U.S. Legal Wills
Canadian Legal Wills
What makes PartingWishes.com better than a do-it-yourself will kit?
Loved ones' ashes can give back to nature
New Jersey among states allowing 'reef balls' as final resting place that
nurtures coral
October 27, 2004
Associated Press
As if shooting them into
space or pressing them into artificial diamonds were not sufficiently offbeat, the
deceased can now have their ashes mixed into concrete to help form ocean fish habitats.
A Georgia company has placed
about 200 of the concrete cones, called "reef balls," in the ocean, mostly along
the Gulf
Coast.
Last week, it interred cones filled with the ashes of several former
New Jersey
residents about seven miles off the shore as part of the Great Egg Reef.
Eternal Reefs was founded
by Don Brawley and George Frankel in 2001 after Brawley, an accomplished diver,
had the idea of mixing human ashes with concrete to make the reef balls into memorials.
"Most states with reef
programs buy artificial reefs," Frankel said. "We like to think that we're buying
public reef balls with private money."
Burying a loved one's ashes
in a reef ball can cost between $1,000 to $5,000. Decatur, Ga.-based Eternal Reefs
also has two models for pets, for $400 and $500.
The balls have grapefruit-size
holes in them to dissipate currents, and their surface is dimpled to encourage coral
growth.
The company received approval
from the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection to put ashes in the reef
installations. The Great Egg Reef also contains decommissioned Army tanks and old
tires cabled together.
Relatives and friends of
those interred last week said they wanted to do something more tangible with their
loved ones' ashes than scattering them or leaving them on a shelf.
"I thought we would get
my three kids together and we would sprinkle them on the ocean," Kit Aronson, who
buried the ashes of her husband Robert, told The New York Times for Saturday's editions.
"But this is doing it in a more identifiable fashion, where the kids can see where
he is. Not in a mausoleum or Arlington Cemetery, but outdoors."
Ruth Townsend, a close
friend of the Aronsons, deemed it a fitting memorial to a man who loved the shore.
"For Bobby, it wasn't about
the beach, it was about the ocean and fishing," Townsend said. "This man would fish
in the snow, and this way, he's part of the sea, and part of its renewal."
(Note that you can create your Will, Power of Attorney and Living Will online at
http://www.PartingWishes.com,
http://www.USLegalWills.com,
http://www.LegalWills.ca and
http://www.LegalWills.co.uk).
For More Information Contact:
PartingWishes.com
Email:
support@partingwishes.com
Internet:
http://www.partingwishes.com