCB last week and "the green seaweed was jes turrible". He informed me that I would hate it.
He obviously doesn't know me.:lolabove: What a pansy.
:floor: You crack me up Jen-ay!!!!!
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