Juno Beach beach nourishment

Salvor6

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If you are the gubmint you can do anything. In 2003 the Florida Dept. of Environmental Protection issued a permit to dump over 1 billion gallons of acidic water from the closed Piney Point phosphate plant out in the Gulf of Mexico. They dumped the acid water 100 miles offshore. Winds blew the water back east and it killed every living thing from Tarpon Springs to Naples. The state got away with it.
 

Diver_Down

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Dec 13, 2008
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ivan salis said:
once run thru a dredges impellers you bet its dead -- just like anything else would be -- but seriously if they are killing live coral their in a world of hurt . -- any treasure hunter caught damaging coral in any way would be hung out to dry

Ivan, you would know if it is live rock or dead regardless of running through the impellers. It is quite different. Regardless, I'm sure part of the process of winning the contract is to hold an incidental take permit. So long as efforts are taken to minimize the damage that is all that is required.
 

OP
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mad4wrecks

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Dec 20, 2004
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Thanks John for the info.

The Juno Beach govt. website states they are dredging from a borrow pit 4 miles south (of where?).

Does anyone know how that works? Are they dredging up sand onto the ship at the borrow pit site, moving to a staging area and then pumping the sand onto the beach, or are they dredging it up where the ship is anchored? Dom?
 

ivan salis

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as a former crew member on these types of dredges ---I can say they dig the fill matter elsewhere ( 4 mile south is the barrowing pit area where the filler matter is coming from) then bring the stuff the dredge up to the pump off station spot where they -- hook the pipes up and then pump it to shore.
 

billinstuart

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This is wrong on so many levels. They aren't pumping "sand"..that's a misnomer. They're pumping debris from the ocean floor. Great Lakes Dredging and their "coastal engineer" toadies are ruining our beaches.
 

ivan salis

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billinstuart ---you are right years ago I was a crew member on some of these very vessels -- it was a job and i had to feed my family and as a lowly b book member in my union , beggers could could not be choosers -- I did not like job much ---- they run 24 fours a day are very noisy and smelly to live on -- the vessel is only quiet about 1 day a week when they fuel down for about 12 hours ---my job was the messman / later on I was moved up to cook -- two weeks on 24 /7 and two weeks off rotation --- year around

these beast tear up a lot of stuff in their work
 

FISHEYE

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Tom,

Follow the hoses comming from the dredge ship,if they end up somewhere 4 miles away then thats their borrow pit.If not,they are sucking from the bottom where the ship is anchored.The large hoses will have a bouy attached every 50 to 100 feet.

When they did the new smyrna beach renurishment in jan/2006 they dredged from the west side of the ICW.The ran the hoses across the ICW thru the neighborhood and to a relay pump station then down to the beach.
 

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billinstuart

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stuart..the treasure coast..well, used to be
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Martin county is planning on renourishing Bathtub Beach, and will be using material from inside the inlet. An excellent source of beach material. It will also be totally devoid of anything of interest, as it was deposited by water movement carrying the sand into the inlet.
 

itmaiden

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Sep 28, 2005
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Explains the sick dolphins.

itmaiden



Salvor6 said:
If you are the gubmint you can do anything. In 2003 the Florida Dept. of Environmental Protection issued a permit to dump over 1 billion gallons of acidic water from the closed Piney Point phosphate plant out in the Gulf of Mexico. They dumped the acid water 100 miles offshore. Winds blew the water back east and it killed every living thing from Tarpon Springs to Naples. The state got away with it.
 

bucketofguts

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oh great karma teach important lesson to stupid people who try to fuc# with mother nature :nono:
 

SFLOcenEng

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billinstuart said:
Martin county is planning on renourishing Bathtub Beach, and will be using material from inside the inlet. An excellent source of beach material. It will also be totally devoid of anything of interest, as it was deposited by water movement carrying the sand into the inlet.

An excellent source of beach material? How do you figure. I'm biased and totally against the renourishment programs in general but I don't understand how that could be a good place to get the sand from. For a number of reasons!
 

