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Showing posts with label Watchaug Pond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Watchaug Pond. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

What do Charlestown’s Watchaug Pond and the Reflecting Pool in Washington have in common?

Dangerous algae bloom

RIDOH and DEM Recommend Avoiding Contact with Watchaug Pond

This morning in DC, workers poured bottles of peroxide
into the Reflecting Pool just days after the $14 million
repair job ordered by Donald Trump was completed.
The Rhode Island Department of Health (RIDOH) and Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) are advising people to avoid contact with Watchaug Pond in Charlestown due to harmful algae blooms (HABs).  Water samples were collected by DEM and tested by RIDOH’s State Health Laboratories.

All recreation, including swimming, fishing, boating and kayaking, is high risk to health and recommended to be avoided at this location. This HAB is caused by blue-green algae, also known as cyanobacteria, which are naturally present in bodies of water. HABs can produce toxins which can be harmful to humans and animals.

Use caution in all areas of Watchaug Pond as HABs can move locations in ponds and lakes. Initial samples collected at Watchaug Pond exceeded the advisory threshold. People should not drink untreated water or eat fish from affected waterbodies. Pet owners should not allow pets to drink or swim in this water. 

This is going to take a LOT off peroxide!
This advisory recommendation remains in effect until further notice. To confirm the water is free from toxins and high cell counts, water samples will be collected to lift the advisory when the bloom has cleared from the affected waterbody.

Skin contact with water containing HABs can cause symptoms such as skin rashes, sore throat and irritation of the eyes and nose. Swallowing water containing HABs can cause stomachache, diarrhea, vomiting and nausea. More serious, but less common health effects associated with swallowing contaminated water may affect the liver and nervous system, cause irregular heartbeat, dizziness, or seizures.

Young children, pets and people with certain underlying health conditions or who are immunocompromised may be at greater risk for illness. Anyone who experiences symptoms after contact with water containing HABs should contact a healthcare provider.

If you or your pet come into contact with an algal bloom (HAB):

  • Rinse your skin with clean water right away.
  • Shower and wash your clothes when you get home.
  • If your pet was exposed, wash it with clean water immediately and don’t let it lick algae from its fur.
  • Call a vet if your pet shows signs of illness like tiredness, no eating, vomiting, diarrhea or other symptoms within a day.
  • If you feel sick after contact, call a healthcare provider.

Affected waters may exhibit bright to dark green scum along the shoreline, with thick algae floating on the surface. It may resemble green paint, pea soup, or green cottage cheese. If you see water like this, people and pets should avoid contact with the water.

To report suspected blue-green algae blooms, contact DEM’s Office of Water Resources at DEM.OWRCyano@dem.ri.gov  or call 401-222-4700, Press 3, and select Office of Water Resources. If possible, send a photograph of the reported algae bloom. For more information and the Cyanobacteria Tracker Dashboard that lists current advisories and data, visit: www.dem.ri.gov/bluegreen

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

After delay, Burlingame State Campground Opens for the Season

Opens Friday - Brace for another surge in summer people

The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) announces the completion of three new shower and restroom facilities at Burlingame State Campground in Charlestown. Reservations will open for the 2026 season through Reserve America on Wednesday, June 10, at 9 AM. The first night to make a reservation will be Friday, June 12.

Phase One of the project brings exciting upgrades to the Midpark North, Fish Camp and Mills Camp sections of the campground with the addition of three modern restroom and shower facilities. 

Designed to enhance visitor comfort and accessibility, the new buildings are ADA-compliant and feature new septic systems, indoor/outdoor coin-operated hot water showers, energy-efficient lighting, and durable, water-conserving plumbing fixtures. 

The $18M project is funded primarily through the voter-approved 2021 Beach, Clean Water, and Green Economy Bond, along with $2M federal grant. Construction is expected to be fully completed in April 2027.

