Mystic River Canoe Tour

Do you want a free canoe trip on the Mystic River? Are you looking to learn more about the watershed and its history? Well then you’re in luck! 

Join MyRWA and Professor Rick Beinecke for a one-time only, educational canoe tour of the Mystic River and the Amelia Earhart Dam. Beinecke is an expert on the Mystic River and its history, having written an extensive paddling guide and book on the watershed, The Mystic River – A Natural and Human History and Recreation Guide. The trip will be a fun and educational way to explore the river and will include a paddle through the lock system of the Amelia Earhart Dam to discover the salt water portions of the river. MyRWA will provide all canoes, life jackets, and paddles for this free event. Space is limited – RESERVE your spot today! 

When: 9:00 a.m., Saturday September 19th, 2015 

Rain date: Sunday, September 20th

Where: Mystic Wellington Yacht Club (451 Fellsway, Medford, MA 02155) 

Why: Fun in the sun and information from an experienced professional

Final Water Chestnut Cleanup

The big groups have come through and done their baskets of work, but there are still a few water chestnuts left in certain stretches of the river! Given our ambitious and exciting goal of collecting 100% of the plants in the river, we are sending out a call for volunteers to help us collect the stragglers. If you have your own boat and can spend an hour or so of your time to help clean up the Mystic, please let us know!

Use the maps below to pick a section of river you would like to work on, then sign up for the respective section on this Google form:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1RdZUbUMaJC60opQaJR6AC5X6gVkdiCkkYmHmXSVBWBs/edit?usp=sharing

QUESTIONS:          

How are we doing this?

                We are asking volunteers with their own canoes or kayaks to sign up for a portion of the river and search among the Lily Pads and Algae for the last few Water Chestnut plants. Feel free to sign up for as many sections as you'd like, we appreciate the help!

When should I try to complete this?

                The earlier the better, we are trying to pull the plants before they have a chance to reproduce. Ideally, we’d like every section to be cleared by August 21st.

Which areas are most important?

                While we are trying clear all of the water chestnut, in general the further downstream the area is, the more plants are left. Therefore, our top priorities are the lower numbers (i.e. 1-6).

 

How do I know what to pull?

                The water chestnut looks like this: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d9/Trapa_natans_kz5.JPG and grows on the surface of the water. Grasp the plant just below the water surface and gently tug it to pull up the long roots. Then pull the plant into your boat. Be careful of the spiky seeds: https://www.flickr.com/photos/44914436@N07/20291944785/in/album-72157656714783596/. If you see these floating in the water, no need to pull them out (they are defective) however, the plants can have seeds on them so be aware and wear gloves!

 

Why are we removing water chestnut from the Mystic River?

 For more information on the Water Chestnut and the problems it poses for the watershed, refer to this document: http://www.mass.gov/eea/docs/dcr/watersupply/lakepond/factsheet/water-chestnut.pdf

 

What do I do with the plants once I pull them?

                You can throw them on the shore or put them in your compost or trash. Just don’t throw them back in the water!  

If you have any more questions, or can't find an open slot that works for you, don’t hesitate to email waterchestnut@mysticriver.org

 

Thank you in advance for your help cleaning the last of this invasive species from the upstream portions of the river!

Water Trouble: A Neighbor-to-Neighbor Dialog about Storms, Floods, and Water Quality Forum

Please plan on attending this forum hosted by the Belmont Citizens Forum and sponsored by MyRWA!

Thursday, September 10, 2015 at 7:00 p.m.
Winn Brook School, 97 Waterhouse Rd, Belmont, MA 02478

We will be joined by our Arlington and Watertown neighbors to raise awareness among our three connected communities. The goal of the Forum is to educate citizens to:

  • Take action to improve water quality through better stormwater management

  • Reduce the ill effects of flooding through green infrastructure

Our panel of experts will discuss stormwater projects and issues relevant to Arlington, Belmont, and Watertown, as well as green infrastructure, water quality and rivers, and infiltration strategies for urban soils.

  • Wayne Chouinard, Town Engineer, Town of Arlington

  • Ralph Jones, PhD, Town of Belmont former selectman, managing director, Cadmus Group

  • Matt Shuman, Town Engineer, Town of Watertown

  • Patrick Herron, Deputy Director, Mystic River Watershed Association

  • Julie Dyer Wood, Director of Projects, Charles River Watershed Association

  • John Swallow, Principal and founder, Pine & Swallow Environmental

Anne-Marie Lambert, BCF director and cofounder of the Belmont Stormwater Working Group, will facilitate the discussion.

If you'd like to volunteer for this event, please contact the Belmont Citizens Forum at bcfprogramdirector@gmail.com.  For more information about the Belmont Citizens Forum, visit belmontcitizensforum.org.

Canoemobile coming to the Mystic!

