NOAA came out this summer and with Jackson & Merkey's help, removed
tons of industrial age rubble from Grand Trunk pier on Lake Muskegon.
The grass seeded where coast is newly shaped is verdant and probably
nutritious for migratory birds stopping by. The crews yanked up a few
hardwoods decades old and tossed them into shallows, not unlike a bag
of spices tossed into soup. I am sure the lunkers and minnows like
shade now found under them. All of that verdant grass filters runoff
and that's going to keep nitrogen sparked algae blooms down. I guess
that's what NOAA calls a swale. I have a spot I like to go but a man
in a big truck frowned me off. When I caught a glance of a feminine
hand, I drove off already. Ordinarily it's a great place to view swans
swimming in an adjacent slough.
tons of industrial age rubble from Grand Trunk pier on Lake Muskegon.
The grass seeded where coast is newly shaped is verdant and probably
nutritious for migratory birds stopping by. The crews yanked up a few
hardwoods decades old and tossed them into shallows, not unlike a bag
of spices tossed into soup. I am sure the lunkers and minnows like
shade now found under them. All of that verdant grass filters runoff
and that's going to keep nitrogen sparked algae blooms down. I guess
that's what NOAA calls a swale. I have a spot I like to go but a man
in a big truck frowned me off. When I caught a glance of a feminine
hand, I drove off already. Ordinarily it's a great place to view swans
swimming in an adjacent slough.
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