| Mangrove Garden Foundation Philosophy |
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Less than 50 years ago, residential developers were of the belief
that wetland property had to be dredged and filled to remove all
water and vegetation to enhance marketability. Today, we know that
our wetlands are valuable eco-systems, supporting a variety of
life and should, if at all possible, be maintained. These wetland
environments, surrounded by mangroves, nurture and sustain virtually
all of our estuary and near-shore marine food and recreational
fish. The prop roots of the mangroves hold the shorelines safe
from the violence of storms as well as allow new land masses to
form within their root systems. And, we have learned the hard way,
that when the mangrove fringe is indiscriminately removed, flooding
and land erosion quickly follow.
Fortunately, these eco-systems can
be preserved. We can co-exist – the
mangroves and mankind – adding to the environment as opposed
to destroying what is so important to the health of our rivers,
estuaries and oceans by re-evaluating our needs and adopting a
new philosophy.
By adapting our development goals and desires to what
the wetlands need, by becoming familiar with and working within
the wetlands,
we have found that one can live and garden within this environment
without upsetting the delicate balance. In developing The Mangrove
Gardens, we protected and improved the environment by removal
of invasive species, i.e. pepper trees, Australian pines and
vines - and - by instituting controlled periodic pruning/trimming
of the mangroves the health of the wetlands has greatly improved
and the result is a more productive, natural environment.
Garden
beauty comes in many different forms. By working with the environment
and incorporating the mangroves and the spoil islands
left behind by the Army Corps of Engineers in the 1950’s,
a unique and exotic garden has evolved. By example, it has become
a tool with which to educate individuals and groups who visit – we
can only hope that each and every visitor learns that with careful
planning, each of us can do our part to preserve and enhance
these areas so they can flourish not only now but for all time.
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