SeaSafe is a path you choose.

To clean and protect.

To keep something good from our childhood and pass it on. Everyone has their own passion, whether it’s water quality or saving beaches, picking up trash or planting trees, reclaiming or re-clamming.

SeaSafe INCLUDES every CREATURE in the sea. It is A WAY OF LIFE where everyone’s project is important, and everyone does their part, NO MATTER HOW BIG OR HOW SMALL. IT ALL ADDS UP TO SEASAFE. GOOD CLEAN FUN.

From coast-to-coast, Star brite supports efforts to protect our beaches and waterways for future generations. Whether it’s helping restore the clam population in the Indian River Lagoon or working our way towards planting a million mangroves, we support the causes that you support. That’s the SeaSafe way. It’s Good Clean Fun.

Find out how you can live the SeaSafe life with these projects and more at www.Starbrite.com or check with your local CCA chapter.

Take The Challenge

Do you or someone you know always seem to be doing the right thing? Taking care of our waterways, picking up trash at your local beach, working on restocking, or restoring our waterfront environment?

Let Cory Redwine know about it and you or they might be a winner of some of the best cleaning supplies on the planet!

Send Cory a video or picture and a brief story of your or someone you know making a difference in our waterway communities by tagging her @SeaRedwine and by using #PreservationChallenge #SeaRedwine #SeaSafeChallenge in your social media posts. 

First, Who is Cory Redwine?
and why does she get to select a winner?

Cory Redwine, the artist, is a Florida native who loves the beaches and waterways for many reasons.  Fishing, boating, paddle boarding, exploring and great family fun and relaxation are just a few of the reasons Cory likes being on or around the water.  

Of course the currents and winds deposit litter from the ocean/river as a constant reminder of man’s detrimental plastic pollution in the ocean.  She started picking up litter with the desire to eliminate the garbage on the beach.

But now picking up the un-ending procession of litter and bits and pieces of plastic has become a passion of its own. Though frustrating at times, seeing so much trash appear time and time again, Cory found a way to channel this endless task into a more exciting activity; like a scavenger hunt on the beach.

Cory said, “I began to gather the more colorful bits of trash and the unique objects cast upon the sand by the waves and wind. I hated to just fill up the landfill with it as well, so I began to ponder what purpose I could give to this quantity of materials I was collecting.

My husband is an accomplished artist, so I began to create works of art using a collage of color and texture that comes from the many bits I’ve collected and scrubbed clean. 

"My hope is that these works of art will bring awareness to the growing crisis of plastic pollution and encourage others to notice garbage and not just walk over it, but to also pick it up. Who knows, maybe they will be inspired to do something creative too, one piece of trash at a time.”