Stories From the Gulf - Birds Falling Out of the Sky
This summer, Patagonia teamed up with non-profit environmental and social justice group, Louisiana Bucket Brigade (LABB), to assist with a project massive in scale and ambition: to track the full impact of the greatest ecological disaster in American history, the Deepwater Horizon oil spill of Spring 2010. The impacts of this disaster extend well beyond unspeakable environmental degradation to the collapse of sustainable industries like fishing and tourism, and the human communities those industries support. Today we offer the fifth in a week-long series of stories from Patagonia employees who travelled to the Gulf to assist the LABB in their ongoing community surveys and Crisis Map project.
Birds Falling Out of the Sky
Christina Allen and I were surveying members of the community at the Trade Winds Marina and met a group of fisherman and the marina owners. The business lost 90% of the fishing-excursion revenue and the only money to be made was off of BP workers shopping at the Marina Mart and staying at the Marina Hotel. We were shown a jar of oil that had been collected in a “safe” fishing area and told stories of birds falling dead out of the sky. None of this was normal to the men that grew up and lived their entire lives on this finger of land jutting into the Gulf of Mexico. Jonathan, one of the Trade-Winds Marina owners, extended an invitation to take us by boat to the Barrier Islands. This is where the birds feed that he saw falling dead out of the sky. Little did I know this would be the most eye-opening boat ride I've ever experienced.
[Oil collected by a local fisherman along the shore of a local barrier island. Photo: Christina Speed.]
With perfect timing as we were leaving the dock the following day, the song “Come Sail Away’” came on the radio. I couldn’t help but enjoy the possibly contaminated air I was breathing on the certainly contaminated water we were boating on. We made our way
The following day we surveyed in Chauvin. After that long, hot day of surveying was over, we feasted at our favorite Cocodrie Marina, compliments of Captain Jonathan. This was where, pre-oil disaster, they would ‘fish all day and tell lies all night.’
Denise Schutte
Patagonia Customer Service
Reno, NV
[Right - One of the many petroleum rigs found throughout Gulf waters. Left - A statue of the Virgin Mary (img. left) overlooks the ruins of a church and bags of oil-soaked sand collected by BP cleanup crews. Photos: Christina Speed.]

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