A Senior Moment

An unlikely group is cleaning up Cape Cod’s ponds and making friends along the way

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An unlikely group is cleaning up Cape Cod’s ponds and making friends along the way

The pond is silent, until the first cry: “Found something!” A swimmer ducks into the water. She emerges, fist first, clutching a pair of bright blue children’s swimming goggles. These are passed to a kayaker, who waggles them overhead, like a prize, before stowing them in a laundry basket for safekeeping. 

Over the next hour, on a cloudy Saturday morning in July, the team of 15—all over age 65, all women—hunts for trash across Mares Pond, a 28-acre ­kettle hole on Cape Cod, at depths of up to eight feet.

The divers turn up wooden planks, silty beer cans, a plastic container lid, a mud-caked fishing rod, a cement block and countless other bits of garbage. The day’s pièce de résistance, though, is a 12-foot segment of aluminum flashing. It requires the combined efforts of several divers to hoist it onto the back of a kayak.

When the team returns to shore, the women are smiling and laughing, cracking jokes about the dive and their haul.

“We didn’t even know what it was,” one swimmer said with a giggle, refere-ncing the blueberry cheesecake–flavoured electronic cigarette they found. “We have to ask a young person.”

These are the Old Ladies Against Underwater Garbage (OLAUG). Since 2017, the group, which accepts only older women as members, has made it its mission to remove trash from ponds across Cape Cod.

Part conservation organization, part social club, the group’s existence is owed to a moment of spontaneity by Susan Baur, a retired psychologist. A lifelong nature buff, she had begun swimming in ponds on the cape as a safer alternative to the ocean. However, between mud, darkness and snapping turtles, the world of the pond was at first one of anxiety for her. The only way she could keep her courage up was to rely on markers.

“I’d swim to the golf ball, and then swim to the drowned tree, and then sw...

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