Friday, January 23, 2026

Cold Water, Hot Bites - Winter Trout & Salmon Stocking

DEM - thanks for the fish

The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) will stock trout and Sebago salmon from Tuesday, Jan. 27, to Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026 in the following areas:

  • Barber Pond, South Kingstown – Rainbow Trout, Salmon
  • Round Top Ponds, Burrillville – Brook Trout
  • Olney Pond, Lincoln Woods State Park, Lincoln – Rainbow Trout, Salmon
  • Carbuncle Pond, Coventry – Rainbow Trout, Salmon
  • Meadow Brook Pond, Richmond – Rainbow Trout, Salmon
  • Silver Spring Lake, North Kingstown – Rainbow Trout, Salmon
  • Simmons Mill Pond, Little Compton – Rainbow Trout, Salmon
  • Stafford Pond, Tiverton  Rainbow Trout
  • Watchaug Pond, Charlestown – Rainbow Trout
  • Willet Pond, East Providence – Rainbow Trout
  • Wyoming Pond, Hope Valley – Rainbow Trout
  • Peck Pond, Burrillville – Rainbow Trout
  • Upper Melville Pond (Thurston Gray) – Golden Rainbow Trout, Salmon

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Help kids with special needs enjoy summer camp

Volunteers needed for next week

Debra Tanner, SRIV

Southern Rhode Island Volunteers in Charlestown received a request for volunteers to help at the Down Syndrome Camp at Camp Watchaug for Monday, August 25th through Wednesday, August 27th.  Camp is 8:30 am to 3 pm each of those 3 days.

Volunteers could help with the following activities:

Rock climbing and other activities--they have counselors

Kayaking on Watchaug Pond--they have some counselors (please - you must be able to swim to do this)

Watching over campers in water (2 ft of water,-not deep water) 

Watching over campers on Monday with Goats (there are keepers with this activity)

Watching over campers on Tuesday (drummers activity from 11-1 lunch time)

There are 22 campers; 9 of these campers are high-functioning and will be in group settings.

Other campers need one-on-one and are covered with parents, relatives and others.

Please, anyone with an interest in helping contact the SRIV office by Thursday, noon on August 21st at 401-552-7661.  Thanks for considering!

Sunday, January 19, 2025

Winter Trout Stocking

Stay off thin ice

The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) is conducting winter trout and salmon stocking. Stocking will be in selected areas in Rhode Island beginning Tuesday, Jan. 21, and continuing through Thursday, Jan. 23.

The following areas will be stocked with the indicated species:

  • Barber Pond, South Kingstown –Golden Rainbow Trout, Rainbow Trout, Salmon 
  • Round Top Ponds, Burrillville – Brook Trout 
  • Onley Pond, Lincoln Woods State Park, Lincoln – Golden Rainbow Trout, Rainbow Trout, Salmon
  • Carbuncle Pond, Coventry – Golden Rainbow Trout, Rainbow Trout, Salmon 
  • Meadow Brook Pond, Richmond – Golden Rainbow Trout, Rainbow Trout, Salmon 
  • Upper Melville Pond, Portsmouth – Golden Rainbow Trout, Rainbow Trout, Salmon
  • Silver Spring Lake, North Kingstown – Golden Rainbow Trout, Rainbow Trout
  • Simmons Mill Pond, Little Compton – Golden Rainbow Trout, Rainbow Trout, Salmon
  • Stafford Pond, Tiverton – Golden Rainbow Trout, Rainbow Trout
  • Watchaug Pond, Charlestown – Golden Rainbow Trout, Rainbow Trout
  • Willet Pond, East Providence – Golden Rainbow Trout, Rainbow Trout
  • Wyoming Pond, Hope Valley – Rainbow Trout
  • Peck Pond, Burrillville – Golden Rainbow Trout, Rainbow Trout

Daily stocking updates will be available each afternoon. Please visit DEM's Division of Fish and Wildlife's (DFW) Facebook Page, visit www.dem.ri.gov/troutwaters, or call 401-789-0281 or 401-539-0019 for more information on stocking. 

