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sunsetdunes

Beach Lover
Jul 11, 2005
99
1
Wow, I certainly hope any beach renourishment in South Walton won't cause any similar problems!

After Ordnance Scare, Beachgoers Told to Dig With Care

By JILL P. CAPUZZO
New York Times

SURF CITY, N.J., May 14 — Sun worshipers coming to this Jersey Shore town should be happy that the closed beaches will soon be reopening. But they might want to rethink what they bring.

Pail and small shovel: check. Sand spade and metal detector: skip. Beach umbrella: proceed with caution.

After removing 1,111 pieces of potentially explosive military ordnance from the sand and surf, the United States Army Corps of Engineers is ready to declare the beaches here and in neighboring Ship Bottom safe and recommend that they be reopened in time for Memorial Day.

So, once the State Department of Environmental Protection approves, the “Beach Closed” signs will come down. But in their place will be new signs prohibiting beachgoers from using metal detectors or digging deeper than a foot into the sand. These “land-use controls” will be posted at every entrance and on every lifeguard stand along the 1.4 miles of affected beach on Long Beach Island.

“We really don’t expect anybody to find anything, but you don’t know,” George Follett, an explosives safety specialist for the Army Corps who has been overseeing the removal of the devices, said on Monday. “If there’s a lot of wave action, something might be uncovered.” Keith Watson, the project manager, said he did not expect umbrellas to pose a problem, but children digging too deep might be warned to ease off.

The corps will be holding training sessions with all police, fire and beach personnel, and any interested citizens, about how to handle situations should they arise, Mr. Watson said.

“We’ll be training badge checkers and lifeguards what to look out for,” he said, “and when they see someone digging too far, they’ll politely tell them not to. It’s all part of the public relations.”

It is one public relations campaign that Joe Muzzillo, who owns a Surf City beach shop, could live without. Or maybe not. After hearing that sand castle building and hole digging would be restricted, Mr. Muzzillo decided to skip buying any sand toys and umbrellas for his shop, Exit 63 WearHouse. Instead of the beach paraphernalia, the store’s back wall is now lined with T-shirts that carry slogans like “Save a Tourist — Find a Bomb,” “Surf City’s Da Bomb” and “I Got Bombed on L.B.I.,” for Long Beach Island.

Aside from a couple of complaints, reactions to the shirts have been “98 percent positive,” Mr. Muzzillo said. Still, he’s predicting a weak summer. “Even if the beach is open, I think it’s going to suffer,” he said. “If kids can’t dig and do the normal things kids do, it could be kind of traumatic, especially when they hear the explanation for why. Is a kid ever going to want to dig in the sand again?”

Mary Madonna, the Surf City borough clerk, said the borough has had an ordinance that prohibits digging more than 12 inches at the beach since 2002, when a boy in nearby Loveladies died after digging a deep tunnel that collapsed on him. But she and others at Borough Hall could not say how strictly the law has been enforced.

In Ship Bottom, where about 10 percent of the beaches are affected by the new guidelines, a regulation against digging deep holes also exists, but Mayor William Huelsenbeck said that there was no set depth and that enforcement was left to the discretion of lifeguards.

“We’ve always discouraged deep holes; nothing will change,” Mayor Huelsenbeck said. “Kids can use their shovels and pails. As for metal detectors, certainly we would discourage people from trying to look for these things.”

The explosives problem arose on March 5 when a resident using a metal detector came upon a rusted military fuze, an ignition device incorporating mechanical or electric elements, buried in the sand. Believed to have been dumped off the sides of ships sometime during World War I, the discarded military munitions lay on the ocean floor for 90 years or more, according to Mr. Follett. Last fall, the Army Corps dredged up 500,000 cubic yards of sand from the bottom of the Atlantic as part of a $9 million beach replenishment program for Surf City and part of Ship Bottom.

The joy of getting new, wider beaches was quickly diminished by the discovery of the ordnance, which corps officials said could cause injury or death if detonated.

