Orange Tide takes 4-H’ers on extraordinary journey

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By Dan Rahn
University of Georgia

The Sea Monkeys could never have imagined how far those oranges
would take them.

“I had no idea we would do more than just gather facts for local
scientists,” said Nathan Potts, one of the Glynn County, Ga.,
high school 4-H’ers who call themselves the Sea Monkeys. “We
became the scientists.”

At first, the group simply had been concerned about the water
washing the St. Simons Island beaches. Health advisories had
warned of enterococcal bacteria, and nobody knew where it was
coming from.

So in December 2004, the 4-H’ers launched the first 280 oranges
of their “Orange Tide Marshwater Tracking Study.” Working with
local environmental scientists, they used the floating fruit to
track the flow of tidal streams.

They trailed those oranges and later launches over the following
months. They combed beaches and searched from kayaks. They noted
the oranges’ exact locations with Global Positioning System gear
secured with a grant after the project began.

Based on the group’s findings, environmental scientists focused
their searches and found enterococcal bacteria sources. The Sea
Monkeys found an unexpected source, too: dog feces on the
beaches. They mounted an intensive public education campaign to
turn that “brown tide” around.

As the project progressed, awards started coming. Big awards.

* In November 2005, the group won a trip for four to the
Earthwatch Conference in Cambridge, Mass. There, they were named
a grand prize winner in the international Earthbound3 Challenge.

The honor includes a $12,000 award that will send Potts, Harvest
Hale and Will Prince and their 4-H advisor, Robi Gray, on a
research expedition in southern Spain. (Three students accepted
$1,750 each in lieu of the trip.)

The 4-H’ers will live aboard a refitted Norwegian fishing vessel
for two weeks in late June and early July. They’ll study
dolphins, whales and sea turtles in the Alboran Sea during the
days and spend each night in a different port.

* In April, the Sea Monkeys took top honors in the Georgia
Conservancy Youth Environmental Symposium. The award includes
$2,000, a plaque and a number of T-shirts, guide books, water
bottles and other prizes.

“YES is a wonderful venue for inspiring young Georgians to take
action in their communities,” Gray said.

* In October, four of the Sea Monkeys will go to SeaWorld
Adventure Park in San Antonio, Tex. They’ll be honored there as
one of eight national winners in the 2006 Environmental
Excellence Awards given by SeaWorld, Busch Gardens and Fujifilm.

The award includes, besides the SeaWorld trip, $10,000 to expand
and enhance the project; a digital camera; trophies and
certificates for every student and group leader; T-shirts for
school and community partners; and an environmental partnership
with the National Geographic Society.

The biggest impact, though, may be where the Orange Tide project
is taking the Sea Monkeys next.

Will Prince, for instance, had moved to Glynn County only a month
before the 4-H project began. “He had never thought of marine
biology,” Gray said. “But now he wants to be a marine biologist.”

Before the project, Hale planned to become a music teacher.
“After the study, I realized how much fun environmental science
really is,” she said. “I want to study marsh ecology.”

Potts, too, intends to study an environmental science and
engineering. “I’d like to work in an area,” he said, “where I can
bridge science with other fields to solve problems.”

The Sea Monkeys will go to the National 4-H Technology Leadership
Conference in Lincoln, Neb., July 24-27. There, they’ll use
expertise they developed in the Orange Tide project to teach
other 4-H’ers how to help develop community emergency evacuation
maps.

“People from local and state organizations really like high
schoolers getting involved and looking for solutions to community
problems,” Potts said. “I’m very grateful for the opportunity to
help my island be a better place.”

(Dan Rahn is a news editor with the University of Georgia
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.)