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Starting today, DEM is stocking Watchaug and 10 other ponds with more trout and salmon

Getcher hooks ready


DEM will be stocking the following waterbodies: 

·       Melville Ponds, Portsmouth

·       Simmons Mill Pond, Little Compton

·       Stafford Pond, Tiverton

·       Willett Pond, East Providence

·       Barbers Pond, South Kingstown

·       Wyoming Pond, Hopkinton

·       Silver Spring Lake, North Kingstown

·       Meadowbrook Pond, Richmond

·       Watchaug Pond, Charlestown

·       Round Top Ponds, Burrillville

·       Peck Pond, Burrillville

Daily stocking updates will be available each afternoon. Please visit DEM's Division of Fish and Wildlife's Facebook Page, visit www.dem.ri.gov/fishing for more information on stocking. 

Friday, August 25, 2023

Charlestown's Watchaug Pond beaches among the worst

Number of Ocean State beach closures highest in nearly 20 years

By Rob Smith / ecoRI News staff

Burlingame Park on Watchaug Pond

There is still a month left of summer, and Rhode Island has already seen the highest number of beach closures in nearly two decades.

According to data from the RI Health Department’s beach monitoring program, freshwater and saltwater beaches around the state have been closed for a combined 284 days since Memorial Day, the highest number of closures recorded since 2006.

Beaches are closed by order of DOH when they test positive for elevated levels of enterococci bacteria; anything higher than the sample standard of 60 colony forming units (CFU) per 100 milliliters of water is closed until the tests produce a clean result again.

The bacteria represent a small but significant health risk to swimmers. Swimming in contaminated water can cause gastroenteritis, an inflammation of the stomach and intestines that can cause symptoms such as vomiting, headaches, and fever. It can also result in ear, eye, and throat infections, and in more serious cases, salmonella.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Three beaches on Watchaug Pond in Charlestown were closed for a total of 31 days so far this summer, according to RI Health Department data. The three beaches are the ones at the picnic area and campgrounds at Burlingame State Park and the Westerly Y's Camp Watchaug. On two of the 31 days, there was an overlap when both Burlingame beaches were closed. Otherwise, the closures were on separate occasions. These beaches account for more than 10% of the total days of beach closures in the state.    - Will Collette

Monday, July 10, 2023

Our local beach closures are testament

Poop pathogens threaten US beachgoers nationwide, study finds

SHANNON KELLEHER

The YMCA's Camp Watchaug beach in Charlestown, one of several
local beaches recently closed for unhealthy levels of E. Coli bacteria.
It's also the location for the Charlestown Land Trust's August 5
"Pondside Picnic" ($60 ticket). Suggest you stay out of the water.
Beachgoers may be on the lookout for sharks and jellyfish, but one danger lurking beneath the waves this summer originated onshore — pathogens from human and farm animal waste. 

Over half of US beaches tested in 2022 harbored potentially unsafe levels of contamination, according to an analysis released today by the organizations Environment America Research & Policy Center and Frontier Group.

The study found that 1,761 out of 3,192 coastal and Great Lakes beaches tested across the country last year showed fecal contamination levels above an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) benchmark on at least one day that year.

363 of the beaches showed potentially unsafe levels on at least a quarter of the days they were tested. Much of the contamination comes from stormwater runoff in developed areas, outdated and deteriorating sewage systems, and factory farming, the authors write.

Swimming in water contaminated with fecal bacteria can cause gastrointestinal and respiratory illness, as well as infections, according to the EPA’s website.

Source: RI Dept. of Health. Note that the closure of Camp Watchaug has not, as of July 9, been lifted.

Thursday, May 4, 2023

Fish for free this weekend

Angling for a Deal? How about Free Fishing Weekend May 6-7?

The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) announces it will hold its annual Free Fishing Weekend Saturday, May 6, and Sunday, May 7. 

DEM invites Rhode Islanders and visitors alike to fish in the state's freshwaters on both days for all species of freshwater fish without a fishing license, which costs $21 for residents and $38 for nonresidents, or a trout conservation stamp, which costs $5.50. 

