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Princeton Christmas Trees To Help Rebuild Jersey Shore

Volunteer April Readlinger is collecting discarded Christmas Trees to help rebuild the beach dunes in Berkeley Township.

 

Getting rid of your Christmas tree?

Now it can go to a good cause.

Princeton resident April Readlinger is spearheading a local effort to collect old trees and take them to the Jersey Shore where they will be used to rebuild dunes destroyed by Hurricane Sandy.

The project started about a week ago, after Readlinger saw a Facebook post about Berkeley resident Dominick Solazzo’s initiative to stack old Christmas trees along a one-third mile stretch of beach at the south end of Seaside Park, in Berkeley Township. Solazzo is a member of the board of directors of a local homeowner’s association.

Readlinger shared Solazzo’s efforts on her Facebook page and offered to pick up trees locally and drive them to the shore.

The results were overwhelming.

Readlinger and her sister, Allison Kruchkowski of Tewksbury, spent last weekend collecting about 80 trees at various homes in and around Princeton. They made two trips to the shore, using a truck donated by Scaffolding Towers of America in Middlesex.

“I saw this as an opportunity to help in a different way,” said Readlinger, who no longer commutes to work in New York and now has time for some volunteer activities.

“I grew up at the Jersey shore,” she said. “We would go down every weekend. My in-laws live there. It was just such an important place to me growing up, it’s important to me now. I expect my kids will go there all the time.”

Due to the overwhelming response, Readlinger can no longer pick up individual trees, but she has arranged for drop off points: Shady Brook Farm in Yardley, Pa. and at the Joseph H. Maher, Jr. Ecological Center on Princeton Pike in Lawrence Township.

Best of all, Princeton residents who put their trees by the side of the road will donate to the project indirectly because Princeton trees end up at the Ecological Center and Readlinger has arranged for them to be earmarked for the Shore project.

Now Readlinger seeks volunteers who can help load the trees onto the truck over the weekend, or even those who might have a truck to donate to the effort.

Once the trees get to the shore, Solazzo and other local residents use the trees, in conjunction with fencing, to build up the dunes along the private beach that were significantly eroded as a result of Hurricane Sandy.

The Christmas trees and fences serve as an obstacle for the winds to pass through, dumping sand on top of the trees and rebuilding a natural barrier.

“Ultimately it helps to restore the dunes by collecting sand,” Solazzo said. “It took 30 years to get the dunes where they were.”

Solazzo said homes along that stretch of beach were mostly spared from damage, but the residents want to make sure the homes remain unscathed during future storms.

Protecting their homes is important for residents of the blue collar community where bungalows line the shore, albeit set back a little further from some of the homes that suffered the worst storm damage, he said.

“There’s a lot of people for who it is their primary residence, it’s their home, it doesn’t matter if (the homes) are worth $20,000 or $500,000," Solazzo said. "The culture is different, we’re not going anywhere. We need to stay, we need the homes we love so much.

“You can’t take for granted it won’t happen again tomorrow.”

To volunteer to help April Readlinger with her efforts, email her at aprilreadlinger@gmail.com

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Bill Atkins January 8, 2013 at 02:35 pm
Why not collect them from homes near the shore, instead of driving them across the state?
Carolyn Foote Edelmann January 8, 2013 at 06:31 pm
Greta, what a wonderful story! It's so difficult, these days, to stay upbeat, with destruction on all sides. There's nothing better than learning anew that one person makes a difference! Thank you.
Carolyn Edelmann, your "The Nature of Princeton" blogger

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SFB June 19, 2013 at 02:02 pm
I totally disagree that the plan to build apartments on the hospital site is bad for Princeton. ForRead More the many people who drive into Princeton every day from neighboring townships to work, these apartments will offer an alternative that allows them to walk or cycle instead. Less traffic is good for everybody. Residents in these apartments will also support Princeton businesses and contribute to Princeton's tax base. They will make the town more vibrant. The plan has been substantially revised to better fit in with the neighborhood. In fact it makes the neighborhood more open by adding several new through streets and a park on the corner of Witherspoon and Franklin. 56 affordable units are provided in both big buildings on every level and facing every direction. This is a fantastic opportunity for tenants of income-restricted properties in Princeton. These apartments would be beneficial anywhere in Princeton. They will increase the value of surrounding homes and provide new housing opportunities. Neighbors are entitled to voice their protest, but they will reap the greatest benefit from living next to a modern, well-maintained residential property instead of the much larger, uglier hospital building, which generated far more traffic and regular shipments of biohazardous waste.