Hi everyone! All the leftovers from Thanksgiving should be finished by now and it's time to get out and enjoy the brisk late fall/ early winter beach. Some of these photos were taken earlier in the month, before we had the shocking and anomalous deep freeze last week. Oh and that snow!
Beautiful November colors in the dunes....
Could these green leaves in the center be the velvet leaf weed I am searching for?
All fall we have been watching the dredging boats, working on H Sandy beach repairs, an ongoing somewhat sporadic project done by the US government? and the Army Corps of Engineers.
The boats used are multiple---one very large barge with suction pumps and hoists and who knows what all. This ship siphons up sand from the seabed and sends it through a 12"? diameter tube, a quarter mile long, up onto the beach.Then there are large but a bit smaller boats, plus each has its own tugboat! These smaller boats are in charge of setting the suction tubes and the flotation devices that hold the tube in position. There is also a strange superstructure on the beach, called The Crab, which is a lookout post and a site evaluator, and a surveying tool.
Meanwhile back on land huge equipment came and pounded large pilings into our dunes. It was pretty awful, my house shook like an earthquake for weeks and Mo was scared. The constant rumbling and shaking was oddly upsetting or nerve wracking, even when one knew it was not indeed an earthquake.
Not thrilled with these pilings, they are ugly and much taller than any natural dune formation. They also spoil my view! Will they help collect sand as the years and even eons go by, or will they be expensive eyesores? I don't think anyone really knows.
So anyway, the sand sucked from the seabed will be moved with, again, giant machines to form faux dunes. The dunes they built a few years ago have settled in nicely, so that may be okay. Will sand be pushed into the piling forests mechanically? We don't know, yet another mystery.
Here is a large patch of rare pink sand!
My friend found this very large, fortunately used, old brass gun shell. A 20 mm round marked USA 1943. You can see how big it is.
Research shows us that this WW2 shell was an anti-aircraft round, from small ''cannons'' used on US warships. More info HERE
How? Why? When, where? It must have quite a story to tell.
Then seaglass has returned, but for now at a rather far away beach near the surfing beach.
My daughter came home one morning with quite a haul.
Some beauties, a cobalt bottle neck:
A green milk glass or Jadeite shard with fluted edges.
The beach is too far for me to walk there and back especially after my recent fall and thrice daily Mo walking duties. If we get a warm gorgeous day I think I'll get a lift over to the surfing beach, then I'll walk one way home, maybe three miles?
Sunsets have been long and so beautiful. Very much ''of Autumn"; not a winter-y sky.
Mo was happy to don his coziest fall plaid jacket that frigid 19* day.
But mostly he'd rather just lie in bed on cold grey days.
I'm excited to welcome December soon. My holidays have evolved since my kids were wildly excited Santa believing toddlers, but every year is wonderful because we are together. New memories, new ideas, new traditions. (Money not Legos!)
"Simplify"?
Your thoughts?
love
lizzy
gone to the beach...
A more technical description, with wonderful photos!,of a similar ongoing operation, from this past summer HERE The main difference is here they are adding to the dune structure, filling areas that they believe are flood channels [ooops, no, guys, maybe NOT! Here is the flood break, about 50 feet east of the piling installation, sigh]
I like the idea of your one-way walk from the surfing beach area, were you might find fun stuff like beach glass! Just remember to take a bottle of water and maybe a little bucket to carry stuff home in. Going to collect a little bit of the pink sand?
ReplyDeleteThe pilings are kind of icky now, but maybe they plan to put some kind of mesh down and add sand, to help hold it? Maybe they'll trim the height after so they don't show/aren't ugly?
The shell casing is an unusual find! I think I've heard there were a couple islands in the NY area that were practice ranges and/or munition test sites, maybe it washed in from one of those areas? Or maybe it rolled/fell out of a ship patroling those waters, from an earlier battle further away. I think those guns toss the casings as they fire so they probably go everywhere, and probably not all are found in the cleanup. Wouldn't it be interesting if it could somehow tell you?!
I'm with Mo - I don't go out if it's nasty and cold unless I really have to! We had a 'blizzard' - not a lot of snow but with high winds so it was whiteout conditions half the day or more, and it got pretty dang cold. Today it finally warmed up and was around 50* again. I know more cold weather will be coming, though, so I won't be able to avoid going out in it much longer.
Enjoy your good weather, and thanks for sharing your beach!
Your sunsets look gorgeous, Lizzy! It's interesting to learn what they're doing with the sand. You have lots of shells on your beach!
ReplyDeleteI didn't know about that dredging operation...hopefully the beach will be reclaimed --but I don't know if the Sea will cooperate in the long term?..
ReplyDeleteWe no longer take our oceanside, long walks either--various medical issues have put a halt on these...we do drive down to our little beach and watch the ocean though--I find it so calming...
living in a beach town I took my kids to the beach almost every day--they even took their Summer swimming lesson in the rain...I miss those days...
I love the beach..just sitting, gazing and wool gathering...a bit chilly for that right now though...a bit too brisk with our windy weather...
Lovely sea glass and looks like a ton of shells washed up..Winter pickings are better here than the Summer ones...
Hugs, Julierose
I'm not thrilled with your pilings either! I hope you can get used to them. And I hope they do the job they are supposed to. Love all the glass and shells. Moe looks really handsome in his outfit! :) Kit
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your beach. Such different views than here in Minnesota! Seasons greetings to you and Mo.
ReplyDeleteI so enjoy seeing your beach. I really like the photo with all of the shells. You've got skills! Gorgeous sunset pics too.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting info on the sand dredging op. Sure do hope all of the effort is not in vain. OMG, the pile driving sounds just awful. That'll for sure set your nerves on edge.
High five to your daughter on the seaglass haul. Hope you find some too :)
It's 1:30 am here, and 47 degrees, brrrrr, haha. I don't know what I would do if it were 19*.
Kel
Fascinating about that ammo. All the sea glass is so pretty, especially, the jadeite. Are you ok from your fall?
ReplyDelete