Wasque

Wasque[1] ("way-squee") or Wasque Beach[2] is a 200-acre (0.81 km2) nature reserve on Chappaquiddick Island, Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. The site was established as a reservation for the public in 1967 and is one of five conservation areas on "the Vineyard"[3] managed by the Trustees of Reservations.[1][2][4][5] Wasque contains a sandy strand the Boston Globe calls "a magnificent beach."[3] Travel + Leisure named Wasque Beach the number one beach in New England and WHDH-TV reports "It's pristine, serene, and rain or shine, it's a beach-goers' delight."[2] Off the shore of Wasque Beach is Katama Bay, "a vast and pristine salt water bay that includes many acres of productive shellfish beds."[6]

Ecology

Wasque has a sand barrens ecosystem. One of a number of such habitats in isolated locations from Maine to New Jersey, the reservation's landscape and geography were formed by ancient outwash deposits from glacial till. The free-draining, acidic, dry, and sandy soil sustains coastal heathlands, oak and pitch pine woodlands, and sandplain grasslands.[1][3] Wasque is home to such species as beach plum, bearberry, blackberry, black huckleberry, blue toadflax, bluets, chokeberry, dwarf cinquefoil, golden heather, late lowbush blueberry, Nantucket shadbush, rockrose, and yellow stargrass.[7] These areas are "globally rare communities"[1] and only maintained through relatively intensive land management that includes domesticated animals grazing the grass, mechanical mowing and clearing of vegetation, and even controlled burning.[1]

The reservation has a number of rare animal species that depend on the conditions of these habitats;[1] in 2004 The Boston Globe said that the Wasque Reservation is "a great place for fishing and birdwatching".[3] Observers can spot blue herons, egrets, ducks, and migrating shorebirds that can be found in the marshes. Ospreys can be seen swooping down to pluck fish from the Atlantic Ocean. Butterfly watchers can see monarchs, sulphur butterflies, and red admirals that stop here to drink nectar from wildflowers before continuing their southward migration.[1]

History

Algonquian people camped at this site in warm weather; the name is said to come from wannasque, an Algonquian word meaning "the ending". European settlement came to this part of Chappaquiddick Island in 1750 or later. Several 19th century land speculation proposals never came to fruition. "Chappaquiddick-by-the-Sea," one failed concept for land development, would have included a grid of 750 quarter-acre parcels, broad avenues, public parks, and yacht facilities. In 1967, when the property was purchased for the public, there were only a few homes in the area.[1]

Visiting

Relatively remote, this "little-known"[2] beach and nature reserve is about 70 miles south of Boston off the coast of Cape Cod. Martha's Vineyard is a short Steamship Authority ferry ride from mainland Cape Cod, out of Falmouth or Woods Hole. Bicycles and motor vehicles may be transported on the ferry for additional fees.[3] A ferry from Edgartown on the Vineyard allows one to get to Chappaquiddick.[1] The property is open 24 hours a day all year. Due to severe beach erosion at Wasque Point, one is no longer allowed to take vehicles over the sand to Wasque from adjacent Cape Poge Wildlife Refuge. Formerly this was allowed except for occasional summer closures to protect the nest sites of rare shorebirds.[1]

Wasque is a great place for recreational fishing.[3] Recent reports of fishing off Wasque Beach have mentioned bonito that were reeled in at the Wasque rip and Menemsha jetties. Bluefish and 10-15 lbs. Striped bass have been reported as well.[8] In some years, the waters off Wasque Beach have been "hot with both game species."[9] At times, dedicated anglers have come to the Wasque just to sit in their vehicles “watching the water for signs” that fishing conditions were favorable.[10]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Wasque". The Trustees of Reservations. Retrieved 8 July 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d WHDH-TV Great Escape: Wasque Beach (Air date: Thursday, July 21, 2005)
  3. ^ a b c d e f Boston Globe "If you go: Martha's Vineyard", October 17, 2004
  4. ^ TravelMuse: Chappaquiddick Island
  5. ^ "Cape Poge Wildlife Refuge and Wasque Reservation (East Shore)" on Home & Abroad 2008
  6. ^ Edgartown Officials Stand Firm on Katama Bay Anchorage Ban, by Mark Alan Lovewell, Vineyard Gazette Online, February 25, 2005
  7. ^ "A Picture Guide to Interesting Flowering Plants" by Lloyd Raleigh, May 25, 1999
  8. ^ "More of same – slow (Arrival of bass may signal uptick)", Jonathan Raymond, Boston Globe, August 1, 2008
  9. ^ "Derby continues mission to keep area waters clean", Tony Chamberlain, Boston Globe, May 25, 2001
  10. ^ Martha's Vineyard Real Estate Insights

