Professed "Jersey girl" Christeena
Hockin-Minopetros began collecting sea glass from the New Jersey shore when she
was 5. She recalls that when she was younger, before the glass became scarce,
you could walk home with a bucketful after a day at the beach.
Now, 10 months after Hurricane Sandy hammered the Atlantic
coastline, the Florida resident says she's shocked by how many of the frosty
relics she found while walking along Sea Bright Beach back home this summer.
"This is an epic summer for a collection of beach
glass," she said.
Sea glass, or beach glass, begins essentially as garbage --
broken glass dumped into fresh or salt water. Over time, waves, water and sand
smooth its sharp edges. It's the smaller pieces of sea glass that usually get
brought onto shore for people to pick up, Hapke said.
It's well-known that hurricanes erode seashores and hamper
tourism, but, according to Hapke, a storm like Sandy -- which boasted
record-high waves in late October -- can filter larger, coarse materials from
the seabed and wash them onto the shoreline.
That's good news for beach-side businesses that sell their
finds.
That's why Hurricane Sandy and the February nor'easter were
"a blessing," Bartolomeo said.
"We had people calling, 'Are you open now?' " she
said. "But we were never closed."
Gov. Chris Christie's administration announced last week
that every public boardwalk and beach along the New Jersey shore is now open,
after 10 months of renovations and "beach replenishing."
Despite the good news for many businesses, Hockin-Minopetros
is concerned that beach replenishing -- by which sand from other areas is used
to revitalize an eroded beach -- might affect the abundance of sea glass, much
like she worries construction and spiking insurance rates along the coast could
affect the shoreline's pristine quaintness.
"I'm afraid New Jersey's shoreline will be one big
McMansion, and that saddens me deeply," she said.
In addition to the sea glass she collects to craft into
jewelry, which she sells, Hockin-Minopetros also keeps a personal collection of
about 500 "really fantastic" pieces, most of which she collected
while living in Greece.
But her best piece is one she picked up in Point Pleasant,
New Jersey, she said.
The heavy, 8-inch-long, clear glass is actually a deck
prism, which sailors used in the upper deck of a ship to illuminate the ship's
passageways below deck. It's one she won't be selling, she said.
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