Drownings at Australian beaches down: National Coastal Safety Report

Swim safe: There were no drownings between beach safety flags in the past year. Photo: Domino Postiglione

Drowning deaths at Australian beaches fell by nearly a third over the past year.

The 2014 National Coastal Safety Report shows 84 people drowned off Australia's coast, down 29 per cent on last year, with over half of the incidents happening more than five kilometres offshore.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott, who launched the report at Sydney's Queenscliff beach, said the drop in drownings was impressive, particularly considering there were no deaths between beach safety flags over the year.

"If you swim between the flags you can be very confident you will be looked after and you will be safe," he said.

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Surf Life Saving Australia president Graham Ford says the figures show his organisation saves lives.

"The system works when people heed the warnings and swim between the red and yellow flags," he said. "We can't save you if we can't see you."

Over the year, 38 per cent of drownings were near beaches and a quarter happened on rocky coastlines.

Men accounted for 89 per cent of deaths, while a startling 91 per cent of male drowning victims were aged between 60 and 64.

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Drownings at Australian beaches down: National Coastal Safety Report

Beaches pass water quality tests

FLORIDA KEYS

Beaches pass water quality tests

Water-quality testing performed by the Florida Department of Health in Monroe County indicates that all of the beach samplings during the latest biweekly test period were in the acceptable ranges, officials reported this week.

The health department samples 11 beaches in Monroe County, including four in Key West -- Fort Zachary Taylor State Park, Higgs Beach, Smathers Beach and South Beach. All the beaches were rated "good," meaning they registered less than 36 enterococcus per 100 milliliters of marine water.

Enterococci bacteria, which normally inhabit intestinal tracts of humans and animals, are an indication of fecal pollution, which may come from stormwater runoff, pets, wildlife and human sewage.

For information, call 305-293-1653.

You can also visit http://www.floridahealth.gov/, click on the Environmental Health tab, choose Beach Water Quality and then click on Monroe County.

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Beaches pass water quality tests

Mexico's Punta Mita beckons with beautiful beaches, uninhabited isles

I plunged feet-first into a Jacques Cousteau daydream recently. I had been skimming across the clear, blue waters of Mexico's Banderas Bay in a power boat when our guide stopped near the rocky, uninhabited Marieta Islands and invited us to put on snorkel gear and jump in.

Within a few minutes, our group of eight swimmers entered a craggy tunnel, emerging on the other side at stunning Hidden Beach, a paradise accessible only to those who make the short underwater journey. I said a silent thank you to Cousteau, who loved these islands so much that he started a movement to protect them.

Cousteau, the great French undersea explorer and conservationist, would have been happy that his efforts helped the Marieta Islands become a national park in 2005, eight years after his death.

The Marietas are a short jaunt from the Pacific Coast resort of Puerto Vallarta, where a neighborhood earned the nickname "Gringo Gulch" after Liz Taylor and Richard Burton behaved scandalously there during the filming of "The Night of the Iguana" in 1964.

Now a new generation of celebs is turning nearby Punta Mita into another gringo gulch.

If you haven't heard of Punta Mita, you must not be keeping up with the Kardashians Kim visits often and vacationed here with Kanye West or other rich and famous A-listers: Tom Cruise, Beyonc, Lady Gaga, Britney Spears, Rihanna, Jennifer Aniston and Kate Hudson.

The arrowhead-shaped peninsula called Punta de Mita is about a 45-minute drive northwest of the easy-to-navigate Puerto Vallarta international airport, PVR (officially named Licenciado Gustavo Daz Ordaz).

A resort and residential development there, called Punta Mita, has evolved into one of Mexico's most exclusive luxury communities, with multimillion-dollar villas, two Jack Nicklaus golf courses and a couple of high-end, well-known hotel brands: Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita and St. Regis Punta Mita Resort.

Tourism in the region is exploding. The Four Seasons and St. Regis resorts cater to big spenders, while a handful of less expensive resorts nearby offer more modest accommodations. All have one thing in common beautiful beaches.

The boom is a welcome change in fortune for the Mexican state of Nayarit, which has long tried to distinguish its 200-mile stretch of beaches, including Punta Mita, from Jalisco state's popular Puerto Vallarta. Seven years ago, Nayarit branded itself as Riviera Nayarit to promote its beaches and resorts, but the jury is still out on how well the campaign is working overall. Riviera Nayarit hasn't become a household phrase yet, but Punta Mita is gaining ground, especially among celebrity watchers and surfers.

