Eco Education Days🦀

Eco-Education Days

Gentle, family-first days in shallow water—learn about seagrass, shells, fish, birds, and coastal habitats. Hands-on, unrushed, and tailored for curious kids (and grown-ups, too).

Family exploring shallow seagrass flats on a calm day

Overview

We use shallow-draft boats to reach calm flats, sandbars, and lagoons where kids can safely explore. Expect easy snorkeling, dip-netting, gentle wades, and close-up looks at sea grasses, shells, fish, shorebirds, and the invertebrates that keep this coast thriving.

Group size: typically 4–5 guests (occasionally 6). Typical duration: ~3–4 hours. Pace: slow and flexible—plenty of shade, water breaks, and teachable moments.

Best Time

  • Morning starts: cooler temps, calmer winds, clearer water.
  • Low-to-mid tides: expose sandbars and seagrass edges for easy viewing.
  • Post-front clarity: crisp air and excellent visibility.

We pick the window with the best combo of tide, wind, and learning goals for your crew.

Learning Zones

  • Seagrass flats & tidal creeks
  • Sandbars & back-beach lagoons
  • Mangrove edges & oyster bars

Exact route varies to keep water calm and crowds away for better discovery.

Activities & Curriculum

  • Dip-netting & observation: tiny sea stars, sand dollars, pipefish/seahorses, shrimp, and crabs—observed and returned gently.
  • Shallow snorkeling: in waist-deep water to view grasses, shells, and small fish.
  • Habitat talks: how mangroves, seagrass, and tides support dolphins, birds, and gamefish.
  • Shell & shorelife ID: age-appropriate guides and simple “field missions.”

Leave-no-trace: handle wildlife briefly, with wet hands, and return to the exact spot.

Safety & Comfort

  • USCG-licensed captain; stable, shallow-draft boat; easy re-boarding ladder.
  • Shade breaks, drinking water, and frequent pauses to regroup.
  • Gentle pace, child-friendly explanations, and lots of Q&A.

What’s Included

  • Cooler with ice & water; dry storage
  • Dip nets, clear-view buckets, basic ID sheets
  • Optional kids’ activity cards and mini checklists

What to Bring / Essentials

  • Sun layer, hat, polarized sunglasses (reef-safe sunscreen)
  • Swimwear, towel, and secure water shoes for wading
  • Refillable water bottles and light snacks
  • Small daypack; optional mask/snorkel if you have a favorite fit

Request Dates

Tell me your window, ages of participants, and interests (snorkeling, dip-netting, shells, birds). We’ll pick calm water and time the tide for a fun, comfortable learning day.

Request Trip