Living Lands and Waters

Living Lands and Waters Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Living Lands and Waters, Nonprofit Organization, 17624 Route 84 N, East Moline, IL.

Spending up to 9 months a year living and traveling on the barge, the Living Lands & Waters' crew hosts river cleanups, watershed conservation initiatives, workshops, tree plantings & more!

Two great ADM cleanups in one week? We’ll take it. 💪ICYMI: On Wednesday, we hit the Illinois River in Peoria, IL with 12...
06/12/2026

Two great ADM cleanups in one week? We’ll take it. 💪

ICYMI: On Wednesday, we hit the Illinois River in Peoria, IL with 12 go-getter volunteers from ADM and pulled 1,672 pounds of garbage off the shoreline in just a couple of hours.

Today, we were back at it on the Illinois River in Havana, IL with 13 more ADM volunteers who absolutely crushed it. (We’re still tallying up the final totals, but it was a LOT of garbage.)

Huge thanks to everyone from ADM who rolled up their sleeves and got to work helping keep our rivers clean.

On Wednesday, we hit the Illinois River in Peoria with 12 go-getter volunteers from ADM! Together, we hauled 1,672 pound...
06/12/2026

On Wednesday, we hit the Illinois River in Peoria with 12 go-getter volunteers from ADM! Together, we hauled 1,672 pounds of garbage off the shores in just a couple of hours!

Not a bad start to summer cleanups. 💪

We’re back at it today with more ADM volunteers in Havana. Let’s goooo!

A well-deserved highlight for Chad Pregracke! 👏 👏
06/10/2026

A well-deserved highlight for Chad Pregracke! 👏 👏

"Chad Pregracke grew up 30 feet from the Mississippi River in East Moline, Illinois. That river was his entire world. He fished it as a boy. He swam it as a teenager. At age 15, he took his first job on it - as a commercial shell diver.

Every day, he dove down into the pitch-black current. And every day, he came up with something that was not supposed to be there. Rusted 55-gallon barrels. Old refrigerators.

Piles of scrap metal and industrial waste. Tractor tires by the hundreds. The bottom of America's most famous river looked like a junkyard.

1991. East Moline. Chad is 17 years old.

He picks up the phone and calls his first government agency. He explains what he is seeing. He asks politely, "Who is responsible for cleaning this up?"

The answer stuns him. Nobody, they say. There is no agency, no department, no program. The river is just filthy. And no one owns the problem.

Here is what makes it worse, 18 million Americans drink water that flows from the Mississippi River. Garbage thrown into a storm drain in Minnesota can travel 2,300 miles all the way to the Gulf of Mexico. And the people in charge? They shrug.

Chad does not give up. He calls state agencies. He contacts federal offices. He writes letters. For 6 years - from age 17 to age 22 - he keeps trying to get someone, anyone, to act.

1997. The answer is still the same, nobody.

The river is not getting better. It is getting worse. Chad stands on the bank one evening and looks at the water he loves and makes a decision that will change his life - and eventually, the lives of hundreds of thousands of others.

If no one else will clean this river, he will.

He has no organization behind him. No government grant. No corporate sponsor. No crew. He has a small flat-bottom boat, a pair of work gloves, and a deep, burning sense of personal responsibility.

He pushes off from shore alone.

That first summer, Chad hauls rusted barrels and smashed appliances out of the water by himself, one piece at a time. His back aches. His hands blister. But every morning he goes back out. A 22-year-old trying to clean the Mississippi River single-handedly, with 1 boat.
1998. Something shifts.

Local newspapers start writing about him. TV cameras show up. The calls start coming in. People want to help.

Chad founds Living Lands and Waters, a nonprofit with a simple mission: restore America's rivers from the ground up. He trades his flat-bottom boat for a secondhand houseboat. Then a barge. Then a fleet. Within a few years, his operation is the only industrial-strength river cleanup organization in the United States.

June 2002. Washington D.C. The United States Supreme Court.

Chad Pregracke - the shell diver from East Moline - stands in the nation's highest court and accepts the Jefferson Award for Public Service. Known as America's Nobel Prize, the award is presented alongside recipients Bill and Melinda Gates and Rudy Giuliani.

He is 27 years old.

But Chad is not interested in ceremonies. He goes right back to the river.

The volunteers keep coming. Students spend their spring breaks on his barges instead of beach vacations. Teachers bring classrooms down to the water. Everyday people - retirees, families, teenagers — show up in work gloves, ready to haul trash.

2013. CNN names Chad Pregracke its Hero of the Year.

He has now pulled more than 67,000 tires from rivers alone. He has cleaned 25 rivers across 21 states. His team spends up to 9 months a year living on the water, removing 500,000 to 700,000 pounds of trash every single year.

And still, he goes back every morning.

Today. The numbers are almost impossible to believe.

Living Lands and Waters has removed more than 14 million pounds of trash from 31 rivers in 23 American states. Nearly 140,000 volunteers have joined Chad since that first solo day in 1997. More than 30,000 students have gone through his educational programs. More than 1,400 community cleanups have taken place because 1 young man refused to accept "nobody" as an answer.

