Delaware Beach and the storm

smokeythecat

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Here's a pic from 7 am today of the Delaware Beach. Raining there from a band now, maybe tomorrow would be a better day to venture out. IMG_0776.webp


The entire state of Delaware is under a coastal flood advisory.
 

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Wow that's amazing to see Thanks for the pics
 

There is a person standing on the water end of the walkway over the dunes! Hard to see but there.IMG_0777.webp Compare to the first pic.
 

Thanks for posting the pics Smokey. I think saturday should be the day - provided they allow folks on the beach. I can't get there until sunday.

Good luck and please keep us updated. If Coin Beach looks like a bust, I might just stay home and hunt fossils; our NE winds should have removed some sand (it couldn't be much worse than it was...).

Here is a pic of the muddy Chesapeake Bay at 1130 today in the middle of our 7 hour power failure. Pic taken at the site of the Dares Wharf, a 1000' steamship wharf destroyed by a hurricane for the umpteenth time in 1935 and not rebuilt since roads replaced river and Bay landings by then

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Pic was taken standing at the top of a cliff about 50' high.
 

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On the Delaware Coast - no road closures, no dunes removed, rain ending, tide is going out now and next low is at 4 am. It did NOT overwash the dunes where the coins are.
 

On the Delaware Coast - no road closures, no dunes removed, rain ending, tide is going out now and next low is at 4 am. It did NOT overwash the dunes where the coins are.

Delaware Seashore State Park opens at 8 am and closes at sunset. Its hard to know if the low tide will make much difference - but I would want to be there when it opens and stay to hunt the late afternoon low tide.

The pics don't show water up near the snow fencing. If that is as high as it got, is there any point to hunting the dry sand?
 

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Honest answer, probably not. I'll probably stay home or go to a local water area. Plus at the bridge where you see the pic, that's all dredged sand from within the inlet itself. The put millions of tons there after Sandy and lots of it is still there.

It is a very tough place to hunt.
 

I'm also leaning against making the trip. It doesn't look like enough of a cut - and the pic shows nothing up in the dry sand part of the beach. In the old days, the best cuts took out the sand all the way to the snow fence.

It might be more productive to walk my fossil beach and see if the NE winds took away some of this sand. I can do that without driving anywhere.

This might be an example of a hurricane that is not as good as a prolonged Nor'easter.
 

Unless it takes out some of the snow fence, it will be finding scraps left over from Sandy. There has been no ocean churner since then, just an odd find here and there.
 

I am very tired for cleaning four fish tanks. Tippy is sleeping on my chair, while I am Last.
 

I didn't get to Coin Beach because of a wedding of family friends. But I'm glad I went to the reception. It was held at the first estate in the state of Maryland, established five months after the state came to be in 1634. I don't believe the present building dates to 1634 when it was called Trinity Manor but the present manor house dates before the CW and was used as a safe house to hide Confederate prisoners who escaped Point Lookout prisoner camp. The escaped Confederates were hidden in "priest holes" in basement tunnels and taken across the Potomac R to VA. The original Trinity manor house was plundered by the British during the Revolution. I hope we get several years notice when our daughter decides to marry her BF because that is how long it is booked.

When we arrived, the owner, a former president of St. Mary's College, was parking cars. I stopped and exchanged greetings that included my asking if she had found the buried treasure yet. That's when I learned that the manor house was also a bank and a buy station for oysters in the 1800's. I'd love to dig here, but the time was not right to broach that topic.

Woodlawn
 

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I heard a lot of folks went to Coin Beach and most got diddly squat. Time to clean the cat box.
 

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