This is where I was yesterday, in a boat in the marshes and swamps north of Lake Boudreaux, which is about a mile SE of Houma, in south central Louisiana. This is what salt water intrusion does to a cypress swamp. According to the lead biologist on this trip, everything that's open water used to have marsh grass. The second photo isn't quite a bucolic as it seems, the depth of field is flattened, so the marsh grass is growing on the edge of the oil field canal that I'm standing on, dead cypress trees in the back. The project wants to divert fresh water, which will push out the salt water, and hopefully allow some of the plants to come back. The shrubs, out in the open water areas, are "floats," pieces of salt marsh lifted up by the storm surge from Hurricanes Lili (2002) and Rita (2005) and deposited inland.
And yes, it was raining, hard, at times.
Oh, and swamps have trees, marshes don't. But what do you call it when there used to be trees?




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