May be where we are headed in the future: An article from the orlando sentinel. http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/volusia/orl-vbeaches2107jan21,0,6811405.story?coll=orl-home-promo
I understand your view seacliffes. We just differ on our view points.I take the opposite point of view. Beach renourishment has been a God send to my neighbors and I. Yes, in a perfect world we would rely on nature to "do it's thing" and do it naturally. The problem with that is that we are talking in terms of Geological time which is measured in millions of years. Man has altered the course of nature for his own use ever since he arrived in this country by building roads, bridges , dams, etc. How many dams have been built altering rivers and streams for electric power generation with recreation as a byproduct? Should those be torn down because they are not natural?
Using this same logic, should New Orleans be left back to nature? A lot of our money is being used to build flood walls there since they are below sea level. Should we tear those down? Our project is about $29 million how much is it costing in New Orleans?
There are seawalls for more than a mile in either direction of the Breakers.Here are a few quotes from different people interviewed in that article :clap_1::
"Every time we try, Mother Nature always wins," said County Councilman Carl Persis, who voted against the grant. "We are never going to be able to stop nor'easters, tornadoes, hurricanes, or that strange current coming in right now that's dropping red sand on our beaches."
"Saving the coastline, he said, "is not about putting more sand on the beach."
"it's costly, and it washes away, so it's a recurring cost. And it doesn't produce a good, regular beach."
"Renourishment is bound to be scrutinized when places such as Bethune Beach -- a consistently eroding coastline near Volusia's southern end -- is overwhelmed with sand. A renourishment project didn't put it there -- nature did. Nature's own."
"When you artificially replenish a beach, "you're not saving the beach, because sand moves. What you're saving is houses," said New Smyrna Beach surfer Yogi Oberoi, 34."
"I know it was a million years ago," Oberoi said recently while watching waves lap up to The Breakers restaurant in New Smyrna Beach, "but I don't think they should ever have allowed people to build so close to the beach. It's like building on an earthquake fault."
My guess is that we will see more beach sand go out to sea from the erecting of the walls in SoWal.There are seawalls for more than a mile in either direction of the Breakers.