What are you looking for?
2 minutes | News |

Save the Waves targets threats to water

A conservation organization is now using the Save the Waves crowdsourcing app to help take on threats to the waters it’s aiming to protect.
Jump to story

Want to continue reading?



Please log into your OFAH Community account to access this conent. Not an OFAH member or Ontario OUT of DOORS Subscriber? Follow the links below to join or subscribe and gain access to exclusive online content.

A conservation organization is now using the crowdsourcing app Save the Waves to help take on threats to the waters it’s aiming to protect. Georgian Bay Forever, a Toronto-based charity helping restore, conserve, and protect the the bay’s aquatic ecosystem, is encouraging citizens to use the Save the Waves app. The app is now available for Apple and Android. You use the app to take photos of garbage, plastic pollution or other threats (such as erosion, degraded infrastructure or algae blooms) on beaches and coastlines, geotag the location, and submit this information directly to the group. “Every time you submit a possible environmental threat on Georgian Bay through the app, it gets sent to us so that we can either alert the proper authorities, other environmental groups, or take care of it ourselves whenever possible,” Georgian Bay Forever Development Director Amber Gordon said. The app is part of the Critical Catch program, which provides waste receptacles for anglers. It also includes public education, including helping foster youth conservation skills in a classroom effort with a local hatchery, Gordon said. More receptacle are now located throughout the town of Collingwood. They will be installed in other locations this year. Save the Waves boundary map To watch a video tutorial on the Save the Waves app, click here  Learn more at: savethewaves.org/app  For more fishing, click here Click here for more outdoors news Watch on-demand videos anytime on OFAH Stream

Related Stories

Get Hooked

Getting hooked

Get Hooked is a six-part documentary series following the fishing excursions of four queer millennial women across Ontario.

Read More
the Permethrin problem

The permethrin problem

Permethrin remains unavailable in Canada due to delays caused by a lengthy approval process blocking its market entry.

Read More