This fall, the National Park Service, Groundwork Somerville, YMCA Boston and Wilderness Inquiry will be hosting an exciting canoeing event on two of our important local rivers: the Mystic River in Somerville (September 22nd, 2015) and the Neponset River in Boston (September 23rd, 2015). The Wilderness Inquiry Canoemobile, a fleet of six 24’ Voyageur canoes, delivers place-based education on urban rivers and waterways that offers youth a chance to canoe, learn, and interact in and around their local rivers. As part of its national tour of 31 cities, the Canoemobile will be delivering 2 days of programming in Boston and Somerville.

The event is coordinated and funded by the National Park Service’s Rivers, Trails, and Conservation Assistance Program, hosted by YMCA Boston and Groundwork Somerville and implemented by Wilderness Inquiry and a number of community-based organizations. The Canoemobile is a program of Wilderness Inquiry in partnership with Nature Valley and many federal, state, and local organizations that care about healthy lifestyles for today's youth.

The event will include water and land-based activities throughout the day. Each of the canoes (24-foot, hand built wooden boats) seats nine students and one environmental educator-canoe guide, allowing participants who have never been on the water to have their first paddling experience. Participants study water quality, climate change, and ecosystem restoration while on the water. Partner organizations facilitate interactive land-based curriculum stations, which typically includes environmental education (i.e. water quality and wildlife ecology), outdoor recreation (i.e. pitching a tent, building a small raft or tying knots) and historical/cultural interpretation (i.e. learning about the history of the river).

For more information:

Event website: http://www.groundworksomerville.org/programs/youth-programs/canoemobile/

Canoemobile program: www.wildernessinquiry.org/canoemobile

Journey Down the Mystic Sept. 12!

Mare Liberum, a boatbuilding and waterfront art collective based on the Gowanus Canal in Brooklyn, will be leading a day-long journey down the Mystic River on September 12th. The journey will be punctuated by stops to meet with environmental, advocacy, and citizen scientist groups doing work on the river, including MyRWA, Public Lab, Clean Water Action, and Chelsea Collaborative. As part of their residency and exhibition at the Carpenter Center for Visual Arts, entitled Or, the other island, Mare Liberum will be holding workshops from September 3rd-11th to build a small fleet of their newly designed plywood punts for the journey. Members of the public are invited to sign up for a spot on the punts, or bring their own human-powered boats along for the journey on September 12th. If you are interested in joining for the journey and/or boatbuilding workshop, please contact Sunita at sunitadee@gmail.com

Additionally, Mare Liberum is interested in any expertise members of the MyRWA community have about the river to help prepare for the trip. Historians, scientists, boat-clubbers, and paddlers with experience on the river who are willing to share some of their knowledge should please also contact Sunita at sunitadee@gmail.com

Greening the Malden River - Upcoming Community Charrettes!

As part of the Urban Waters Malden River Partnership, MyRWA is hosting two public meetings to gather community insight and input on where to implement green infrastructure, such as a rain garden. All are welcome to attend these meetings to learn more about the project and share their community knowledge!

Community Charrette: Greening Malden & Everett to Improve the River
Tuesday, August 18, 7:00 p.m.
Malden Senior Center auditorium, 7 Washington St, Malden, MA 02148
Community Charrette: Greening Medford to Improve the River
Wednesday, August 26, 6:00 p.m.
Andrews Middle School, 3000 Mystic Valley Pkwy, Medford, MA 02155

Recreational Flagging Program Funded

MyRWA was one of 12 grant recipients from the Massachusetts Environmental Trust (MET) for projects to protect and restore rivers, watersheds, and wildlife across the Commonwealth.  $60,405 has been awarded to develop a Mystic River recreation flagging system. The Mystic River Watershed Association and Tufts University will develop a system in the watershed to alert recreational users to safe or unsafe conditions. The project will increase understanding of conditions of Mystic and Malden Rivers; protect public health; increase attention to sources of pathogen contamination; and increase recreational use of the Mystic River. Read the press release here.

Since it was founded in 1988 as part of the Boston Harbor cleanup, MET has awarded more than $20 million in grants to organizations statewide that provide a wide array of environmental services, from supporting water projects in communities to protecting coastal habitats. Funding for this program comes from the sale of the state’s three environmentally-themed specialty license plates: the Right Whale Tail, the Leaping Brook Trout and the Blackstone Valley Mill. Support this program by ordering a Specialty “Preserve the Trust” License Plate today!

MyRWA Receives Funding for Water Chestnut Removal Program

The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, through the Five Star and Urban Waters Restoration Program, announced their support of water chestnut removal on the Mystic River. MyRWA was one of 64 community-led wetland, stream and coastal restoration projects across the nation to be selected. The Five Star and Urban Waters 2015 winners were selected from a highly competitive pool of more than 280 applications.

Enjoy Pizza and Bowling for a Cause!

On Tuesday, September 15th head to Flatbread Pizza at Sacco's Bowl Haven in Davis Square for a Mystic River Watershed Association (MyRWA) fundraiser. That’s right, the more flatbread you eat the more money will be raised to support the Mystic River Watershed Association and our efforts to protect and restore the Mystic River Watershed!

Eat at or get take-out from Flatbread Pizza, 45 Day Street, Somerville, between 5pm and 11pm and a portion of your flatbread cost will automatically be donated to MyRWA.

