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Stimart family launches Build Back the Beach project

Stimart family launches Build Back the Beach project
Cindy Stimart presented the Build Back the Beach project to Anna Maria city commissioners. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

ANNA MARIA – Homeowners Cindy and Tryn Stimart are leading the Build Back the Beach community impact project that plans to replace the native beachfront plants and grasses destroyed by Hurricanes Helene and Milton.

The project is an extension of the Stimart family’s Good Guardians Collective.

The Stimarts live in Lakewood Ranch and own a second home on North Shore Drive in Anna Maria. Their home is located about a block away from the Sycamore Avenue end of the project area and their home and property will not directly benefit from the Build Back the Beach project.

The Anna Maria home, purchased last year, serves as a weekend getaway and vacation home for the Stimart family that Cindy said visits at least once a month. The family spent the Thanksgiving weekend in Anna Maria and went fishing at Bean Point on Friday night. While visiting, the family often enjoys family walks on Bean Point. The Stimarts envision living in their Anna Maria home fulltime when they get closer to retirement and the six children in their blended family head off to college and into adulthood.

Their Anna Maria home is also operated as a short-term vacation rental managed by Sato Real Estate.

THE PROJECT

On Nov. 14, Cindy presented the Build Back the Beach project to the Anna Maria City Commission seeking the commission’s support, which was given, with no financial assistance requested.

Stimart family launches Build Back the Beach project
The project area extends from Sycamore Avenue to the northern tip of Bean Point. – Google Maps | Submitted

At that time, the proposed project area began at the southwest end of Pine Avenue and extended north around Bean Point. At the suggestion of county officials, the project area was reduced by a couple of blocks and will now start near the Sycamore Avenue beach access instead. The 100,000-square-foot planting area was selected because the properties along that coastline are privately owned and that shore­line area will not be restored by the county or the state.

Stimart presented the commissioners with printed copies of her six-page presentation and she noted their children are the third generation of their family members to frequent the Island.

Stimart said the coastal sand dunes and vegetation along the Gulf of Mexico shoreline protected their property from damage greater than the 3 feet of floodwater surge they experienced on the ground level of their elevated home. In addition to protecting beachfront homes and properties, the shoreline dunes and vegetation provide wildlife nesting areas and habitats and help enhance the tourism industry that supports Anna Maria’s business community.

Stimart family launches Build Back the Beach project
The Bean Point beach area looked like this before the hurricanes hit. – Cindy Stimart | Submitted
Stimart family launches Build Back the Beach project
The vegetation along the Bean Point shoreline was decimated by back-to-back hurricanes. – Cindy Stimart | Submitted

Stimart said the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conser­vation Commission, the Florida Department of Environmental Protec­tion and FDEP’s Office of Resilience and Coastal Protection already approved the project to be conducted similar to a county-initiated beach planting project.

It will cost ap­proximately $26,000 to purchase the native sea oats, panic grass, railroad vine, dune sunflowers and planting materials, and the Stimart family will match 50% of the fundraising total. As of Dec. 8, almost half the needed funds had already been raised, according to Stimart. To donate, visit the “Help Heal & Renourish The North End Coastline of Anna Maria” GoFundMe page or the Good Guardians Collective website.

The plants will be purchased from Aquatic Plants of Florida. The seedlings to be pur­chased were grown in a greenhouse using seeds previously harvested from the Anna Maria Island shoreline.

Oyster River Ecology Executive Director Damon Moore has vol­unteered to oversee the planting sessions and the preparatory work scheduled for Friday, Jan. 24.

“I am eternally grateful to him for lending his expertise, leadership and generosity to this project,” Stimart stated in her written presentation.

“He used to live on the Island and he’s so happy to see civilians stepping up to restore the coastline,” she later told The Sun.

The goal is to recruit enough volunteers to have 75 volunteers per shift participating in each of the three planting sessions scheduled on Saturday, Jan. 25 from 8-11 a.m. and 1-4 p.m. and on Sunday, Jan. 26 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. If necessitated by weather conditions, the planting sessions will be delayed a week. As of Dec. 8, 120 volunteers had already been recruited.

The Center of Anna Maria Island will assist with volunteer recruitment. To volunteer, visit the Good Guardians Collective website or call 631-599-0989. You can also call The Center at 941-778-1908.

Stimart family launches Build Back the Beach project
The Build Back the Beach plantings are scheduled to take place in January. – Submitted

Another project goal is to educate the community about the importance of healthy coastlines and the critical role they have in protection, habitats and the local economy. The Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring organization will assist with the educational efforts.

Planting volunteers will be encouraged to visit Anna Maria restaurants and businesses before or after their planting sessions.

Stimart said every potentially impacted beachfront property owner will receive a letter signed by her that provides them with the opportunity to opt out of project-related plantings taking place at their property.

Sato Real Estate will help promote the project and will reach out to the vacation rental property owners they represent in the project area.

“We live in Lakewood Ranch but we can’t get out to the Island fast enough when Friday hits and the kids are done with school,” Stimart said when explaining her motivation for this project. “This project is so important to me. I’ve lived in Florida a long time and these hurricanes are probably the worst I’ve ever seen. This completely shook me. We went for a walk on the beach and saw all the sea urchins that washed up and that broke our hearts.”

PARTNERS & SUPPORTERS

The impact project partners include the Stimart Family, the Good Guardians Collective, The Center of Anna Maria Island and Executive Director Chris Culhane, and Moore, the founder of the Oyster River Ecology organization.

Impact project supporters include the city of Anna Maria, Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring Executive Director Kristen Mazzarella, the Anna Maria Island Historical Society and board member Barbara Murphy, Sato Real Estate and company representative Danielle Sato, North Shore Café owners Scott and Colleen Geller, the Anna Maria Island Garden Club and local resi­dents and property owners.