
Closing the Nature Gap through Beachcombing
An artist and entrepreneur has created a place for youth in her community to feel grounded, happy, and at peace.
Read moreAn artist and entrepreneur has created a place for youth in her community to feel grounded, happy, and at peace.
Read moreSome people baked bread, others took up gardening, but Ella Hawkins, design historian, found her niche during lockdown: biscuit art.
Read moreAs plentiful as it may seem, there is shortage of the second most consumed raw material after water: sand.
Read moreLake Erie beachcombers still find artifacts on the lake’s shores from a shipwreck in 1764.
Read moreVisit historic Lewes, Delaware, in June for the annual Mid-Atlantic Sea Glass and Coastal Arts Festival.
Read moreLooking to escape frigid winter temperatures, this couple traded the Ohio frost for warm Floridian sands.
Read moreThis annual beachcombing event on the Washington Coast is retooled for 2023.
Read moreWe’re putting together a list of everyone’s dream beachcombing trip locations for an upcoming issue of Beachcombing, and we need your help!
Read moreNothing excites beachcomber, biologist, and artist Ethan quite like finding a good piece of discarded fishing rope.
Read moreSand dollars are prized finds of beachcombers around the world today, but there were also many ancient species.
Read moreFinding a marble on the beach is on many people's bucket lists. Finding the bottle where it came from is even more exciting.
Read moreLet's celebrate the joy, expressiveness, and pure delight of poetry.
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