First post here...just got back from my first trip to the area just a couple days ago and had posted the following on TripAdvisor before before pointed here:
Major construction equipment on beach at Eastern Lake... - Seagrove Beach Forum - TripAdvisor
Granted, I don't know much about the area but I have a hard time believing they were simply removing man-made berms. It sure didn't look like that.
It was a massive operating and nobody, including one of the truck operators, seemed to know what was going on. Several homeowners we met in our area were furious. One seemed so angered by the possibility that someone (controversial I gather) who owns generally unbuildable lots on the beach was starting to build that he excused himself to run in and make a phone call.
Perhaps this is naive but, if it was something as simple as removing man-made berms, it seems like an odd time to do it. They basically shut down a huge stretch of beach in the middle of one of the busiest Spring Break weeks of the year. Even if you tried to deal with diesel smell and the sight of the gigantic trucks, eventually the noise essentially evacuated the beach.
It was sad.
I was at the beach at the outflow this last sunday and it has indeed been completely restored to pre-berm days. Was a gorgeous beach day too!
Perhaps the truck drivers were weary of having to explain in detail to tourists what they were doing. I don't blame them.
There is lots of heavy equipment on the beaches all over SoWal right now. They waited as long as they could to keep protection from oil (thank goodness we never needed it). Now the work has to be finished by the start of turtle nesting season May first. Which means they will be through well before the start of summer season.
The controversy at Eastern Lake is ongoing due to a homeowner who previously added sand to his gulf front lot bordering the outflow to build dunes up and apparently restricted the natural flow.
The protective berm was actually removed many months ago. While I didn't witness most of this current operation, it appears that they were only attempting to remove the remaining sand that was deposited during the berm installation. In others words, restoring it to the condition it was in before the oil spill crisis. It may have been disputive for one day, but all is good now.