SFLOcenEng

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billinstuart said:
This is wrong on so many levels. They aren't pumping "sand"..that's a misnomer. They're pumping debris from the ocean floor. Great Lakes Dredging and their "coastal engineer" toadies are ruining our beaches.

I know a number of Coastal Engineers and Ocean Engineers and they are not the bad guys. The bad guy is the ocean front community who lobbies for this type of program. With the exception of the company owners 9/10 of the employees don't have and knowledge or don't care if it's bad or good it's a paycheck. The other 1/10 probably know it's not a great solution but again it's a paycheck. The real problem is man have built on the dune line in a dynamic zone the expands and shrinks in some periodic fashion. Something must be done and I doubt they are going to let the building fall but we should stop building in that dynamic zone. In reality it's a very complex problem with no straight forward solution. My 2 cents.
 

billinstuart

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stuart..the treasure coast..well, used to be
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SF:

St. Lucie Inlet doesn't have an impound basin to catch southward migrating sand, so the inlet becomes the repository. Was just there yesterday. The sand is hard, smooth, consistent..just like real beach should be.

If the deposits weren't from the beach originally, I'd agree with you. Of course it won't stay in place..there's another layer of beach mechanics that's affecting that stretch of beach.

Bill
 

capt dom

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Nov 9, 2006
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Sounds like somebody knows what he is talking about... Bill

Most people have no clue about "natures" engine along the on shore
trough that actually manufactures "beach Sand"... by using periodic
uncovering of coastal hard bottoms - then how wave and littoral current actions
grind up shell and other skeletal matter {dead baby sea turtles, arh, and the like )
mixing it with sediments so as to provide the white or lighter hue of natural
beach sand.

I'm still sitting here in Jupiter - waiting for the life guard tower and toilets to wash into
the sea once more - before I attempt to make my case for using the
large quantity of beach sand sitting in our solution holes along the Jupiter
Shipwreck scatter pattern to bolter the dunes and down stream beaches.

Problem is.... Its just too good of an idea....
and, I don't have a war chest or desire
to pay off the right lobbiest!
 

itmaiden

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Sep 28, 2005
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Govt' bureaucrats don't appreciate "common sense". If there is a harder, more difficult, and less successful way to "try" and reach some goal, that seems to be the approach they take.
It never seems to be about logic, intelligence, or what would be "right".

What you have in gov't is widespread Attention Deficit Disorder. They can't and won't pay attention because their minds are too busy trying to negotiate their way through their tangled webs of deceit, bribes, favors and fears in order to get their share of some "honeypot", or keep their jobs.

I've had to deal with those people on other issues in years past, and it is like dealing with "Sybil" the fictional woman with 13 different personalities !

It is absolutely maddening. Possibly the only way you can get an "in" is to find someone closely related and respected by those whose attention you seek and get "that person(s)" to make it happen.
They might not even be a gov't employee.

I would do some PR if I were you. I would actually maybe take some key people out on your boat for a diving day. If they don't dive, then take them out to the shallows with sifters and let them find and keep a few trinkets. They will enjoy the relaxation and fun, get to know you a little better, and maybe see first hand the benefits. It won't cost you anything but some snacks and drinks and quality time. (oh and when they want to keep their finds, be sure they have to turn them into the state archies first, and then "maybe" they will get them back).

itmaiden





capt dom said:
Sounds like somebody knows what he is talking about... Bill

Most people have no clue about "natures" engine along the on shore
trough that actually manufactures "beach Sand"... by using periodic
uncovering of coastal hard bottoms - then how wave and littoral current actions
grind up shell and other skeletal matter {dead baby sea turtles, arh, and the like )
mixing it with sediments so as to provide the white or lighter hue of natural
beach sand.

I'm still sitting here in Jupiter - waiting for the life guard tower and toilets to wash into
the sea once more - before I attempt to make my case for using the
large quantity of beach sand sitting in our solution holes along the Jupiter
Shipwreck scatter pattern to bolter the dunes and down stream beaches.

Problem is.... Its just too good of an idea....
and, I don't have a war chest or desire
to pay off the right lobbiest!
 

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