- September 16, 2025
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Mary Ann Kiger and Helen Rogers from Sarasota help with the sea oat replanting at Katie Pierola Sunset Park. They were among the 300 volunteers from all over the region who helped plant 12,000 seedlings on July 26.
Photo by Dana KampaStanding next to their handiwork, the yellow team celebrates planting hundreds of seedlings at Katie Pierola Sunset Park.
Photo by Dana KampaJennifer Hoffman, executive director of Keep Manatee Beautiful, welcomed volunteers at the Coquina Beach meeting point Saturday morning, explaining how to properly plant a sea oat seedling.
Photo by Dana KampaVolunteers Sandy Meneley, Judy Flowers, Wanda Thoreson and Christine Olson said there is no better way to meet new people than to join a community effort like the sea oat planting on Saturday at Anna Maria Island. Participants came from Longboat Key, Sarasota and beyond.
Photo by Dana KampaSweet Bay Nursery provided the 12,000 sea oat seedlings at cost this year, Keep Manatee Beautiful executive director Jennifer Hoffman said.
Photo by Dana Kampa(Front row) Alanna, Logan, Astrid, Eowyn, (back row) Joshua and Diane Hyland brought the whole family out to help with the sea oat planting on Coquina Beach. Diane said they came as part of the Scouts lending a hand, but she was also glad her children could gain a greater appreciation for protecting the beaches.
Photo by Dana KampaAlanna and Diane Hyland work together to securely plant a sea oat seedling on Saturday at Coquina Beach.
Photo by Dana KampaVolunteers planted the sea oat seedlings in areas marked off by coordinators from Keep Manatee Beautiful and partner organizations.
Photo by Dana KampaThe sea oat seedlings can grow to a mature size in about two months, affording barrier islands extra protection from storm surges.
Photo by Dana KampaVolunteer Jason Siegel, working with his wife Maurine, scopes out the next spot for a sea oat seedling.
Photo by Dana KampaOne of the teams at Coquina Beach makes quick work of planting about 70 seedlings in their plot Saturday morning.
Photo by Dana KampaMelissa Gautier, a teacher at Apollo Beach K-8 School, treads carefully to avoid the freshly planted sea oat seedlings.
Photo by Dana KampaKacy Bilches, a volunteer member of the yellow team working at Katie Pierola Sunset Park, packs sand around a sea oat seedling.
Photo by Dana KampaArmed with commemorative Keep Manatee Beautiful trowels, volunteers planted 12,000 sea oat seedlings on Coquina Beach and nearby parks on Saturday.
Photo by Dana KampaRichard Larsen, a county forester with the Florida Forest Service, said if the conditions work out, up to 95 percent of the sea oat seedlings planted on Saturday could take root.
Photo by Dana KampaWorking row by row, the yellow team of volunteers filled the designated area with sea oat seedlings, as well as another half length of the original layout on Katie Pierola Sunset Park.
Photo by Dana KampaCoordinator Tammy Fagan lines up the next batch of sea oat seedlings to go in at Katie Pierola Sunset Park.
Photo by Dana KampaHundreds of people spent their Saturday morning digging their trowels in the sand of Anna Maria Island. But they weren't crafting sand castles or searching for seashells. They were helping protect coastal areas from erosion.
Jennifer Hoffman, executive director of Keep Manatee Beautiful, said the organization and its partners have been coordinating volunteer-led plantings of sea oats for the past five years, planting 1,000 annually. However, they significantly ramped up the effort this year, planting 12,000 seedlings on Coquina Beach and other parks along the shore.
"This is, by far, our biggest effort yet," she said. "I couldn't be more proud to see this many people come out this early in the morning and give back to the community without asking for anything in return. It's just amazing to me."
She said they had hoped to enlist the help of 300 volunteers, and that's how many turned out.
They came from all over the region, including Longboat Key, Sarasota, Palmetto, Lakeland, Tampa and beyond.
"It's wonderful," Hoffman said. "It's not just our community that uses the beaches, so it's not just our community that helps."
Among those volunteers was Cyndi Seamon, vice president of Longboat Key Turtle Watch.
She shared her appreciation for this amazing plant that grows deep roots at an impressive rate. She joined the team working at the beach access point off 52nd Street, and she said they got through their seedlings quickly.
Hoffman said she has been in conversation with Longboat leaders about expanding the effort to the island.

On Saturday, volunteers congregated at sunrise on the southern end of Coquina Beach, where they collected commemorative trowels and learned from Hoffman how to properly plant the seedlings.
Sea oats are a type of grass that captures and holds sand in place, helping build dunes and protect coastal areas from erosion during extreme weather.
Hoffman instructed the volunteers to plant the seedlings deep in the sand, covering the roots and a third of the plant itself. Each little plant was given a few feet of space, allowing room for its robust roots to grow.
"They will hold the sands in place when the storms are not too bad, acting as a water break before it comes and floods the inner part of the island," she said.
Besides physically supporting the dunes, the freshly planted sea oats will also afford the dunes some regulatory protection, Hoffman said.
"There is no protection enforcement on dunes that do not have vegetation," she noted. "In putting these out, we protect the dunes, and officers can fine people who damage them. While they were bare, they were simply considered sand."

The seedlings only need about four to six weeks to grow in, and Hoffman said if they can last two months, they'll typically survive for the long haul.
Richard Larsen, a county forester with the Florida Forest Service, said if the conditions work out, up to 95% of those seedlings could take root.
Volunteers had all manner of motivation for joining the Herculean effort to get the thousands and thousands of plants in the ground. It took some sweat to get done, as the powdery white sand of the beaches could quickly fill in a freshly dug hole just as quickly as it was made.
However, attendees quickly got the hang of it, working row by row to fill in the designated planting areas on the beach.
Teams worked at Coquina Beach, as well as parks along Bradenton Beach and Holmes Beach.
The volunteers included those of all ages, including Cub Scouts and Girl Scouts from local troops.
While they crouched to carefully put each plant in place, the volunteers spoke about how restorative it felt to take an active role in doing something to protect the shore from future storms, especially with last October's hurricanes fresh on their minds.

Volunteer Wanda Thoreson explained, "Seeing the beaches after the storms was a little bit heartbreaking, so I want to do my part to restore it and bring it back, because I enjoy the area."
Hoffman said the impact on the environment from just one day of planting will be immeasurably profound.
Anyone wishing to support future plantings can donate through ManateeBeautiful.com. Donors can specify in the notes if they want their contribution to go toward a specific undertaking or to any of Keep Manatee Beautiful's community work, from roadside cleanups to beautification projects.