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The Creek


The Creek
Photo Information
Copyright: angela LL (angela926) Gold Star Critiquer/Silver Workshop Editor/Gold Note Writer [C: 362 W: 17 N: 331] (1377)
Genre: Places
Medium: Color
Date Taken: 2008-05-04
Categories: Daily Life
Camera: Canon EOS 40D, Canon EF 75-300mm f/4-5.6 III
Exposure: f/14.0, 1/500 seconds
More Photo Info: [view]
Photo Version: Original Version, Workshop
Date Submitted: 2008-05-06 17:49
Viewed: 443
Points: 14
[Note Guidelines] Photographer's Note
Gerritsen Creek in Brookly New York.


Marine Park occupies the westernmost inlet of Jamaica Bay. The bay itself was formed over the past five thousand years, as ocean currents deposited strips of sand along the south shore of Long Island. These beaches act as barriers against the surf, and thereby allow calm saltwater marshes to form on the protected side. Jamaica Bay’s barrier beach is Rockaway. Gerritsen Creek is a freshwater creek that used to extend inland twice as far as it does today. Around 1920, the portion of the creek that lay north of Avenue U was converted into an underground storm drain. Though it is no longer visible, it still supplies the marsh with freshwater from further inland.

Between 800 and 1400 CE, Native Americans from the village of Keshawchqueren (where Flatbush Avenue and Kings Highway intersect today) probably used this creek for hunting and fishing. Their food preparation pits, deer and turtle bones, oyster shells, and sturgeon scales have been excavated throughout Marine Park. When the Dutch arrived in the early 17th century, the plains and salt marshes along the southern coast of Brooklyn seemed reminiscent of perennially flooded Holland. Thus, the Dutch stayed and established several villages including New Utrecht, New Amersfoort (Flatlands), Flatbush, New Lots, and Bushwick. These villages consisted of large dairy farms, spread throughout the region. These and later settlers found additional wealth harvesting oysters and clams from Jamaica Bay. But during the 1920s, suburbanization of Brooklyn forced land-intensive dairy farms elsewhere, and harbor development killed the bay’s oyster beds.

Around 1900, developers considered plans to turn Jamaica Bay into a port. They intended to dredge Rockaway channel and thereby allow large ships to enter. Speculators anticipated a real estate boom and began purchasing waterfront properties on Jamaica Bay. Two local men, Frederic B. Pratt and Alfred T. White feared that the pristine marshland around Gerritsen Creek would be lost to development, so they donated 140 acres to the city as a park in 1917. By 1937, Marine Park had grown to 1,822 acres through additional city purchases. In 1974, New York City transferred 1,024 acres of the park to the National Park Service’s Gateway National Recreation Area. But the 798 acres that remain of Marine Park still constitute a natural preserve nearly the size of Manhattan’s Central Park.

At low tide, near marker 4, visitors can see wooden pilings crossing the creek. These are the remains of the first tide-powered mill in North America. Dutch farmer Hugh Gerritsen (the son of the original settler Wolphert Gerritsen, for whom the surrounding neighborhood is named) built this flourmill in 1645. While George Washington’s Continental Army was stationed in Brooklyn, this mill ground flour for the troops. Later, the Hessians who fought for the British captured and used it too. The mill continued to operate until 1889, and was burned by vandals in 1935.

Gerritsen Creek provides a natural habitat for a very diverse group of organisms. Myrtle warblers (Dendroica coronata), Canada geese (Branta canadensis), brants (Branta bernicla), canvasbacks (Aythya valisineria), buffleheads (Bucephala albeola), red-breasted mergansers (Mergus serrator), common loons (Gavia immer), grasshopper sparrows (Ammodramus savannarum), cotton-tailed rabbits (Sylvilagus virginianus), ring-necked pheasants (Phasianus colchicus), horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus), oyster toadfish (Opsanus tau), and different species of egret, heron and grebe all live in and around the creek.

The creek also supports myriad plant life, including common reedgrass (Phragmites austalis), sea side goldenrod (Solidago sempervirens), and ragweed (Ambrosia artemisifolia). The reedgrass grows at the expense of other plant life by crowding the soil and blocking sunlight. Goldenrod is fertilized by insect pollination. Finally, ragweed relies on the wind for pollination because its flowers fail to attract insects. Because the wind is not particularly efficient, ragweed must produce copious amounts of pollen to have any success. This is why the plant causes much suffering for people with allergies. Other wildflowers that can be seen here include asters (Aster), shepherd’s purse (Capsella bursa-pastoris), Carolina whitlow grass (Draba verna), and marsh elder (Iva frutescens), all typical of the area. Of special note is the White mulberry tree (Morus alba) at marker 10. Such trees, native to China, were first planted in 1830 near Flushing. Their leaves are the food of choice for silkworms (Bombyx mori), and they were planted to help establish a silk industry in the United States. The industrial effort failed because it was too labor-intensive, but the trees thrived and are now common throughout the northeast.

JPlumb, belido, Charo, jlbrthnn, jusninasirun, Simon415 has marked this note useful
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Critiques [Translate]

Hi Angela, I like this shot, I like the positioning of that boat, with the bridge, and I like the good sharp detail you've captured here. Your notes are excellent. There were a couple of things that I thought you might continue with in PP, so I've gone off to play to show you a couple of other options.

Thanks, John

Hi Angela,

lovely shot! You chose a very good pov and framed perfectly, reserving some space for the soft sky. The clarity is really good all over the image and there is no overexposure. Great job!
Regards,
Carlos

  • Great 
  • Charo Gold Star Critiquer/Silver Workshop Editor/Gold Note Writer [C: 2574 W: 22 N: 4912] (18890)
  • [2008-05-09 11:45]

Hola Angela,
Estupenda perspectiva con muy buena luz y colores. Excelentes detalles y contraste.
Cordialmente
Charo

Hello Angela,
Brooklyn, usually do not evoke this kind of image, which surprises me agreeably. It is a very beautiful natural sight, whose framing uses the diagonal. Very beautiful natural colors. Pleasant work.
Have a nice day
Cordially
Joël

Hello Angela. Beautiful shot at this creek in diagonal perspective. The strong contrast of the water and land here is just stunning against the spotless blue sky. The boat is well anchored in the frame and a definite plus point. Well done and best regards. Jusni

Angela,
Very nice and pristine place. Perfectly captured. Really good quality, sharpness, clarity, very natural color and light. Simple and beautiful composition.
SL

Angela, this looks loke a place where I could relax. I'll bet id=f you sit quietly long enough that you see some wonderous sights. To think it is "The City" is mind boggling. You have noce color and perspective and the narrative is nicely edited and matches the shot well I think. I might have cropped to a more panorama shape to dump some of the sky but even so this is very nice.

Greg

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