External links

  • Wasque The Trustees of Reservations
  • Cape Poge/Wasque/Mytoi trail map The Trustees of Reservations
  • v
  • t
  • e
National Historical Parks
National Historic Sites
Other National Park Service Units
National Wildlife Refuges
Wild and Scenic Rivers
Other Protected Areas
Parks
Reservations
Other
Wildlife
Management Areas
  • Agawam Lake
  • Agawam Mill Pond
  • Ashby
  • Ashfield Hawley
  • Attitash
  • Ayer Game Farm
  • Baddacook Pond
  • Bakers Pond
  • Bay Circuit Trail
  • Bearse Pond
  • Becket
  • Bennett
  • Birch Hill
  • Black Brook
  • Blackstone / West River
  • Bolton Flats
  • Boxboro Station
  • Brayton Point Salt Marsh
  • Breakneck Brook
  • Brewer Brook
  • Bullock Ledge
  • Burrage Pond
  • Canoe River
  • Catamount
  • Chalet
  • Chase Garden Creek Salt Marsh
  • Childs River
  • Chockalog Swamp
  • Church Homestead
  • Clapps Pond
  • Clinton Bluff
  • Concord River
  • Connecticut River
  • Cook Pond
  • Copicut
  • Coy Hill
  • Crane Pond
  • Cummington
  • Cusky Pond
  • Dartmoor Farm
  • Darwin Scott Memorial
  • Day Mountain
  • Deerfield River
  • Dogfish Bar Beach Coastal
  • Dolomite Ledges
  • Dunstable Brook
  • E. Kent Swift
  • Eagle Island
  • East Mountain
  • Eastham Salt Marsh
  • Elbow Meadow
  • English Salt Marsh
  • Eugene D. Moran
  • Facing Rock
  • Fairfield Brook
  • Farmington River
  • Fish Brook
  • Fisherville Pond
  • Fisk Forestdale Lot
  • Fisk Meadows
  • Five Mile River
  • Flagg Swamp
  • Flint Pond
  • Four Chimneys
  • Fox Den
  • Fox Island Salt Marsh
  • Frances A. Crane
  • George L. Darey Housatonic Valley
  • Glen Echo Lake
  • Gosnold
  • Grassy Pond (Dennis)
  • Grassy Pond (Plymouth)
  • Green River Access (Franklin County)
  • Green River (Berkshire County)
  • Greenfield River
  • Halfway Pond
  • Hamilton
  • Hancock
  • Harlow / Cooks Pond
  • Haskell Swamp
  • Hauk Swamp
  • Hawksnest State Park
  • Hawley
  • Head Of The Plains
  • Herman Covey
  • High Ridge
  • Hinsdale Flats
  • Hiram H. Fox
  • Hockomock Swamp
  • Hog Pond Lot
  • Honey Pot
  • Hoosatonic River
  • Hoosic River
  • Hop Brook
  • Housatonic River
  • Hubbard Brook
  • Hunting Hills
  • Hyannis Ponds
  • Ipswich River
  • John J. Kelly
  • Joint Base Cape Cod
  • Jug End
  • Jug End Fen
  • Kampoosa Fen
  • Katama Plains
  • Knops Pond
  • Konkapot River
  • Lackey Pond
  • Lake Lorraine
  • Lake Rohunta
  • Lake Snipatuit
  • Lake Warner
  • Lanesboro
  • Lawrence Brook
  • Lawrence Pond Lot
  • Leadmine
  • Leyden
  • Lilly Pond
  • Little Alum Pond
  • Long Sought For Pond
  • Maple Hill
  • Maple Springs
  • Martha Deering
  • Martin H. Burns
  • Mascuppic Lake
  • Mashpee Pine Barrens
  • Mashpee Pond Lot
  • Mashpee River
  • Mckinstry Brook
  • Meetinghouse Swamp
  • Merrill Pond
  • Miacomet Heath
  • Mill Brook Bogs
  • Mill River
  • Millers River
  • Mine Brook
  • Montague
