Some of you may have seen the NYTimes video on the High Water Line project. In it you can see me and “a guy named Ed” talking about the Brooklyn neighborhoods through which I am traveling. I am saying how fascinating and wonderfully different all of the neighborhoods are, but how this line (and climate change) connects them all. In fact it connects all of us, around New York and around the world.
This weekend I will be getting a big taste of those differences between neighborhoods. I will spend tomorrow wandering the streets of Gerritsen Beach. I really like this neighborhood – small streets with small plots of land and tiny little bungalows. To me, it is the epitome of what an urban beach town should be. It is a little spit of land between Plumb Beach Channel and Shell Bank Creek. Unfortunately I will only graze the northern portion of the area, because in the climate change scenario I am tracing, Gerritsen Beach will be all but gone.
Saturday I will travel through Sheepshead Bay, Gravesend and a little bit of Brighton Beach. These areas will be the most densely developed that I have traveled through yet. Brighton is getting a lot of new luxury condos lately, all on the ocean (flood) side of the line.
Sunday takes me into the tony Manhattan Beach neighborhood where I will draw a few block diameter circle which will outline the tiny portion of Coney Island which lies above the 10′ above sea level line.
Which takes me back to the connectedness which climate change engenders. The line that I am drawing, and the scenario of flooding every 5 years, is a worst case scenario if we stay on track, living and acting the way we do now. If we act now (as in today) and change habits and attitudes we can keep this flooding from happening. And it will take all of us acting together to have the greatest impact.
So, if you see me out drawing the chalk line, make sure to ask me for some extra Action Packets so you can hand them off to friends, family and neighbors. And if you are reading this blog, definitely forward links (and your thoughts on the project and climate change) to everyone you know – all around the world!
We can change the future…








