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City of Water Day Public Paddle in Dutch Kills! (And Street Clean-up and Public Art Installation!)

  • July 16, 2022
  • 11:00 AM - 2:00 PM
  • Borden Avenue Bridge, Dutch Kills, LIC, Queens

Registration

  • Leave a note to say when you think you'll arrive
  • Help get set up, get the boats in the water (we need strong backs and willing hands!), and run the first trips.

    Sign up for one, two, or all three shifts if you want!
  • Help run trips, get waivers, fit PFDs, and serve snacks, and clean up the street end.

    Sign up for one, two, or all three shifts if you want!
  • Help with the late trips, returning boats and gear, and cleaning up after the Public Paddle.

    Sign up for one, two, or all three shifts if you want!
  • We want to see you for as long as we can -- maybe stay all day! Leave a note to tell us how long you can help out.

Registration is closed

Clean-up, public paddle, *and* an immersive arts experience along the Creek! Come out and enjoy your city's local water body! Free!

City of Water Day brings together communities throughout the NY/NJ Metro Region to raise awareness about the risk we all face from floods and rising seas, and champion climate-change-resilient shorelines and waterfront communities.

Join
North Brooklyn Community Boathouse (NBCB),  Newtown Creek Alliance (NCA), and the and visual and performing artist Marie Lorenz for a Creekside clean-up and exploration by boat of the forgotten reaches of our local Superfund site: Newtown Creek!

From 11am - 2pm NBCB will run a Public Paddle event
along the Dutch Kills tributary of the Creek while NCA will host a clean-up at the public access site and street end.

Our goal is to improve environmental conditions at these sites while also making them safer and more inviting as green public areas along the shore.

Light snacks and water will be provided.

At the public paddle event, we will launch canoes NBCB's 29' cooperative canoes, and volunteer guides will lead trips to experience artwork by the found-materials sculptor, photographer, and performance artist Marie Lorenz on the water, out of sight from the shore.

No paddling experience is required for participants and an on-land safety training will be held before boating begins. The Dutch Kills tributary offers a safe haven for boating given the inaccessibility for commercial vessels and large boats.

For the on-shore clean-up, NCA will provide gloves, tools, safety vests, and guidance on how to help care for the new urban meadows. We ask participants to bring a refillable bottle and sun block and to wear close-toed shoes.

You can register through this event page or through Eventbrite. NBCB volunteers, please register through the calendar and let us know when you are available. You can also just show up!


Whether registered or not, all attendees will be able to join the shoreline clean-up of the Borden Ave Street End (a city-owned shoreline NCA has stewarded since 2019); paddle on the guided canoe trip of Dutch Kills (utilizing one of NBCB’s 29 foot 12 person canoes, captained by a certified trip leader); and engage with Lorenz’s on-water artwork.

The Public Paddles let NBCB do what we do best: fulfill our mission to enable access to the waterways of New York City for our local community. We hope you can join us for this special City of Water Day edition!

NBCB sincerely thanks the Greenpoint Community Environment Fund and the Office of the New York State Attorney General and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation for financial support for our Public Paddle series.

About our partners:

The Newtown Creek Alliance is a community-based organization dedicated to restoring, revealing and revitalizing Newtown Creek.

NCA works to restore community health, water quality, habitat, access, and vibrant commerce along Newtown Creek. Since 2002, the Alliance has served as a catalyst for effective community action.

Marie Lorenz’s work, both on and off the water, brings people closer to our urban waterways and is deeply evocative of our impact on the planet. Amongst her numerous projects, Lorenz has been operating The Tide and Current Taxi, a rowboat taxi that she paddles to reveal New York Harbor to any interested parties, seasonally since 2005. She also makes prints, sculptures, and mobiles of washed-up manmade materials. With her creative work, Lorenz brings people to the water, working with its tidal systems to reintroduce urbanites to our aquatic systems and the impact they have on us, our city, and our shorelines.
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