For the past six weeks, contractors hired by the corps have been sweeping every inch of the replenished beach, using equipment that Mr. Watson and Mr. Follett said could detect devices as deep as three feet with 95 percent accuracy.

At the start of the cleanup effort, Mr. Follett said, the contractors were finding as many as 40 to 50 devices a day. On Monday, doing a second sweep of the areas stirred up by the recent northeaster, the crews found one device. The cleanup has cost $2.3 million to date, according to Mr. Watson, who added that the corps might have to undertake a similar effort next winter.

“Beaches are a dynamic thing,” he said. “We’re not leaving. We’ll follow it through to the end.”
 
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Smiling JOe

SoWal Expert
Nov 18, 2004
31,648
1,773
Don't be so sure about our beaches not exploding. This area was heavily used by the military in WWII. Last year, a guy found what he thought was a bomb on the beach in Blue Mtn Beach, but it turned out to not be a bomb.

Farily close to us the beaches of Tyndell AFB have warning signs posted regarding the risks of unexploded ordinances on the property. The TDC would never allow such signs here, but that doesn't mean that it couldn't happen.
 

sunsetdunes

Beach Lover
Jul 11, 2005
99
1
As I suspected. Beach renouishment might cause us the same problems, right Joe?

Don't be so sure about our beaches not exploding. This area was heavily used by the military in WWII. Last year, a guy found what he thought was a bomb on the beach in Blue Mtn Beach, but it turned out to not be a bomb.

Farily close to us the beaches of Tyndell AFB have warning signs posted regarding the risks of unexploded ordinances on the property. The TDC would never allow such signs here, but that doesn't mean that it couldn't happen.
 

Mango

SoWal Insider
Apr 7, 2006
9,709
1,360
New York/ Santa Rosa Beach
:eek: Thanks for posting this. My best friend rents the same week we do in Surf City, and he's not going to be happy about his kids not being able to make sand castles. Guess he'll have to find another rental or he'll be at my house everyday, hich means I'll be teased all day long. :lol:

Gotta get me one of those t-shirts too. :D
 

BeachSiO2

Beach Fanatic
Jun 16, 2006
3,294
737
As I suspected. Beach renouishment might cause us the same problems, right Joe?

Anything COULD happen, but I wouldn't expect it considering where the sand for SoWal beaches would come from and the typical QA/QC plan in place. Its amazing that none of the "debris" was seen as it was pumped onto the beach. Anyone that saw the project in western Walton County and Destin should realize that what comes out of the pipe is seen immediately. Plus the noise caused by metal debris coming through metal pipes would be noticed. The bigger problem is and always will be color.
 

beachmouse

Beach Fanatic
Dec 5, 2004
3,504
741
Bluewater Bay, FL
As others have said, this area has been used by the military for a long time. Every once in a while, they still find Civil War era cannonballs in the Pensacola Beach/Ft. Pickens area, and there are spots in Topsail Hill park where you can still see rebar and metal grid poking up from the sand from that area's days as a military training ground.

It is very very rare to find anything dangerous anymore. However, if you ever do, please just call 911 and let the very nice folks from the Navy OED school come to you. Do NOT decide to throw the questionable bit of metal in the back of your truck and drive it to the fire station for them to deal with. (That actually happened in Navarre in the past 2-3 years)
 

Smiling JOe

SoWal Expert
Nov 18, 2004
31,648
1,773
Its O.K. i know this good explosives expert his name is Steven M. here is the video link http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hogvg-mDUHA
He is a quack. If you need an explosives guy with real experience, you need to talk to Sam. (not for viewing by moms with 14 year old sons -- there are some things that Moms just don't need to know, ever!) :eek:

If my buddy, Sam, cannot help you out, my former neighbor, Billy Bubba, has plenty of experience with explosives. He used to collect them and store them in his garage, prior to the fire. :yikes:
 
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