The Green Harbor River, as viewed from the dock at Peter Igo Park. |
Until recently,
those who wished to paddle a kayak, canoe or other non-motorized craft on the
Green Harbor River had few appealing options for launch sites. They could pull
to the side of Route 139 in Green Harbor and creep down the steep rocky
embankment of the bridge at the Brant Rock Dike, or they could tramp hundreds
of feet through overgrown brush and poison ivy . . . Other than that, there was
nothing. But then things started happening at Peter Igo Park in Brant Rock, and
now, not only is there reasonable access to the river, it’s slated for further
improvement!
The changes are in
large part the result of the work of the Peter Igo Park Initiative (PIP), a
non-profit organization dedicated to rehabilitating a mostly-neglected
Marshfield park. Since 2008, the PIP has been taking steps to transform the
17-acre park into a much more user-friendly space. They oversaw a major upgrade
to the tennis and basketball courts on site, removed tons of refuse, thinned
trees, cleared brush, and created a path through the woods and the marsh, right
up to the river’s edge. There’s even a dock, with plans to install a much
larger one, once permitting from the state is complete. This past summer, they
even hired a team of goats to eradicate some of the poison ivy!
I’ve had a kayak for
more than twenty years now, but somehow – for the past decade and more – I’ve
let the cobwebs collect around it. When I dragged it out from its storage place
last month, I found evidence of a critter nesting deep in its bow!
It was the end of
September, the kids were back in school, and all the pieces had fallen into
place for me to go out on the water. I had a friend with whom to paddle, and
enough time in my schedule to make a day of it. Plus the weather was
just-right. And so we transported our boats to Peter Igo Park, hauled them down
the new path to the river, and headed upstream.
The Green Harbor
River flows through my backyard. It took me years to figure this out. What I
always thought was a pond was in fact a wide upstream section. The Green Harbor
River rises from ponds and wetlands from near the Garrretson cranberry bogs,
between Moraine Street (Route 3A) and Black Mount in Marshfield. From there it flows
under Webster Street and through the aptly-named Green Harbor Golf Course
before crossing into Mass Audubon’s Daniel Webster Wildlife Sanctuary. Then
it’s a slow, snaky passage to the sea, via the Brant Rock Dike and Green Harbor’s
actual harbor.
In contrast to the
more heavily trafficked North and South Rivers, the Green Harbor River is
relatively quiet. Most of it is bordered, on one side if not two, by
conservation land. Since the Brant Rock Dike impedes access from the harbor and
the ocean, typically there aren’t any
motor boats on it either. It’s a lovely place to paddle, as it winds through
salt marsh and red cedar swamp.
In late summer, the
marsh grass grows very tall. You may not be able to tell from a distance, but
it easily extends to ten feet in height. When you’re down on the water, seated
in a kayak, it towers over you. It’s not terrain I’d choose to walk through,
but as a backdrop to the river, I really enjoy the sense of enclosure that it
creates. There’s something very peaceful about one’s view being limited to
water, trees, sky, and tall golden grass.
That said, I’d also like
to paddle the Green Harbor River in the spring, when the marsh grass is just
beginning to come in. That way, I’d be better able to see what borders it.
Access to the Green
Harbor River is free and open to the public. Parking is available at Peter Igo
Park, as well as across the street at the DAV, where a few spots are reserved
for paddlers. Take Route 139 through Green Harbor toward Brant Rock, go past
the Marina and the Yacht Club, and then after you’ve crossed the bridge, turn
left onto Marshall Street. Large signs make it difficult to miss. The recently-mulched
path to the water is to the left of the tennis courts. It’s not exactly a short
haul to the river – but it’s direct, and it’s worth it. On the relatively calm
day that I visited this fall, it took a little over an hour to paddle up to the
first wooden bridge in Daniel Webster Sanctuary, but only half that (with the
wind at our backs) to return.
Also of note is a
privately-owned island, in the middle of the river, right across from the
launch. Wooden signs posted there indicate that visitors are welcome, as long
as they treat the property with respect. It’s well worth the exploration!
For more information
about about the Peter Igo Park
Initiative, visit http://www.peterigo.com.
by Kezia Bacon
September 2015
Kezia Bacon's articles
appear courtesy of the North and South Rivers Watershed Association, a local
non-profit organization devoted to the preservation, restoration, maintenance
and conservation of the North and South Rivers and their watershed. For
membership information and a copy of their latest newsletter, contact NSRWA at
(781) 659-8168 or visit www.nsrwa.org. To browse 19 years of Nature (Human and
Otherwise) columns, visit http://keziabaconbernstein.blogspot.com