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Where
did Redfish Island Go?
The
grand re-opening of Galveston Bay's Redfish Island was celebrated
in March of 2003. Redfish Island, once a popular boater destination
that disappeared more than a decade ago because of subsidence
and erosion, is officially ready to host both boaters and wildlife.
Construction of Redfish Island was a substantial task. The restoration
involved carting 140 barge loads of stone to the middle of the
bay, placing more than 206,000 tons of limestone on the bay bottom
to create the island. The entire process, which began in June
2002, took just three months.
Photo of the
Redfish Restoration project.
Clickthe pic to view a larger image

The "hook"
in the right foreground is what we call the boater's hook, it
provides a sheltered anchorage from the south, and south east.
The rock contractor is filling in the narrow section to the right
by hauling the rock from the off loading area. The north end of
the island (to the left side of the photo), when constructed will
have a necked down and shorter area to allow circulation, but
not ship wakes and then a large bird nesting island. It's a unique
restoration that provides for endangered bird nesting and human
recreation. In the background you can see the Weeks Marine bucket
dredge loading material from the Houston Ship channel widening
and deepening project. This material is being placed offshore
in mounds to create fish habitat. We are already seeing better
fishing there from a previous effort with the outer bar material.
Click
on photo to see Galveston Bay from the Shuttle!
Redfish Island is clearly visible

Redfish
Island Reborn
Redfish
Island Resurrected after Decade Under Water
Redfish
Island: A Promise Kept
A
Promise Kept 2
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