… pitchin’ in.
On any given day, loose litter blows about in the gentle wind … a stray fast-food wrapper here, an empty water bottle there. A half-eaten apple, carelessly tossed aside, reposes near the perimeter path, evidently too dilapidated for the squirrels to claim and gnaw on.
By Winter’s end, paper debris plastered itself against the chain-link fence where snow or ice weighed it down, so it remained, that is, until volunteers showed up in the rain on Earth Day to beautify Council Point Park, just one of our City’s 19 parks. I saw the photos posted on the City’s informal Facebook page the evening of Earth Day, plus I saw those efforts the following day when I walked around Council Point Park for my virtual 5K walk. It wasn’t just trash either. This year’s Earth Day cleanup endeavor had folks picking up huge branches that cracked off trees following our February 22nd ice storm. They bundled them to be picked up by the City’s park maintenance crew.
Then there are the “Ecorse Creek Cleanup” events when, on three occasions each Summer, a team of volunteers, armed with their gear, i.e. gloves, pointy pick-up sticks and long-handled grabbers, converge to nab debris on land and in the Ecorse Creek, the latter endeavor done while seated in kayaks and canoes. The group gathers to beautify three Downriver Parks: Beaver Park in Wyandotte, Council Point Park in Lincoln Park and Pepper Park in Ecorse. Their efforts make these three parks a pleasant AND cleaner place to walk/run/rollerblade or bike.
Last Summer I was at one of their chosen venues, Council Point Park, on a beautiful Summer Saturday, September 10th, my wings clipped from venturing to larger park venues since my car had developed an oil leak and was going to the shop on Monday. So, I ventured on foot to Council Point Park instead.
When I arrived at the Park that morning, the kayaks and canoes were stacked up and some were already in the launching area. I chitchatted with the organizers of the group. They were registering volunteers and doling out tee-shirts and extra-large garbage bags to be stuffed with litter gleaned from the Park grounds and the Ecorse Creek.
These volunteers were on the move.
They donned their neon-colored shirts and soon were off for their respective duties. The “on-land” volunteers were spearing litter left and right, then deftly placing it into their bags. Here are a couple of gentlemen picking up litter along the Creek’s shoreline.
I took a picture of the cement ledge wall with two empty energy drink cans and a hoodie draped over that wall.
A moment later, two women swooped in and cleared those items in a heartbeat.
All that was left was the graffiti on the wall.
They were industrious as a few minutes later, they had so much trash, I saw they had to share carrying that load.
I caught up with this guy spearing litter …
… and asked him to pose with his picker stick next to, what else, but this sign about littering. Of course, they should replace that sign with a new one, but would that encourage less littering? Hmm.
I asked to take a picture of the back of his shirt and he accommodated me.
Trolling for trash on the Creek.
The Ecorse Creek is formally called the “Ecorse River” and is a tributary to the nearby Detroit River. It is 18.8 miles/30.3 km long and, because of its small size, it is merely referred to as the Ecorse Creek or “The Creek” around these parts.
I’ve been following the group’s efforts for a while through the Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge Facebook site. They bring their own canoes and kayaks and some are brought in for them to use. I’ve seen photos where those volunteers extricated bicycles, baby strollers, basketballs and baby dolls – you name it, they have grabbed onto this trash, then piled it into their kayaks or canoes to dispose of properly. Here’s a photo from their site – look at all the trash! It’s a wonder the canoe did not sink!
I asked one guy wearing knee-high rubber boots how deep the Creek was and he said “only chest high” which surprised me as I thought it was deeper than that, but I’ll still remain careful that I don’t topple in when standing on the cement ledge. Here a few of the volunteers preparing for this convoy along the Creek.
I spoke to another gentleman as he was ready to begin his trash quest …
… then later he proudly showed me one of the bags of trash he had collected in that short amount of time.
The volunteers would continue paddling down the Ecorse Creek past Lions Park, just one-half mile away. I walked to Lion’s Park, took a few photos while awaiting the paddlers, but they got hung up somewhere, so I returned to Council Point Park. Here are a few shots of the shoreline at Lion’s Park.
Over the course of almost three hours and my long walk, I chatted it up with many of the volunteers. One gentleman was not picking up trash, but instead videotaping the group’s efforts. He chuckled when he saw the squirrels clustered around me as I doled out peanuts under the Safe Haven Tree. I told him my visits with the volunteers and photographing their efforts had waylaid “breakfast” so my furry friends were eager to see me. He asked if I would mind if he took a video of us and I said “not at all” then I promised to send photos to the group which I sent to Rose a few days later. [I had more photos, but omitted them here as they seemed duplicative to me.]
I left for home before the clean-up at Council Point Park was finished. The next day when I arrived at the Park something at Brian Skinner’s memorial tree, near the pavilion, caught my eye. Evidently this rusted scooter was retrieved from the Creek and leaned up against the tree which had been decorated for 4th of July and the scooter remained for several weeks thereafter.
What I have enjoyed most about walking at Council Point Park this past ten years is it is a small enough nature nook to notice any and all the subtle changes, Mother Nature’s doing or otherwise. The seasons come and go and I know which trees leaf out first, or which trees turn glorious shades of orange or red and where the first tiny Spring Beauties wildflowers grow. My head is always swirling around!
I’ll leave you with a quote by E.B. White, author of Charlotte’s Web and Stuart Little among other books.
“I would feel more optimistic about a bright future for man if he spent less time proving that he can outwit Nature and more time tasting her sweetness and respecting her seniority.” ~ E. B. White














































































































































































