By Emily Reddington
Photo courtesy of Anne Mazar

Imagine a fall day, with its golden light, where you paddle across the shimmering waters of a great pond to the barrier beach, a narrow division between pond and ocean. Imagine the salt air, the warm breeze, and the sound of the waves. As if all this beauty and abundance were not enough, imagine humpback whales breaching just beyond the shore. This is not just a lovely imagining, but rather the lived experience of community members this fall on Edgartown Great Pond.  

Life begins in water and throughout life we turn to living waters to lift our spirits, feed our families, and sustain our economy. Water gives our community a sense of identity and it also sustains us in the best and worst of times.

At Great Pond Foundation (GPF) our mission is to cultivate the resilience of our coastal pond ecosystems through science, collaboration, and education. Expressed most simply, our goal is keeping local waters alive. Our field studies, laboratory analyses, scientific collaborations, technical communications, and community outreach are done to keep local waters alive. 

We are proud to bring you Great Pond Foundation’s 2023/2024 Annual Report dedicated to Cultivating Community Resilience.  It is going to take an Island of informed and engaged community members to protect our precious ponds.

~ Quantify MV CYANO impact from 2021-2024.

~ Dig deeper into Planning for Sea Level Rise.

~ Explore Monitoring Well Installation at Long Point.

Water gives us so much, what if we chose to give back? This reciprocal relationship with water and its creatures is not a new concept. The Wampanoag community has spent the last 12,000 years living the knowledge that giving back to the ecosystem, through gratitude and actions, is a vital part of sustaining life. Wampanoag people have long understood that water itself is life.

Resilience is about giving back more than we take. It is building a surplus of health and well-being and cultivating a stronger ecosystem. Each cut is an opportunity to renew and restore pond ecosystems. It is an opportunity to strengthen the ecosystem and to build resilience by infusing brackish ponds with cool, salty, clear, and clean seawater. 

Excess nitrogen is the greatest driver of impairment in our pond ecosystems. Eventually external nitrogen restrictions will be imposed by the state, as they have been on the Cape, but will the health of our precious ecosystems five years from now? What if we proactively chose to reduce nitrogen? 

Martha’s Vineyard is celebrated for its abundant and beautiful natural spaces, but one of our greatest assets is our strong and resilient community. While the challenges facing our ponds are growing, so is our knowledge of the sources of impairment and the solutions to remediate them. Our community can be the model for other coastal communities by proactively choosing to give back to our waters and cultivate their resilience.