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Attention Paddlers!
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NAPS Again Receives Grant for Marsh Grass Planting and Phragmites Control
Beginning in 2002, NAPS (Northumberland Association for Progressive Stewardship www.napsva.org) has stressed the importance of marshes, encouraging citizens to “garden” their marshes by removing debris and pruning back vegetation that shades the marsh. In spring, NAPS purchases and plants marsh grass, and in fall invasive Phragmites australis is sprayed with herbicide. Funding has been derived from the Chesapeake Bay Restoration Fund, Fish America, the NAPS treasury and donations. We have received another grant from the Chesapeake Bay Restoration Fund for 2009.
Marsh grasses are planted in spring, usually in early May when the plants become available, to encourage the development of “living shorelines” as an alternative to rip-rap or bulkhead and to “jump-start” marshes that have been sprayed with herbicide the previous fall. Since 2002, 94 sites have received grass, some more than once, and for the last five years we have averaged about 30 sites each year.
Common cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora) is planted between mid tide and average high tide. Small amounts of salt meadow or alkali bulrush (Scirpus robustus) are also planted along with the cordgrass near high tide at some locations because this species has excellent wildlife value, especially for ducks. Salt marsh hay (Spartina patens) is planted above high tide because this species, once established, forms a dense stand of grass that is both attractive and effective at resisting erosion.
The secret to a healthy marsh is full sunlight. Marshes can be improved by pruning overhanging limbs and other vegetation so as to admit sunlight. Winter burning is encouraged if it is safe. A bit of fertilizer like 10-10-10 is helpful, broadcast on the marsh as the tide goes out a couple times during the growing season, especially where the plants are sparse or where it is desirable for the plants to spread. We emphasize that the tiny bit of pollution the fertilizer might cause will be more than offset in future years by a healthy stand of grass. Local groundwater is massively polluted with nitrate as the result of the inefficiency of agricultural fertilization practices and from septic system discharge. Riparian buffers, including marshes, intercept runoff and groundwater discharge and either consume nitrate and phosphate, or, in the case of nitrate, convert it into harmless nitrogen gas. Healthy marshes are good for the Bay.
The NAPS Phragmites eradication effort began in 2002 at 14 sites and has expanded every year. 118 sites were treated in the fall of 2008. The effort has been aided by loan of a power sprayer courtesy of the Eastern Virginia Rivers National Wildlife Refuge Complex, allowing control to begin on large patches that would otherwise be very difficult with only backpack sprayers. Rodeo, or its equivalent is used at a concentration of 1 1/2%, along with a wetting agent approved for wetland use. Spraying takes place in September.
If you believe your shoreline could be improved by having marsh grass planted this spring, contact NAPS (Lynton Land at 453-6605 or JandL@nnwifi.com) before mid March. Also, it is not too early to get on the Phragmites list for this fall. NAPS encourages all POAs/HOAs to become “Phragmites free,” so if you or your association have questions, give NAPS a call.
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Blue Crabs and the Bay
By Dr. Lynton Land
We are being told that Chesapeake Bay blue crab harvests have declined to the point that watermen need Federal disaster relief to survive. But what about next year? How will bailing out watermen this year improve crab harvests in future years?
Some Virginians are proposing more meetings to study the problem. Yet we know with absolute certainty the cause of the Bay's major problem - abysmal water quality and dead zones. And we know the solution. Hopefully, the crabs will also have meetings and decide to breed more. We don't need more meetings - we need significant action, without which there can be no improvement in water quality in the Chesapeake Bay. We must reduce the nutrients, nitrogen (mostly nitrate and ammonia), and phosphate that are being discharged into the water.
To use an analogy, Chesapeake Bay is like a leaky boat, the leaks corresponding to the sources of nutrients that are the cause of the problem. The biggest leak is the inefficiency of agricultural fertilization. This is known with certainty. Only between about 2/3 and 3/4 of the chemical fertilizer applied to a typical field is removed from the field as the crop is harvested. The remainder is released to the environment. In an effort to maximize crop yield, and farm profits, fertilization rates are “pushed” to the limits suggested by agronomists, who focus solely on farm economics and ignore the societal cost of pollution. A second, smaller but still major leak, is the point-source discharge of nutrients from wastewater treatment plants. And then there are lots of little leaks, like acid rain (nitric acid), storm water runoff, septic systems, etc.