Reservations are accepted for groups of 10 or more.

Update on the Mystic River Reservation Master Plan

Mystic River Reservation Master Plan Update, June 18, 2015 –

A Report from DCR’s Dan Driscoll – by Ivey St. John-Charlestown Waterfront Coalition

Background:

In 2009, the Department of Conservation and Recreation published a conceptual Master Plan for the renovation and improvement in the Mystic River Reservation,  defining the plan area as from Belmont’s and Arlington’s Alewife Brook along the Mystic Valley Parkway, to Medford & Somerville, to the Alford Street Bridge in Charlestown. 

The area includes both sides of the Mystic and the Malden River, but does not include Mary O’Malley Park in Chelsea at the base of the Admiral’s Hill development.  In the six years since publication, some exciting steps have been taken despite budget cutbacks.

 Alewife Brook Area:

The Minutemen bike and pedestrian pathway from the Alewife T Station along the Alewife Brook section of the Mystic has been completed, thanks to shovel ready construction drawings and the 2009 Stimulus Program.  The federal stimulus funds regulations drove significant ecological improvements along the trail.  In addition, the Department of Transportation has supported the trail by including new lighting,

and pedestrian and bike improvements to the bridge at the confluence of the Mystic River and Alewife Brook.

 Pathway along Mystic Valley Parkway:

Dan reported that he needs $250,000 to $300,000 to do detailed design and construction drawings for pathways along the Mystic, and to create a multi-use path welcoming to the disabled. 

In addition, he estimates up to $1 million is needed annually to keep all pathways in the Reservation in good shape.  In today’s frugal environment, that goal does not yet seem achievable.

 Auburn Street Bridge to Craddock Dam:

This area is a little hard to define.  Some who travel Rt. 16 north and then east regularly will be familiar with the U-Haul Garage and parking lot, followed by the MBTA Commuter Rail Bridge.  The next crossing into Arlington is the Auburn Street Bridge.  The Craddock Dam supports the roadway into Medford Square from Rt. 16/Mystic Valley Parkway and Mystic Avenue.

In this area, the City of Medford has restored the pathways, moved the parking area near the Condon Shell back from the river, and built canoe access.  Historic markers note the Middlesex Canal and Medford waterfront history of constructing clipper ships. Further improvements await significant new funds to take down the Condon Shell and replace it with a disabled access shell and repaired and reconstructed bike lanes.  Medford has set aside $450,000 to develop a master plan for the area, including expanded bike lanes.  The City expects to hold a public meeting on that plan in September.

Craddock Dam to Rt. 28 Bridge:

This area is largely taken up the McDonald Park, a DCR Park that was poorly designed at its inception.  The Mystic River Watershed Association and local businesses and residents are forming a advocacy group to press for significant improvements to the park.  It is requires major reconstruction and will need significant financial support.  Pathways need to be redesigned, the State Police Station should be moved, and invasive species cut back and controlled.

East of the Rt. 28 Bridge, the Mystic shore and park (Baxter Park) along Assembly Row has been beautifully reconstructed and improved by Federal Realty Investment Trust (FRIT).  Members are encouraged to stroll the park when visiting Assembly Row stores.

 Wellington Greenway:

This pathway stretches from the Rt. 28 Bridge at Station Landing along the north edge of the Mystic, under the Orange Line Bridge, and will ultimately be open all the way to the Wellington T Station just south of the Rt. 16 Bridge over the Malden River. The Rt. 16 Bridge is slated for reconstruction, and will have two pedestrian/bike underpasses on each side of the Malden River.

This area is extraordinarily beautiful, and abuts the Tufts Boathouse and John Preotle’s River’s Edge mixed use development.  The Malden River, despite its badly contaminated sediment, is a lovely pastoral sight, and worth a visit.

 Draw 7 Park to Alford Street Bridge:

This area includes the drafted but still not certified plan to build a pathway from Draw 7 Park in Somerville to Rt. 99/Alford Street along the edge of the Mystic River.  Federal Realty Investment Trust has pledged $500,000 for use to develop Draw 7 Park. There is an effort being made to connect Draw 7 and Assembly Row by multi-use path to Sullivan Square through the MBTA yard downstream from Draw 7. To address a failing headwall on the edge of this proposed path, the MBTA has received a large federal grant with which it can complete the required structural improvements. 

Dan and the MBTA have been brainstorming ideas for the repair of this collapsing Mystic edge bulkhead in order to stabilize it to allow the pathway connection between Draw 7 and Alford Street.  Dan believes the T will have to build out into the river some in order to achieve retaining wall stability.  Here, there may be an opportunity for a much wider path then originally planned.

An additional note, Dan has approached the Wynn team about a grant of $8 to $10 million to fund construction of a pedestrian/bike bridge over the Mystic just above the Amelia Earhart Dam.  If Dan is successful in coaxing that grant out of Wynn, he reports that with the reconstruction of the MBTA bulkhead pathway adjacent to Alford Street, a complete circle will be open so that bikers can travel in a circle of connecting pathways around the Charles and Mystic Rivers.