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Pluff Mud: Gotta Love it
Pluff mud has been in existence in the Garden City area since the waters from the Atlantic crept into the foundations of the land to form the inlet. A unique blend of dirt, salt water, and decomposed plant matter; the pluff mud plays a home to many salt water creatures, as well as nourishes the ecosystem. Joined by its counterpart, the marsh grass, both fight to prevent its landscape from erosion or other harm by the ever-moving inlet current.

Unlike most mud, pluff mud has a very unique smell to it. This is because the ecosystem of the inlet is a very rich and diverse world that relies on the flooding and draining of salt water during tide changes. Marsh grass plays a huge role in controlling erosion, filtering pollutants, and hosting the inlet’s hundreds of species of critters. In fact, the pluff mud is actually made by the decomposition of the marsh grass. The soil that the marsh grass grows in is very muddy and full of “peat,” which is nothing but decomposed plant matter. Since it is waterlogged, peat is very soft and spongy. Because peat is made mostly of decaying organic matter and spends a majority of its time under water, it has very little oxygen in it. Thus all coming together in a scientific process to create the distinctively sweet, yet acrid aroma that stenches up the whole town during low tide.
Posted on 05/22/2015 in Uncategorized




