‘Here Comes the Garbage Barge!’ read by Justin Theroux

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In today’s Storytime lesson, we explored the story “Here Comes the Garbage Barge!” by Jonah Winter, which highlights the challenges of managing waste in a small town. The tale follows the journey of a garbage-filled barge that travels from Islip to various locations, only to be rejected everywhere it goes, ultimately teaching us the importance of reducing waste and taking responsibility for our garbage. The lesson encourages us to be mindful of our environmental impact and to care for our planet.
  1. What was the big problem with garbage in the town of Islip?
  2. What did Gino and Cap’m Duffy do to try to solve the garbage problem?
  3. What important lesson can we learn from the story of the Garbage Barge?

Welcome to Storytime!

Hi there! Today, we’re going to hear a fun and interesting story about a big problem with garbage. It’s called Here Comes the Garbage Barge! and it’s written by Jonah Winter. Let’s dive into the story!

The Garbage Problem

Once upon a time, in a little town called Islip on Long Island, there was a big problem with garbage. People in Islip were making a lot of garbage every day, and soon there was nowhere to put it all. Can you imagine that? The town had 3,168 tons of garbage with no place to go!

The Plan: The Garbage Barge

A man named Gino Stroffolino had an idea. He thought they could put all the garbage on a big boat called a barge and send it to North Carolina. His friend Joey LaMotta promised to take care of the garbage there. So, on March 22, 1987, a little tugboat named the Break of Dawn started pulling the Garbage Barge on a long journey.

The Journey Begins

The Break of Dawn was a cheerful tugboat, and its captain was Cap’m Duffy St. Pierre. They traveled down the East Coast of America, but when they reached North Carolina, the people there didn’t want the garbage. So, Cap’m Duffy had to call Gino for a new plan.

More Adventures

Gino told Cap’m Duffy to take the garbage to New Orleans, but the people there didn’t want it either. The same thing happened in Mexico and Belize. Everywhere the Garbage Barge went, people said, “No, thank you!”

Back to New York

After traveling for weeks and weeks, Cap’m Duffy and the Break of Dawn had to bring the garbage back to New York. The garbage had been on TV and in newspapers, and everyone knew about it. Finally, a judge decided that Brooklyn would take the garbage and burn it in a special place called an incinerator.

The End of the Journey

On September 1, 1987, the Garbage Barge finally reached its last stop. The garbage was burned, and what was left was buried back in Islip. Cap’m Duffy and the Break of Dawn had traveled over 6,000 miles with the Garbage Barge. It was time for them to go home.

The Lesson

The story of the Garbage Barge teaches us an important lesson: we should try not to make so much garbage. And if we do, we shouldn’t expect others to take care of it for us. Remember, all that garbage has to go somewhere!

Thanks for joining us for this story. Keep reading and learning, and remember to take care of our planet!

  • What do you think it would be like if your town had too much garbage and nowhere to put it? How would that make you feel?
  • Can you think of some ways we can make less garbage at home or at school? What are some things you already do to help reduce waste?
  • Imagine you are Cap’m Duffy on the Break of Dawn. How would you feel traveling with all that garbage and not being able to find a place for it? What would you do?
  1. Garbage Detective: Go on a mini adventure around your home or classroom and become a “Garbage Detective.” Look for items that are thrown away and think about whether they could be reused or recycled instead. Make a list of these items and discuss with a friend or family member how you can reduce, reuse, or recycle them. Can you come up with creative ways to use these items again?

  2. Build a Mini Barge: Using recycled materials like empty boxes, bottles, and paper, build your own mini garbage barge. Once your barge is ready, fill it with small items that represent garbage (like crumpled paper or bottle caps). Try floating your barge in a tub of water. Does it float? Talk about what you learned from the story about how difficult it was to find a place for the garbage. Why is it important to reduce the amount of garbage we create?

  3. Storytime Reflection: Think about the journey of the Garbage Barge. Why do you think people in different places didn’t want to take the garbage? Write or draw a short story about what might happen if everyone in the world decided to make less garbage. How would the world be different? Share your story with your class or family.