Visit the DEM website for a complete list of stocked waters. The Division of Fish and Wildlife will continue to provide daily stocking information through the second and third stocking rounds this spring.

Established in 1995, the program provides an opportunity to encourage people to experience freshwater fishing as a new outdoor experience and highlight some of state's premier freshwater fishing areas. Free Fishing Weekend does not apply to saltwater fishing or saltwater licenses.

Freshwater fishing regulations on size/creel (possession) limits apply on May 6 and May 7. The daily creel and possession limit for trout is five from April 8 through Nov. 30 and two from Dec. 1, 2023, through Feb. 29, 2024. 

The creel/possession limit for trout taken in the Wood River between Route 165 and Barberville Dam at Arcadia Road is two fish from the second Saturday in May through the last day of February 2024. 

The minimum size of all trout or charr species taken from the waters of the state is eight inches, measured from the tip of the snout to the tip of the tail. The creel and possession limit for domestic or landlocked Atlantic salmon in the freshwaters of the state is two fish per day and shall be included in the daily limit for trout, salmon, or charr. 

The minimum size for domestic salmon is 11 inches. No person shall take Atlantic salmon from the Pawcatuck River downstream of the Potter Hill dam. The taking of any fish in the freshwaters of the state by net, seine, trawl, cast net or gill net, or similar device — except for a dip net for the landing of a fish caught by hook and line — and the taking of baitfish are prohibited. 

For more regulation information, please refer to the 2023-24 Freshwater Fishing Abstract and the DEM website.

Information about stocked freshwaters and size and creel limits for all freshwater fish species also is available in the abstract and on the DEM website.

Anglers who catch a golden rainbow trout through May 8 will be eligible to receive a golden trout pin. Simply take a picture and email it to dem.fishri@dem.ri.gov for verification. 

Submissions must be received no later than Monday, May 8, 2023, to be eligible. One pin per person limit. The DEM Division of Fish and Wildlife's Freshwater and Diadromous Fisheries team has stocked the following freshwaters with golden rainbow trout:

Saturday, January 7, 2023

More fish!

DEM adding more trout and salmon to Watchaug Pond and other popular fishing spots 


The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) will be stocking ten lakes and ponds with rainbow trout, Sebago Atlantic salmon, and new this year, lake trout starting Monday, Jan. 9, and continuing through Friday, Jan. 17.

DEM will stock the following waterbodies:

o Barber Pond, South Kingstown: trout, salmon, and lake trout

o Round Top Ponds, Burrillville: trout and salmon

o Carbuncle Pond, Coventry: trout, salmon, and lake trout

o Carolina Trout Pond, Richmond: trout and salmon

o Meadow Brook Pond, Richmond: trout and salmon

o Melville Ponds, Portsmouth: trout and salmon

o Silver Spring Lake, North Kingstown: trout and salmon

o Stafford Pond, Tiverton: trout, salmon, and lake trout

o Watchaug Pond, Charlestown: trout and salmon

o Willet Pond, East Providence: trout and salmon

Friday, July 15, 2022

What is a pond?

Study provides first data-driven definition

Cornell University

Trustom Pond. Photo by Will Collette. Cornell says this is not a pond.
 - Too big at 320 hectares. Ditto for Ninigret at 623 hectares. Watchaug 
loses its "pond" status too at 232 hectares.
Nearly everyone can identify a pond, but what, exactly, distinguishes it from a lake or a wetland? A new study co-led by Cornell University offers the first data-driven, functional definition of a pond and evidence of ponds' distinct ecological function, which could have broad implications for science and policy.

"The lack of a universal pond definition causes a lot of confusion, from people wondering about the difference between a pond and a lake, to aquatic monitoring programs with different definitions across governmental agencies, even up to accurately modeling global carbon budgets," said Meredith Holgerson, assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and co-first author of "A functional definition to distinguish ponds from lakes and wetlands," published June 21 in Scientific Reports.