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Mexico's Punta Mita beckons with beautiful beaches, uninhabited isles

A Cape Cod Mystery: Hundreds of Sea Turtles Stranded on Beaches

Kayana Szymczak for The New York Times A rescued Kemp's ridley sea turtle at the New England Aquarium Medical Center in Quincy, Mass., where it is undergoing medical rehabilitation. This year the usual trickle of stranded turtles on Massachusetts shores has turned into a flood, and nobody seems to know why.

WELLFLEET, Mass. For as long as anyone knows, young sea turtles have ventured up the East Coast, leaving warm seas to feed on crabs and other prey. And some of them have lingered too long in northern waters and been stunned when the season turns cold.

Around this time of year, volunteers regularly patrol the beaches of Cape Cod Bay to rescue turtles that wash up at high tide all six species of sea turtles are endangered so they can be rehabilitated and relocated to warmer shores in the South.

But this year the usual trickle of stranded turtles has turned into a flood, and nobody seems to know why.

Since mid-November, volunteers on turtle patrol have found nearly 1,200, almost all young Kemps ridley turtles, the most endangered of the six species. That is almost three times as many as in the previous record year, and many more times the number in an average year. More turtles are being found every day.

Most of them have survived, but hundreds have not.

The stranded turtles, typically 2 to 3 years old and each of them between the size of a dinner plate and a serving platter, have stretched the abilities of the veterinarians and volunteers who rescued them, and the capacities of aquariums as far away as Texas to care for the survivors until they can be released.

Bob Prescott, the director of the Mass Audubons Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary, who has been saving turtles for 32 years, said he had never seen anything like it. When he started walking the beaches, he said, he would find one or two turtles a season, warm them up and drive them to the Boston airport himself. I would go to Logan and give turtles to the pilot of an Eastern Airlines jet, he said. The pilot would keep the turtle in the cockpit and hand it off to a turtle expert in Florida.

Not this year. One day, 157 came in, he said.

The sanctuary now has about 150 volunteers to walk the beaches, help warm the turtles and drive them to the New England Aquarium hospital in Quincy for further care. The volunteers, using their own cars and vans, put the turtles in empty cardboard banana cartons lined with donated bath towels of every color.

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A Cape Cod Mystery: Hundreds of Sea Turtles Stranded on Beaches

BOMA Fort Lauderdale & Palm Beaches Announces The Recipients of the 2014 TOBY Awards

FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA (PRWEB) December 12, 2014

The Building Owners and Managers Association of Fort Lauderdale/Palm Beaches announced the winners of the esteemed The Outstanding Building of Year (TOBY) awards at its annual gala on Friday night, November 7, 2014 at the Harbor Beach Marriott Resort in Fort Lauderdale, FL. Over 400 building owners, property managers, and service providers were in attendance.

The TOBY Awards are considered to be the most prestigious awards for commercial real estate in the country and honors the finest in property management. During the competition, all facets of a buildings operations are thoroughly evaluated from community involvement and site management to environmental policies and procedures. An independent industry study showed that winners of the TOBY Award outperformed other buildings in overall tenant satisfaction.

AWARD CRITERION Buildings are awarded based on the following criterion: physical attractiveness, community impact, tenant/employee relations, building accessibility, emergency procedures, personnel and training. Individual awards are based on: experience, designations, education, contributions, participation in BOMA and major accomplishments. Winners may compete at a regional level and then advance to the International competition. The International winners will be announced at the Every Building Conference & Expo in Los Angeles in June 2014.

The winners of the BOMA Fort Lauderdale/Palm Beaches TOBY Awards from Broward and Palm Beach counties are:

Awards were also given to individuals for outstanding contributions to BOMA Fort Lauderdale/Palm Beaches and their achievements in the property management industry. Individual award recipients were:

The 2014 TOBY awards main sponsor was Brickman, a national landscaping contractor serving South Florida.