How can the leaky boat be fixed? Some people advocate a bigger bilge pump, meaning more filter-feeding organisms like oysters and menhaden. Just as a bigger bilge pump is not the solution to a leaky boat (bilge pumps fail and leaks never get smaller), more filter-feeding organisms, desirable as they are, cannot solve the Bay’s problems. These kinds of organisms merely filter out the algae that have grown in the water because of all the nutrients, use a very small amount of the nitrogen and phosphorus to grow, and “defecate” the rest. The particles sink to the bottom, where bacteria consume them and release the nutrients right back into the water. Filter-feeding organisms like oysters help make the water clearer so that sea grass (Submerged Aquatic Vegetation) can survive, but the nutrients are not removed from the Bay ecosystem.
The only solution is to fix the leaks, the biggest one first. Agricultural fertilization efficiency can be significantly improved by taking three steps:
- Ban the least efficient fertilizers, municipal sewage sludge and poultry litter, that release about half the applied nitrogen and more than half the applied phosphorus to the environment, to no benefit of the crop. Crops that normally receive 120 pounds of chemical nitrogen fertilizer per acre receive 400 pounds of nitrogen per acre in the form of sewage sludge, to grow exactly the same crop. Where do you suppose all that extra nitrogen goes? These materials are better used as biofuels.
- Require split fertilizer application, known to increase the amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus taken up by crops and to decrease the amounts lost to the environment. Development of timed-release fertilizers is also a goal that needs to be achieved, and agronomists would better serve society to develop more efficient fertilization practices rather than promote the use of poultry litter and sewage sludge, the latter called “biosolids” to shield its real origin from the public.
- Mandate riparian buffers at least 100 feet wide, (ultimately) consisting of mature trees with a ground cover at the edge of every stream, river and estuary. Citizens who desire a view of the water can prune the lower limbs of the trees. Riparian buffers are known to be effective and cheap. They should be mandated everywhere, irrespective of the land use, so as to ensure that every waterfront property owner bears some of the “pain” from their establishment, and stiff penalties should be enforced for noncompliance.
To fix the other large leak, wastewater treatment plants should all be upgraded to, or approach, the “Limit of Technology” so the discharge of nitrogen and phosphate is reduced as much as possible. The money required can be derived from the same sources used to build the plants in the first place federal and state funds, usage fees and municipal bonds. At the same time, mandatory septic system inspection, and tank pump-out if necessary, should be imposed throughout the watershed so that every citizen bears some of the “pain” no matter how they dispose of their septage. The Bay has continued to deteriorate because we do everything as cheaply as possible. Unless we recognize the worth of the Bay and that society must cost-account that worth into economic decisions, no progress is possible. Improving water quality in the Bay will incur real costs, and if we choose to pay those costs, which we have not done to date, the best we can do is to spread the financial “pain” as widely and fairly as possible.
Nothing stated above is new. We have known the reasons for the Bay’s problem since the Army Corps of Engineers study in 1965-1973, which cost nearly $100 million in today’s dollars. That study was repeated by EPA the next decade, and another nearly $100 million spent, reaching the same conclusions. Albeit better quantified, the conclusions of these early studies have been confirmed over and over by more recent documents, such as the “Virginia Tributary Strategies.” The science is cast in stone. No meetings or task forces will change anything. Disaster relief for watermen this year will not change anything. If the leaks are not significantly reduced, the biggest first, only the kinds of mandated actions outlined above will result in measurable improvement in Chesapeake Bay water quality.
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Zoning
Our county staff, our Planning Commission and our Board of Supervisors are all struggling with how to make necessary changes in land use in a way that will positively affect all of us in the future. As they alter zoning regulations, they must be visionaries able to see into the future and adjust land use to improve the utility, quality of life, wealth, and sense-of-place for all residents. Recognizing the importance of zoning to future land use, Northumberland’s Planning Commission is currently devoting a large fraction of its time toward upgrading zoning regulations. To have sustaining community value, the zoning reform process must be thoughtful, logical and cognizant of community values. Regulations with long-term implications must be developed carefully using examples from other communities, advice from community development experts, local trend analysis, a clear idea of intended results and, of course, representative public input. The Planning Commission needs your help.