"We wanted to evaluate how scientists and policymakers define ponds and examine whether ponds are functionally distinct from lakes and wetlands," Holgerson said.

Their conclusion: Ponds are small and shallow waterbodies, with a maximum surface area of five hectares, a maximum depth of 5 meters and less than 30% emergent vegetation.

Monday, July 4, 2022

Charlestown Chunks #6: Fourth of July edition

Another COVID summer, but who cares?

By Will Collette

What no one wants to hear

Rhode Island’s infection rate for COVID is more than 10 times higher than it was a year ago: around 160 per 100,000 a day compared to only 14 a day last July 4. But the actual infection rate is FAR higher, thanks to our gormless twit of a governor McKee who has dismantled state testing operations. The prevalence of at-home self-tests whose results are not included in the official infection tally also masks the true number of new infections.

But no one seems to care, especially not McKee who loves the idea that people are going around maskless while shopping in his beloved small businesses. 

It’s madness but apparently we have made an unconscious, collective decision to ignore a disease that has already killed over one million Americans or roughly the entire population of the state of Rhode Island.

You’re next, Justin

Screen shot from WPRI
Another Rhode Island right-wing nut has been busted for his role in the January 6 storming of the Capitol. Bernard Sirr, 47, of North Kingstown was arraigned on June 29 on federal felony charges of civil disorder.

Sirr works at Rhode Island’s ONLY operating nuclear reaction, the RI Nuclear Science Center on URI’s Bay campus.

According to the Boston Globe:

“Sirr works as a facility engineer at the Rhode Island Nuclear Science Center. The FBI confirmed that Sirr was on leave from his place of employment from Jan. 5 to Jan. 7, 2021.”

Bet you didn’t know we have an operating nuke in Rhode Island. The last time we ran a story on it was in 2014. The nuke is only 12 miles to the east of Charlestown. It’s tiny compared to the Millstone nuke just outside of New London, around 20 miles upwind from Charlestown.

Anyway, Sirr is the second Rhode Island recently busted for Trump’s January 6 coup attempt. I am still hoping to see Rep. Justin Price hauled away in cuffs. 

Price admitted he was there and claimed to be close enough to see that the mob was being led by Antifa (he says, without a shred of evidence).

 That’s close enough to be way over the police lines at the Capitol, warranting charges based on his own Twitter claims.

Mystic Aquarium says belugas would have died anyway

In May 2021, Mystic Aquarium airlifted five beluga whales from “Marineland,” a SeaWorld-style Park in Canada, to Mystic for “research.” Two of the whales died and a third is still in critical care.

Mystic has come under sharp criticism. Friends of Animals, an animal advocacy organization, has filed a formal complaint with the US Department of Agriculture seeking a federal investigation and sanctions.

I’ve stopped running any of Mystic’s news releases and notices in Progressive Charlestown, pending an outcome to this investigation.

Mystic Aquarium, citing its own internal pathology reports, claims those reports show it is blameless because the whales would have died anyway of pre-existing conditions.

True or not, that raises the question whether anyone checked the whales before they were put through the trauma of the long flight.

True or not, there is the question of why such intelligent creatures, whose brain to body mass ratio is higher than humans, are kept in small water enclosures with windows for bratty kids to bang on. Is it ethical? Is it moral to conduct “research” on these amazing creatures?

I appreciate Mystic’s marine animal rescue program and much of the educational work they do, but I can’t support this. Neither should you.

Magaziner shareholder activism scores another win

General Treasurer Seth Magaziner, hopefully our Second District member of Congress after the November election, announced major reforms at web giant Pinterest to resolve a culture of gender and race discrimination.

Seth had filed suit on behalf of RI’s public pension fund to force a change in Pinterest’s practices and won a settlement where the company pledged $50 million for reforms designed to protect employees from discriminatory treatment and to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion.”

This is another example of socially-responsible investing that Magaziner introduced to push companies to not only change bad practices, but increase company value – and shareholder return – in the process.

I hope our next General Treasurer will continue these practices.

