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‘Rowboat Cop’ Will Patrol Blacktip Island Marine Parks

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Blacktip Island Marine Parks volunteer fisheries officer Booger Bottoms will be patrolling reefs in a the department’s new rowboat. (photo courtesy of Val Schrader/BIMP)

A cash-strapped Blacktip Island Marine Parks department this week announced—to combat a rising amount of coral damage, litter and poaching—it will begin on-water enforcement of Blacktip Island’s marine park rules with the aid of a small rowboat.

“It’s gotten to be the Wild West out there, with divers, dive operations and fishermen doing whatever they please,” marine parks spokesperson Val Schrader said. “The idea is to put enforcement personnel on the water to cite violators on the spot and hopefully cut down on environmental damage.

“Problem is, we don’t have the money for a motor boat,” Schrader said. “Or a motor. Or gas. With our budget, the best we can do is a used rowboat and a pair of binoculars. It may seem a bit underwhelming, but we have full confidence these patrols will be effective.”

Some on the island questioned the move.

“I get they want to put some teeth in the park rules, but this is all for show,” Gage Hoase said. “I mean, a rowboat chasing power boats . . . you kinda have to want to get caught for them to catch you. End of the day, it’s just Marine Parks doing kabuki theater to build support for a bigger budget.”

Others praised the patrols.

“It was a hoot seeing them doing trial runs last week,” Marina DeLow said. “Booger Bottoms’d start to chase a poacher’s boat, and the boat’d power up be off like a shot. Sometimes they’d let him get aaalmost there before they blasted off. We grabbed chairs and beers to watch.”

Scuba diving visitors were unimpressed.

“I came up from my dive yesterday and some yahoo started yelling about me breaking coral,” Bill Fisch said. “Gave me a written warning. I wadded it up and threw it in the water. Then he wrote another one for littering and told me, ‘Stay out of trouble.’

“Got even with him today, though,” Fisch said. “I swam under his boat and bungeed his oar blades together. He’s probably still trying to get ‘em loose.”

Bottoms defended the patrols.

“Folks can laugh all they want, but I got a reef to protect,” he said. “I may be slow, but I’m wily. They may get away once, but they can’t escape forever. I’m keeping a list. Now, excuse me. I have to go. Slowly. Somewhere there is coral damage happening.”

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Blacktip Island Marine Parks Launch Underwater Walking Trails

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Blacktip Island’s new underwater walking trails offer buoyancy-challenged divers the chance to see some of the Caribbean island’s most iconic underwater sights, such as the grotto at Jawfish Reef. (Photo courtesy of Val Schrader/Marine Parks)

The Tiperon Islands Marine Parks Department has teamed with Blacktip Island’s Skerritt Construction to build a network of underwater trails, aimed at reef conservation, around some of the island’s most popular dive sites. The first trail was officially opened Thursday afternoon.

“The coral on these dive sites is being destroyed by all the divers,” Marine Parks spokesperson Val Schrader said. “They grab coral. They kneel on coral. They stand on coral. They destroy hundreds of years of growth in an instant.

“We were told banning divers was off the table,” Schrader said. “Instead, these trails will give divers a place to stand and kneel and drag their gauges without killing anything. Think of them as pre-killed zones to protect the reef.”

The paths are laid out over sand and across stretches of dead and severely-damaged coral identified by Marine Parks personnel. Trail building was done by Skerritt Construction.

“We use coral-safe marine concrete, stuff that’s been in use since Roman times,” said Skerritt Construction owner Rich Skerritt. “The pointy-heads from Parks mark off where the path should go, and we go to town.

“It’s a Godsend for the island, really,” Skerritt said. “Topside’s about all paved over. We were having to lay people off.”

Local reaction was generally positive.

“I had a lovely dive just this morning,” Blacktip resident Edwin Chub said. “They put in benches so you can sit and ponder a single coral head.

“And when the current picked up, well, there’s also aluminum pegs to pull yourself along, or just hold yourself in place,” Chub said. “They really did think of everything.”

Others were not convinced.

“This sends entirely the wrong message – that it’s OK to touch the reef,” said Harry Picket, president of the Blacktip Island Pelagic Society. “Even on dead coral there’re still polyps trying to reestablish themselves. Most dive guests don’t know dead coral from live coral from their own butts.”

Local dive operators, though, hailed the trails’ potential.

“They’re perfect for Discover Scuba Diving students,” Eagle Ray Divers dive operations manager Ger Latner. “Our instructors can just drag the punters over the paved stretches and not worry so much about buoyancy. It’s good for the reef and divemaster blood pressure.

“We’re also offering hard-hat diving courses,” Latner said. “You can strap on a helmet and lead boots and walk the trails if you want. For an upcharge.”

Marine Parks officials say the trails also open more opportunities for visiting divers.

“We’re building shore entry sites near all the main underwater trails,” Schrader said. “We also have trail maps, and underwater rangers to make sure no one gets lost. Or strays off the trails and into the coral.”

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