ABOUT BOMA FORT LAUDERDALE AND THE PALM BEACHES BOMA Ft. Lauderdale/Palm Beaches represents Building Owners & Managers in the Broward, Palm Beach and Martin Counties and is one of 100 local associations comprising the Building Owners & Managers Association International, founded in 1907. The 19,000-plus members of BOMA International own or manage over 9 billion square feet of downtown and suburban commercial properties and facilities in North America and abroad. BOMA Ft. Lauderdale/Palm Beaches mission is to actively assist commercial real estate professionals to become more successful by providing a network to promote education, advocacy, the exchange of ideas, and develop relationships. For more information about The Outstanding Building of the Year Awards, visit http://www.BOMAFTLPB.org

Contact: Melanie Schrul, Executive Director BOMA Ft. Lauderdale/Palm Beaches 561.395.6664 or mailto: melanie(at)bomaftlpb(dot)org

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BOMA Fort Lauderdale & Palm Beaches Announces The Recipients of the 2014 TOBY Awards

Beaches take a beating in high surf

The high surf that pounded area beaches this week has taken a toll on the towns shore.

At high tide, around noon on Thursday, only a narrow ribbon of sand was visible at the popular Clarke Avenue public beach.

At nearby Midtown Beach, the rock groins were exposed and the lifeguard tower had been moved behind the sea wall. The beach remained open, with hazard flags flying, but few visitors were challenging the choppy surf.

The worst conditions occurred on Tuesday, when the waves reached 8-10 feet tall while sweeping over the offshore reef at Midtown. The surf at high tide blanketed the beach and splashed over the access ramp, lifeguard Craig Pollock said. Lifeguards closed the beach to swimmers on Tuesday, but reopened it Wednesday.

The beach got hit hard, he said.

At Phipps Ocean Park public beach, where the longshore rock works as a barrier against further erosion, sand actually accumulated onto rock that had been exposed.

The erosion was evident in other areas as well. Weve lost some volume, elevation and width, Coastal Coordinator Rob Weber said.

The National Weather Service attributed it to high surf caused by a low-pressure system whipping up the Atlantic waters off the East Coast.

In the next few days, sand that was scooped off the beach may begin to make its way back, he said.

Well have to see what kind of natural recovery we have, to see how much we were affected, Weber said.

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Beaches take a beating in high surf

Sand could be pumped to protect beaches and homes in Christchurch after winter storms

Plans to restore beaches in Christchurch by pumping sand from Mudeford Sandbank have been submitted.

Christchurch council plans to pump sediment and stone from the tip of Mudebank Sandbank across the Run via a submerged pipeline to Gundimore and Avon Beach.

The plans have been given to council planners following severe storms earlier this year, the worst being overnight on February 14.

A planning report, drawn up by the council, says that storms during last winter depleted the beaches east of Mudeford Quay, undermining existing walls and groynes.

It adds: Unless these beaches are rebuilt to their design standard, the coast protection structures will be at risk of further damage, potentially putting properties at risk.

If approved, the scheme is likely to operate during the low spring tide between April 15 and 22 next year.

There are likely to be two operations, lasting around two hours each, every day.

And if the weather in April means the scheme cannot go ahead, it will take place between May 14 and 21.

Cllr Margaret Phipps, portfolio holder for the environment at Christchurch Council, said: The beach replenishment scheme is necessary to replace beach material that was lost during the storms of last winter.

The northern tip of Mudeford sandspit is the preferred location to retrieve the beach material from because the sand is of a similar type to that at Gundimore beach. The work will be funded by a grant from the Environment Agency and a contribution from Christchurch Borough Council.

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Sand could be pumped to protect beaches and homes in Christchurch after winter storms

High Surf Pounds Local Beaches, Higher Waves Expected In Secondary Swell

JALAMA BEACH, Calif. -

High surf is pounding local beaches thanks to a Pineapple Express weather system.

At Jalama Beach Thursday, about half a dozen kite surfers braved the rough conditions.

While, most people are urged to stay out of the water, experienced kiteboarders live for these times.

Local resident and photographer Paul Dieckman has been out at Jalama for days snapping pictures of his buddies catching big waves.

"They are very good. They know what they are doing or they wouldn't be here. They are used to kite boarding and extreme conditions," Dieckman said.

The Santa Barbara County Fire Department said even the most experienced surfers and kiteboarders need to be cautious during this big swell.

Beachgoers from the Central Coast to Ventura County are being warned to stay out of the water.

"Stay out of the water. Except for those experienced surfers and even then you are out on your own when you are going out there," said Mike Eliason of the Santa Barbara County Fire Department.

The department is trained and ready to help, just in case.