General Stanton flea market returns with new up-scale look

The new owners of Charlestown’s historical centerpiece, the General Stanton Inn, are not only bringing a new style to the Inn, but also its flea market.

You should read the nice write-up appearing in Rhode Island Monthly that describes the changes – new look, new vendors, new merchandise and a new name,  the General’s Market.

I hope it works out for them.

Bad beach water

💩We’re only a couple of weeks into official summertime and we’ve already had a couple of local beach closures for unhealthy levels of e-coli in the water. The first closure was at Camp Watchaug on the Pond, run by the Westerly YMCA. The second was Ninigret Park Beach.

Both closures were temporary and the beaches were re-opened. While we could blame animals and birds for the closures, humans also add run-off from septic systems and bad hygiene habits by swimmers. I’m talking to you, kids at Camp Watchaug – no swimming for you if you poop in the pond!

You can check for beach closures HERE.

California dreaming

The Coast Guard House's version
Seems that the Boston Globe is trying to stir up a fight between Rhode Island and California….over calamari.

According to the Globe, Monterey, CA is calling itself the “Calamari Capital” for its large squid catch (45 million pounds compared to Rhode Island’s 28 million) and haute cuisine way of preparing and serving it.

And all that is great. I like seafood in general and squid in particular, especially since it’s both sustainable and relatively inexpensive. I love Rhode Island’s version and I’m sure Monterey’s versions are great, too. I’ve eaten a lot of California seafood and can’t recall ever having had a bad meal.

Squid is a major part of Rhode Island’s maritime economy, so I hope this little rivalry stirs up more interest among shoppers and diners. Mangia!

Turkey Talk

Dunkin turkey (Brooke Bourget)
A wild turkey has been hanging out at the Dunkin Donuts on Route 3 in West Greenwich, attracting a lot of attention and a sharp scolding from DEM.

Turkeys do that. We’ve had several summers where we’ve been visited by a lone turkey, almost always a young Tom who has apparently been booted from his flock by the senior Tom.

They hang around, usually minding their own business and being cute. Our visitors usually strut into our woods, presumably to eat or sleep – I don’t want to disturb so I don’t follow.

But the turkey at the Dunk has stirred up some public debate with one side saying the bird will die from eating crap and others saying that donuts will give it lots of body fat to make it through the winter.

DEM has weighed in authoritatively:

Here's a young turkey who spent the summer with us getting
ready to fly off our deck (photo by Will Collette)
"Rhode Islanders should never intentionally feed turkeys – feeding wildlife is illegal in Rhode Island not only because of this risk to turkeys, but it can also lead to conflicts between humans and wildlife, increase the risk of disease and lead to unsustainable populations of wildlife. Feeding turkeys, either directly or indirectly, can cause turkeys to become tame and can lead to bold or aggressive behavior around humans."

Well, I don’t feed the turkeys and do accept DEM’s superior knowledge about how to treat our wild neighbors. I like having them around and love watching them. The last thing I want to do is damage their health. But lighten up, DEM...turkeys will do what turkeys want to do.

Thursday, December 16, 2021

Fish for the holidays

DEM Stocking Rainbow Trout and Sebago Salmon this Week in Time for the Holidays


In advance of the holidays, the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) Division of Fish & Wildlife announces that the following locations will be stocked with Rainbow trout and Sebago Atlantic salmon starting Friday, Dec. 17, 2021:

• Barber Pond, South Kingstown

• Carbuncle Pond, Coventry

• Carolina Trout Pond, Richmond

• Meadowbrook Pond, Richmond

• Olney Pond, Lincoln Woods State Park, Lincoln

• Roundtop Ponds, Burrillville (Brook Trout)

• Silver spring Lake, North Kingstown

• Simmons Mill Pond, Little Compton

• Watchaug Pond, Charlestown

• Willet Pond, East Providence

Sunday, November 14, 2021

The Muddy Genesis of the CCSPAA

Decade-Old Charlestown Citizens/Sachem Passage Alliance Association Emerges From The Mud Hole

By Robert Yarnall 

In small towns, it is easy for small decisions and big mistakes, local squabbles and petty rivalries to become the business of everyone. This is the story of how one neighborhood’s disputes can have a major effect on everyone, residents and town employees alike.

