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Fast Facts

Dates:

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2010

Jun

Duration:

9 days

Rendezvous:

Philadelphia, PA, USA

Activity Level:

Help for 'Moderate'Moderate

Minimum Contribution:

Help for 'Minimum Contribution:'$1950

Briefing:

Download Briefing

Essential information for the expedition - daily schedule, research area details, project conditions etc.

Amenities:

  • Electricity
  • Flush Toilets
  • Hot running water
  • Research Station

What's it like to volunteer on this expedition?

More Information:

To participate on this expedition you must be 16 or 17 years old.

Hal Avery also runs standard teams for adults!

On the Expedition

Join teens in search of this colorful turtle, in one of the East Coast’s most extensive salt marsh systems.

On this special expedition just for 16- and 17-year-olds, you’ll join fellow teens in New Jersey’s Barnegat Bay Estuary, one of the last significant salt marsh ecosystems along the mid-Atlantic coast. You’ll skim the water in a six-meter motorboat and get up close and personal with turtles as you track and tag them and monitor their nests. You may even have the chance to work with baby turtles monitoring hatching success. When you’re not conducting exciting hands-on research, you’ll be able to enjoy a behind-the-scenes aquarium tour, a trip to Long Beach Island, go-cart racing at a nearby amusement park, and more!

An Earthwatch Teen Team Facilitator will provide additional supervision and guidance for each Teen Team, from the rendezvous to the end of the expedition. Facilitators build good team dynamics and organize recreational and cultural activities designed for Teen Teams. Facilitators are available throughout the expedition to troubleshoot any concerns teens may have. All Facilitators have experience teaching and leading teen groups. Teen Teams may also feature volunteer tasks slightly altered or adapted to suit teen groups; please see the Teen Team Briefing for this expedition for more information.

Meals and Accommodations

Your team will stay at a research center within 180 acres of pristine coastal habitat, with beautiful views of Barnegat Bay. The center provides double rooms, air conditioning, laundry facilities, a computer lab, lounge, and shared bathrooms with hot showers. Breakfast, lunch and dinner will be catered and served in the dining room, where you’ll have plenty of time to get to know your teammates and share stories from the field.

About the Research Area

Your team will work within the Barnegat Bay Estuary, in the marsh systems of the Lighthouse Center for Natural Resource Education, the Sedge Island Wildlife Management area, and sites within the Forsythe Refuge. Barnegat Bay is an extremely rich ecosystem and is home to an array of bird and fish species.

Ocean County, New Jersey, is characterized by a rich history that is greatly influenced by the resources of Barnegat Bay. During the late 18th and 19th centuries, cannon balls and other iron products, charcoal, and glass were produced using local resources and industry. The commercial growth and harvest of cranberries and blueberries was also an important contributor to the regional economy. The area was then and continues to be a melting pot of cultures and ethnicities. Today, tourism is a very important industry and people are still moving to the area, attracted to the bay and its beauty. The Barnegat Bay area is approximately an hour’s drive from Philadelphia and two hours from New York City.