Welcome to Storyline Online, brought to you by the SAG-AFTRA Foundation. I’m Justin Theroux, and today I will be reading *Here Comes the Garbage Barge!* written by Jonah Winter and illustrated by Red Nose Studio.

Garbage. Big, heaping, stinking mounds of garbage. Big bags of garbage on the sidewalk. Garbage trucks overflowing with garbage. Landfills reaching up to the heavens with more and more garbage! Did you know that the average American makes about four pounds of garbage every day? Well, a while back, in the town of Islip, the average person made seven pounds of garbage every day. Islip is a little town on Long Island, right near New York City, and Islip had a problem: garbage! To be exact: 3,168 tons of garbage. And nowhere to put it.

Enter the Garbage Barge! See, this guy in the garbage business named Gino Stroffolino came up with a brilliant plan: a garbage barge would carry the Long Island garbage down to North Carolina. Mr. Stroffolino had a friend there, Joey LaMotta. “Everything is arranged,” Joey told him. “You bring me that garbage– I’ll take care of it.” Some farmers would be paid to take the garbage and bury it on their farms. Clever, huh?

So on March 22, 1987, all 3,168 tons of garbage was loaded up. Then a little tugboat named the Break of Dawn began its long journey south, tugging the rusty old Garbage Barge behind it. The Break of Dawn was a happy little tugboat. Her captain and crew was Cap’m Duffy St. Pierre, a crusty old sailor. Together they tugged the Garbage Barge down the East Coast of America. “Toot toot,” said the tugboat as it entered the harbor at Morehead City, North Carolina.

North Carolina. Land of sand dunes and pine trees, of barbecue and mountains… Smelling something strange, two old sisters who lived on the beach ran out and got their binoculars. “Look!” said Miss Alma McTiver. “It’s garbage!” “In our beautiful harbor?” said Miss Ida McTiver. “What in the world? That isn’t right! Call the authorities!” So a police boat went out to greet the Garbage Barge. It wasn’t a friendly greeting. “You can’t park that garbage in our harbor!” “I’ve got orders to dock here and I’m going to follow them!” cried Cap’m Duffy. “I’m afraid you can’t do that,” said the policeman. “Well, blow me down…” said Cap’m Duffy, scratching his whiskers. And he radioed his boss. “They don’t want our garbage,” Cap’m Duffy said to Gino Stroffolino. “Where’s that fellow who was supposed to meet me?” “Joey had a little accident,” said Mr. Stroffolino. “Just stay put while I make a couple of calls.”

But the minutes turned into hours turned into days—just Cap’m Duffy with a barge full of garbage. It wasn’t much company. Finally, Mr. Stroffolino’s voice came through on the radio. “Bring that garbage down to New Orleans,” he said. “I know this guy—Tony Cafone. He’ll take it.” “Well, let those saints go marching in!” shouted Cap’m Duffy. See, New Orleans was his hometown. Surely folks back home would be happy to see him and his big load of garbage. “Ahoy!” he called as they came within view of the city. “Hard a-starboard! There she blows!”

New Orleans. Birthplace of jazz, home of blackened redfish and streets filled with music, friendly faces, streetcars, garbage… The mayor could see the Garbage Barge way off on the horizon. News of the wandering garbage had already reached him. “We’ve got enough of our own trash,” he told his staff. “Call the coast guard!” The coast guard arrived just in time to stop the Garbage Barge from making its way up the mighty Mississippi. “Shiver me timbers,” moaned Cap’m Duffy. “You can’t do this to a hometown boy!” “Oh, yes we can,” cried the coast guard. What could Cap’m Duffy say? “All righty then. Full speed backwards!” he ordered himself. “Aye-aye, Cap’m,” he answered. And, at dusk, the Break of Dawn and the tired old Garbage Barge began their sad journey back out to sea.

There they were—floating out in the middle of the Gulf of Mexico. This was getting ridiculous. Would no one take this garbage (which, by the way, was really starting to stink)? Cap’m Duffy radioed his boss. “Okay,” said Gino Stroffolino. “There’s this guy down in Mexico—he owes me a favor. Goes by the name of John Smith. I’ll tell him you’re coming.” “All righty then,” Cap’m Duffy grumbled. “Southward ho.”