Part 2  Sedimental Journey

To read Part 1, CLICK HERE. 

With a wink and nod to trick or treat season, the USPS recently delivered an official SPA 2021 Board of Directors’ Survey to every Sachem Passage property owner in order to explore the future of Oyster Drive 05-95-5. Click here for a very cool GIS plug & play of the venue under the microscope. 

What you need to know: twenty-one years ago, a small group of Sachem Passage residents voted to accept an offer of “free land” from Randall Associates, thereby assuming ownership of not only the vacant lot, but also the financial responsibility attached to property ownership:  taxes, liability insurance and maintenance costs. 

In a nutshell, the dilemma SPAvillians now face is a tad squirrelly. The situation is best illustrated by the Board of Directors’ Survey itself, developed under the auspices of newly-elected SPA president Ronald Areglado. 

To add context to the BOD Survey, it may be helpful to note that Mr. Aregaldo boasts a doctorate in education and is considered by some to be a masterful public speaker with a recognized penchant for nuance. Nonetheless, he was the unsuccessful Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA) 2020 candidate for Town Moderator, trounced by Charlie Beck, the straight-talking owner of the Charlestown MiniSuper. 

Below in italicized font are the introductory paragraphs that CCA adherent/SPA president Ronald Areglado served up as a preamble trick to the SPA 2021 Board of Directors’ Halloween treat survey. 

“In September 2000, 4.2 acres of property located on Foster Cove was deeded to the Sachem Passage Association, Inc. This property, formerly owned by Randall Associates, contained a right-of-way (Oyster Drive) that was for the exclusive use of all Sachem Passage I & II property owners. To facilitate this transfer of ownership and manage the property, Sachem Passage Association was formed and incorporated (June 2000).” 

“A membership survey was performed in 2008 to explore the uses and options for the property. Since then, we have many new members in our community. The current Board of Directors feels that the input of all the property owners in Sachem Passage I & II is essential, and we would value your participation at this time by completing the enclosed survey. Please return this survey by November 8, 2021. To protect individual responses, results will be summarized and shared with the membership, and the Board of Directors will act in accordance with the findings.”

For the benefit of readers who are not familiar with the modus operandi of the Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA), it reminds its elected, appointed, and endorsed politicos that “it’s not what you say, it’s what you don’t say.” Former one-year-only Charlestown Elementary School Principal Ronald Areglado (1998-99) embodies this CCA primal doctrine better than anyone.  Just ask retired Chariho Superintendent of Schools John Pini. 

Prior to September 2000, every property deed in Sachem Passage I & II contained a deeded right-of-way to Charlestown Pond. Our deeded right-of-way existed independent of any other parcel of land then owned by Randall Associates, it cost us nothing, there were no strings attached. The right-of-way was simply a humble, overgrown path that had been used for generations by the Narragansett Indian Tribe to access the salt pond for fishing, oystering, berry picking and related activities. 

Screen shot from the TOWN's GIS map of the property
Sachem Passage Association, Inc., a nonprofit business corporation- was created in June 2000 to facilitate the transfer of the Oyster Drive vacant lot from Randall Associates to Sachem Passage Association, Inc. 

The property transfer provided Randall Associates the opportunity to offload 26 years of property taxes and liability insurance premiums on a lot likely to be deemed unbuildable, based on the Town of Charlestown GIS mapping data available here (select Base Maps > Planimetric Base Map ; select Map Layer, check Wetlands, check 2014 Soils) 

The 2008 membership survey was initiated by the SPA Board of Directors as a response to the burgeoning reality that the overwhelming majority of Sachem Passage residents had little or no interest in utilizing the Oyster Drive property.  A spate of disinterested property owners ignored requests for annual dues payments that were necessary to maintain the costs associated with the property. To most of us in Sachem Passage this was no surprise. 