  • Montague Plains
  • Moose Brook Access
  • Moose Brook
  • Moose Hill
  • Mossy Pond
  • Mount Watatic Reservation
  • Mt. Esther
  • Mt. Toby Highlands
  • Mt. Toby
  • Mt. Tom
  • Muddy Brook
  • Muddy Pond
  • Mulpus Brook
  • Nashua River
  • Natty Brook
  • Nemasket River
  • Nissitissit River
  • Noquochoke
  • Nordeen Marsh
  • North Brookfield
  • North Shore Salt Marsh
  • Northboro
  • Oakham
  • Olivers Pond
  • Orange
  • Otis
  • Packard Pond
  • Palmer
  • Pantry Brook
  • Pauchaug Brook
  • Peru
  • Peterson Swamp
  • Phillipston
  • Podunk Marsh
  • Poland Brook
  • Popple Camp
  • Popponesset Spit
  • Poutwater Pond
  • Powell Brook
  • Prince River
  • Provincetown Route 6 Corridor
  • Purchade Brook
  • Quaboag
  • Quacumquasit
  • Quag Pond Bog
  • Quashnet River
  • Quashnet Woods State Reservation
  • Quinapoxet River
  • Quinsigamond Marsh
  • Quisset
  • Raccoon Hill
  • Rainbow Beach
  • Red Brook
  • Richardson
  • Robbins Pond
  • Rochester
  • Rocky Gutter
  • Rowe
  • Salisbury Salt Marsh
  • Salisbury Salt Marsh WMA
  • Sandwich Game Farm
  • Sandy Pond
  • Satan's Kingdom
  • Savage Hill
  • Savoy
  • Sawmill River
  • Scorton Creek Coastal
  • SE Mass Bioreserve
  • Sevenmile River
  • Shattuck Brook
  • Sheperds Island
  • Shubael Pond
  • Sibley Brook
  • Sly Pond
  • South Barrier Beach
  • South Meadow Pond
  • South Shore Salt Marsh
  • South Triangle Pond
  • Southampton
  • Southwick
  • Spectacle Pond
  • Springhill Lot
  • Sputtermill Pond
  • Squannacook River
  • Stafford Hill
  • Sudbury River
  • Sunderland Islands
  • Taconic Mountain
  • Taunton River Access
  • Taunton River
  • Tekoa Mountain
  • Thad Ellis
  • Thayer Pond
  • Three Mile Pond
  • Townsend
  • Townsend Hill
  • Trapfall Brook
  • Triangle Pond
  • Tully Brook
  • Tully Mountain
  • Tully River
  • Wakeby Pond
  • Wales
  • Walnut Hill
  • Ware River
  • Warwick
  • Wendell
  • West Meadows
  • Westboro
  • Westfield River
  • Westfield
  • Weymouth Back River
  • Whately Great Swamp
  • Whately Ponds
  • Whately
  • Wilbraham Game Farm
  • William Forward
  • Williams River
  • Williamsburg
  • Winimusset
  • Wolf Swamp
Wildlife
Sanctuaries
  • Billingsgate Island
  • Carr Island
  • E. Howe Forbush
  • Egg Rock
  • Grace A. Robson
  • J.C. Phillips
  • Knight
  • Penikese Island
  • Ram Island (Mattapoisett)
  • Ram Island (Salisbury)
  • Susan B. Minns
  • Tarpaulin Cove
  • Watatic Mountain
  • Black Pond Bog
  • Boat Meadow
  • Francis Newhall Woods
  • Grassy Pond
  • Greene Swamp
  • Halfway Pond Island
  • Hawley Bog
  • Hockomock Swamp
  • Hoft Farm
  • Homer-Watcha
  • Katama Plains
  • McElwain-Olsen
  • Miacomet Moors
  • Reed Brook
  • Roger and Virginia Drury
  • Sandy Neck
  • David H. Smith Preserve and Fire Trail
  • Stacy Mountain
  • Tatkon
Other

41°21′5″N 70°27′28″W / 41.35139°N 70.45778°W / 41.35139; -70.45778