Mexico. Land of enchantment, of enchiladas and folk art, of swaying palm trees and moonlit beaches… News of the floating garbage barge had arrived before Cap’m Duffy. As the Garbage Barge approached Telchac Puerto, it was surrounded by the Mexican Navy. “¡Váyase!” came a voice through a loudspeaker. “¡Rápido!” (That means “Get moving fast!” in Spanish.) These guys had guns. Cap’m Duffy had no choice. He turned his little tugboat around and, slumped across the wheel, he headed back out to sea. “Where next?” the captain asked Mr. Stroffolino. “Belize,” said Mr. Stroffolino. “It’s a country next to Mexico. I know this guy—Rico D’Amico.”

Belize. Land of bananas, beautiful coral reefs, tropical flowers, and colorful birds… Pictures of the garbage barge had been on the local news. Cap’m Duffy had almost reached the dock when he saw a line of soldiers waving their arms. “Kungo!” they shouted. (Roughly translated, that means “Forget about it!”) Six weeks had passed since the Garbage Barge had set out, and the garbage was getting really funky. Nobody wanted it. And of course they didn’t! It was somebody else’s six-week-old garbage!

Cap’m Duffy radioed Mr. Stroffolino once again. “I can’t take it anymore! I quit!” “Okay, okay,” said Mr. Stroffolino. “Take the garbage back to Long Island. But I have a couple of places you could try along the way.” Texas. The Lone Star State, home of cowboys, cacti, Cadillacs, and oil—black gold, they call it… The Garbage Barge arrived in the harbor near Houston only to find some Texas Rangers in speedboats shaking their heads “No!” Next stop, Florida. The Sunshine State. Home of alligators, beautiful beaches, oranges, and grandparents… The Garbage Barge was not welcome.

By now, the Garbage Barge was famous. It had been on TV and in the headlines of all the papers. Comedians even told jokes about it. But as Cap’m Duffy and the Break of Dawn tugged it into New York Harbor, they were a sad sight. Cap’m Duffy’s mouth hung open. The little tugboat forgot to toot. And the Garbage Barge looked the saddest—and smelled the smelliest—of all. “Well, me mateys, here we are, back where we began,” Cap’m Duffy sighed as his two boats finally pulled into Islip’s harbor. But guess what? Islip had seen this coming. They refused to take the garbage. And the garbage was not welcome anywhere on Long Island or in New Jersey or in New York City, either.

For a whole summer, Cap’m Duffy and his little tugboat tugged the garbage around New York. What else could they do? “Look, Mom!” kids would say. “Here comes the Garbage Barge!” As the summer days got hotter, the garbage grew beyond stinky. Someone had to take it—they just had to. Then, at last… “Good news!” said Gino Stroffolino when he radioed the tired old captain. “Here’s the deal: Brooklyn’s going to take that garbage and burn it. A judge told them they had to. See, they got this ‘incinerator.’” “Aye-aye,” mumbled Cap’m Duffy.

And on September 1, 1987, 162 days after the Garbage Barge had first set out, it reached its final harbor. Brooklyn. Former home of the Dodgers, current home of synagogues and mosques and diners with breakfast specials… 3,168 tons of garbage was unloaded by cranes, put onto trucks, and hauled to the incinerator. It burned for hours, and when it was done, it only weighed 430 tons. Then it was hauled off and buried in a landfill in Islip. The town had been forced by the judge to take back what was left of its garbage. Justice!

The Break of Dawn and Cap’m Duffy were free to go back to New Orleans. As they steered out to sea, people waved and took pictures. “It’s a fair wind and open sea, me hearties!” the crusty old captain shouted, and he patted the tugboat on its wheel. Together they had traveled over 6,000 miles, tugging the unloved Garbage Barge. It was time to go home.

The end. So the moral of the story is don’t make so much garbage, everyone. And if you do make garbage, don’t try and get other people to clean it up for you. Because all that garbage has to go somewhere. Thank you for watching Storyline Online. Make sure to check out all of our stories. Keep watching and keep reading.

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