Before 2000, the Sachem Passage Association was nothing more than a collegial geographic descriptor for an area of town lucky enough to be within sleep walking distance of Watchaug Pond and the Burlingame Park Picnic Area. There was no formal structure, no meetings, no by-laws, no dues, no semblance of the dreaded self-serving embezzlement-prone  “home owners association” movement that accompanied the American condominium boom beginning in the late 1970’s and exists to this day. 

We were a young neighborhood then, composed primarily of nuclear families with toddlers and pre-adolescent school children. School busses made multiple stops. Dogs pretty much had free reign as they accompanied their human pets on their daily walks. There was a healthy sprinkling of “seasoned citizens” representing the best of “the greatest generation.” They graciously took it upon themselves to host the first couple of rounds of holiday parties, staying in the background, learning about “the new kids on the block.” 

Then things started to change, as things always do. Sometime before the incorporation of the SPA in 2000, Randall Associates let it be known a vacant lot with Ninigret Pond frontage could be had for the asking. And it just so happened that our “deeded right-of-way” traversed this particular parcel. 

The neighborhood began kicking around the idea of accepting the Randall offer. Sachem Passage resident John Kaptinski voiced unbridled enthusiasm for the acquisition, citing its value as both a real estate and a life style asset that could be developed for recreational opportunities. 

Mr. Kaptinski’s neighbor, Rob Lyons, Ocean House Marina owner and current Coastal Pond Management Commission chairman, offered a different assessment based on his working knowledge of the salt pond. Mr. Lyons indicated that the muddy bottom of Foster Cove, typical for that part of the salt pond, might not be the best place to pursue activities generally associated with seasonal recreational options afforded by Ninigret Pond. I told John Kaptinski that I agreed with Rob Lyons’ assessment of Foster Cove. 

Cinder Worm (from Wikipedia)
Since 1990 I had fished Foster Cove from a 14-foot McKee Craft, a Boston Whaler-style boat purchased at Ocean House Marina and outfitted specifically to access any part of Ninigret Pond including the breachway, sandy jetties and/or recessed coves. Small boat is the way to go to access Foster Cove, unless you enjoy salt water mud baths. 

Foster Cove is indeed muddy, the kind of mud that provides the ideal habitat for a nematode known locally as a cinder worm, an animal that is singularly responsible for one of the most anticipated fishing events on the East Coast for pursuers of the coveted Striped Bass. The event is called the cinder worm hatch, which is very much of a misnomer. 

Here's a cinder worm hatch in progress
The cinder worm hatch is actually a spawning event. Every year toward the end of May, when the sun is strong and warms the muddy bottom of the salt pond to just the right temperature, cinder worms (nematodes) who live embedded in the mud for the rest of the year rise up into the water and spew forth their reproductive fluids for a few weeks. 

Think about that if someone tries to talk you into a cozy footbath in the warm mud of Foster Cove. 

Quick foot notes aside, I told John Kaptinski 21 years ago that I was opting out of the oasis-in-the-rough idea. I and other families with kids in the neighborhood were more than happy with unfettered free access to the Burlingame Picnic Area with its dedicated boat launch area, clean sandy beach, roped off swimming areas, seasonal lifeguards, shaded grass sitting venues, picnic tables, fire places, bathrooms, and genuine log shelter with its fresh water spigot foot wash. Who wouldn’t be? 

Well, apparently a small contingent of newly-arrived neighbors, the first wave of recently retired baby boomers, were not content with sharing the Burlingame amenities with the hoi polloi. Perhaps they thought they deserved better. If that’s the case, “...it is what it is,” as Head Coach Bill Belichik would say.

But a mud hole? Really? Ok, so at least now I understand the Millennial Generation’s trademark pejorative, “Ok, Boomer...”

So there it is. And here we are again – time for another pause as the cinder worms head down into Foster Cove’s insulating mud layer. Sunlight hours grow shorter. Water temperatures drop. Time to dig a little deeper in the mud. Sling time.