Zoning can be thought of as a set of rules for land use that allow people to live together in harmony in much the same way as we live together on the roads with use of our vehicles. We are taught early on to stay on the right side of the road. We stop at stop signs and red lights. We obey speed limits. On two lane roads, we only pass on the left and when there is a dotted line. Occasionally there is an accident, but these very simple rules (in spite of what some may perceive as a loss of rights) serve to allow generally safe auto transportation use for all. In similar fashion, zoning regulations are crafted toward land use that maximizes benefits and minimizes imposition for all in the community.
Zoning is one of the few ways the county has to guide land use. As pointed out in the Comprehensive Plan, our goals are to:
- Maintain our county’s strong sense-of-place.
- Minimize contention between distinctly different uses farm, residential, business and industrial use.
- Maintain rural/agricultural county roadside appearance.
- Minimize congestion on our primary roads and in our communities.
- Improve the long-term value of all Northumberland property.
Northumberland County, in a land use sense, is like a blank slate. The current state of development is sparse and the zoning regulations are very loose. Guiding land use with updated zoning regulation is one way to assure meeting realistic goals as we move into the future. We have the opportunity today to set the stage for tomorrow. Since 1974, when current zoning was first initiated, the blend of farming and residential properties has changed significantly. Still, the goal is to allow inevitable community development and growth while maintaining our unique Northumberland “sense-of-place” a tranquil bayside community with a strong farming and fishing heritage. As the blend of farm and residential densities change, accommodation must be made to encourage farmers to continue to farm while better protecting residential communities from incompatible land uses. While farmland and farmers need protection, some A-1 uses that were acceptable in 1974 need revision and repositioning into areas designated for business or industrial use. Primary routes, Rt. 360 and Rt. 200, must be protected from congestion, since they are our only emergency routes. Uncontrolled roadside business growth could ultimately clog traffic from Callao to Reedville. A highway protection overlay is important to protect our access portals.
Another means of controlling congestion is the use of “Cluster Housing” within the county at relatively low density. This development concept entails setting aside significant protected open land areas adjacent to housing and is a way to maintain county population density at levels consistent with country living. Protection of the overall appearance of both roadways and villages is also important. Appearance may seem like a trivial factor, but neat appearance leads to stronger economics for all.
Maintaining our sense of place, safeguarding both farmers and our increasing residential population, controlling the levels of congestion and traffic, maintaining our peaceful country appearance these are all important Northumberland quality-of-life values that we should pass on to our grandchildren.
There are several strategic approaches prescribed by the Comprehensive Plan that start us in the right direction. Simply stated, moving land uses to appropriate zoning districts and focusing business development into our villages takes some of the pressure off our primary access roads. The certainty of higher fuel prices in the future is another reason to concentrate businesses in a few village centers rather than disseminating them throughout the county. A properly structured highway overlay can focus on appropriate development along our primary road infrastructure. Let’s work together to retain the “feel” of our county while encouraging business development.
Whatever zoning approaches are adopted will affect you. It may affect you personally with a neighbor’s land use issue. It will certainly affect your quality of life, the level of traffic congestion you face daily, and your property’s worth. Now is the time to construct appropriate rules for future land use. The Planning Commission is currently engaged in Zoning Ordinance re-write. Although some meetings are specifically held to gather public input, you are welcome at all meetings even work sessions of the Planning Commission. Watch the papers for the advertised public hearings that are normally held on the third Thursday at the new courthouse. Get up to speed on the issues at the county website, www.co.northumberland.va.us, or with the information available at the library. Get involved understand the various issues and contribute with your voice at Planning Commission and Board of Supervisor meetings. More information may be found in the Resolution and Zoning Review Plan documents.
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NAPS Awards Scholarships to Five NHS Students
We had an excellent group of students who applied for the NAPS scholarships this year. Eighteen students applied the largest number ever. We interviewed eight, and awarded five scholarships to the following students
- Chelsey Krupski
- Charles Andrew Wilkens
- Jessica Vaneck
- Kimberly Dobyns
- Kelsi Jewell
All five are excellent students who are involved in our community. They have picked up trash, helped in our schools and their churches. One serves with our emergency services, and participates as an Eagle Scout with a Boy Scout Troop. Most have held jobs while attending school. Many have attended Rappahannock Community College and the Governors School. They each have a "can do" attitude and will be an asset to our community. Congratulations!
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