He has received over 40 awards. All 4 living U.S. Presidents gave him a standing ovation at the Kennedy Center.

He still lives on a barge. He still picks up trash by hand.

Because to Chad Pregracke, the Mississippi River is not a cause. It is home.

Share this with someone who thinks 1 person can't change the world - Chad Pregracke proved that 1 stubborn kid with a boat can restore an ecosystem."

Let this story reach more hearts.....
💙💙"
Please follow us: Astonishing

06/05/2026

Happy World Environment Day! 🌎

Today’s a good reminder that protecting the environment doesn’t always happen through big, headline-making moments. Sometimes it looks like picking up a bag of trash, planting a tree, pulling invasive species, or spending a few hours volunteering along a riverbank.

To everyone out there doing the work to take care of our environment: thank you. Every action, big & small, makes a difference, and our planet is better because of you.

Our webinar with WIMOs Association is tomorrow!Join us tomorrow (June 5th) from 11:00 AM–12:00 PM CST for a co-hosted co...
06/04/2026

Our webinar with WIMOs Association is tomorrow!

Join us tomorrow (June 5th) from 11:00 AM–12:00 PM CST for a co-hosted conversation that supports both organizations through a fundraiser focused on protecting and educating about the waterways we live and work on. 💪

Every $50 donated helps remove 14.6 pounds of trash from our waterways. There’s still time to register and be part of the conversation!

Plus, you know that a webinar hosted by three epic maritime women is sure to be a good time.

🔗 To learn more, donate & register!: bit.ly/LLW-WIMOs-webinar

Did you know that we provide FREE cleanup kits through our Adopt-A-River-Mile program? 😳Initiated in 2001, our Adopt-A-R...
06/03/2026

Did you know that we provide FREE cleanup kits through our Adopt-A-River-Mile program? 😳

Initiated in 2001, our Adopt-A-River Mile program is an opportunity for you as an individual, family, group, organization or company to join in our clean river efforts by “adopting” a mile section of any U.S. waterway shoreline and pledging to keep it clean. 💪

You provide the muscle, and we provide a permanent, outdoor metal sign displaying your name and your river mile(s) along with a cleanup kit that includes reusable gloves and biodegradable garbage bags! (And perhaps sometimes some bonus goodies 😉)

It’s free & easy to get in on the cleanup action and restore your local waterway.

& with summer break rolling around the corner, this could be a great opportunity to get the kiddos outside and making a positive impact!

For more info & to sign up head to livinglandsandwaters.org/adopt

On Saturday we had the pleasure of welcoming educators from the Illinois ENTICE program aboard the Mississippi River Ins...
06/01/2026

On Saturday we had the pleasure of welcoming educators from the Illinois ENTICE program aboard the Mississippi River Institute for a teacher workshop!

Participants had great discussions on the Mississippi River ecosystem and its vast array of species, and then we all joined in on a quick river cleanup to remove a little over 300 pounds from the shores of East Moline.

The Illinois ENTICE program is an environmental education initiative by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, providing hands-on, interdisciplinary workshops and professional development for formal and nonformal educators.

Thanks to all who came aboard!

Hey! This post is for YOU (or someone you know) if you’re:• In the Quad City area• Between the ages of 15-25• Exploring ...
05/30/2026

Hey! This post is for YOU (or someone you know) if you’re:

• In the Quad City area
• Between the ages of 15-25
• Exploring career options

On June 10th, step inside our floating classroom, the Mississippi River Institute, for a free workshop exploring real careers in the maritime industry! Ranging from towboat crews and navigation to STEM, conservation, hospitality, and more.

Normally, these hands-on workshops are reserved for school groups… but we’re opening the doors for ONE special summer session perfect for individual students (ages 15-25) who didn’t get the chance to attend during the school year.

• East Moline, IL
• June 10, 2026
• Free to attend (lunch included!)
• Pre-registration required

Don’t miss this chance to get a behind-the-scenes look at life on the river and the careers that keep it moving.

🔗 Learn more + register: mississippiriverinstitute.org

05/28/2026

ICYMI: Our webinar with WIMOs Association is almost here!

Join us on June 5th from 11:00 AM–12:00 PM CST for a co-hosted conversation, open to the public, that supports both organizations through a fundraiser focused on protecting and educating about the waterways we live and work on. 💪

Every $50 donated helps remove 14.6 pounds of trash from our waterways. There’s still time to register and be part of the conversation!

Plus, you know that a webinar hosted by three epic maritime women is sure to be a good time.

🔗 To learn more, donate & register!: bit.ly/LLW-WIMOs-webinar

Send a message to learn more

Address

17624 Route 84 N
East Moline, IL
61244

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4pm
Tuesday 8am - 4pm
Wednesday 8am - 4pm
Thursday 8am - 4pm
Friday 8am - 4pm

Telephone

+13094969848

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