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High Surf Pounds Local Beaches, Higher Waves Expected In Secondary Swell

Study links small drain pipes to pollution at Newport's 'baby beaches'

Small drain pipes carrying runoff from Newport Beach streets could be causing high fecal bacteria counts frequently detected in bay waters at so-called "baby beaches," according to a UC Irvine study.

Bays often are home to baby beaches because the water tends to be still enough for even the smallest swimmers. But that also makes them more likely to hang onto bacteria, experts say.

For years, experts have warned swimmers to steer clear of coastal waters during rainstorms because of increasing levels of bacteria carried from storm-drain runoff to bay and beach waters. However, a recent study by Newport Beach officials and UC Irvine researchers shows that runoff, dubbed by experts as "urban slobber," can make its way to enclosed bay beaches during dry seasons as well. The study was published last week.

The National Resources Defense Council's annual beach report card in 2013 showed that the majority of Newport's beaches bay and ocean did not often exceed bacteria levels considered acceptable by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The beach on 38th Street did not exceed the bacteria levels at all in the 50 samples collected.

However, bacteria levels at the Newport Boulevard bridge at Newport Bay exceeded the standards 44% of the time one of the worst rates in California. Other areas of the bay tested considerably better, the nonprofit's report card showed.

"We were trying to determine why water quality can sometimes show elevated concentrations of bacteria on the shoreline, the area that impacts beachgoers directly," said Megan Rippy, a UCI postdoctoral urban ecologist.

Researchers found that runoff from watering lawns collects in the narrow pipes, gathering animal waste, fertilizer, oil and gas drippings from cars and other pollutants and becomes trapped in the pipes during high tide. The pollutants are then released in a pulse at low tide when storm-drain openings are exposed.

"Urban slobber is any runoff that runs onto our roads that haven't seen rain for a long time," Rippy said. "Whatever is in that runoff is delivered in a highly concentrated form by our storm system to our water bodies."

City engineers and researchers dyed waste that came out of pipes in the upper and lower portions of Newport Bay. They tracked the green plumes to determine how long the pollutants were present and where the waste migrated around the bay from 2006 to 2009.

Researchers found that since water in enclosed bays is generally calmer than at ocean beaches, the bacteria isn't diluted as quickly. Winds often force the runoff against the shoreline, where the water is shallow and swimmers and waders generally congregate, the study shows.

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Study links small drain pipes to pollution at Newport's 'baby beaches'

Nor'easter erodes Jersey shore beaches

Civil rights lawyer to fight for Santacon Civil rights lawyer to fight for Santacon

Updated: Wednesday, December 10 2014 11:16 PM EST2014-12-11 04:16:17 GMT

Santacon in New York City is set to get under way this weekend, but no one knows where. Participants were supposed to gather at a park in Bushwick, Brooklyn, but local residents and some businesses objected because of the charity event's reputation for public drunkenness. Some bars that used to welcome Santacon with open arms have had a change of heart and are saying "stay out."

Santacon in New York City is set to get under way this weekend, but no one knows where. Participants were supposed to gather at a park in Bushwick, Brooklyn, but local residents and some businesses objected because of the charity event's reputation for public drunkenness. Some bars that used to welcome Santacon with open arms have had a change of heart and are saying "stay out."

Updated: Wednesday, December 10 2014 11:13 PM EST2014-12-11 04:13:20 GMT

A car jumped the curb and slammed into several pedestrians on a busy sidewalk in Midtown Manhattan Wednesday night, authorities said. The accident happened near 50 West 34th Street just before 10 p.m. outside Forever 21. The car slammed into the storefront.

A car jumped the curb and slammed into several pedestrians on a busy sidewalk in Midtown Manhattan Wednesday night, authorities said. The accident happened near 50 West 34th Street just before 10 p.m. outside Forever 21. The car slammed into the storefront.

Updated: Wednesday, December 10 2014 10:26 PM EST2014-12-11 03:26:24 GMT

Religious leaders in Harlem on Wednesday night said it's time for prayer not protesting about the chokehold death of Eric Garner. The Greater Refuge Temple Church hosted a vigil to ease stress many feel since a grand jury did not indict NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo. Pantaleo is still the center of several investigations into Garner's death.

Religious leaders in Harlem on Wednesday night said it's time for prayer not protesting about the chokehold death of Eric Garner. The Greater Refuge Temple Church hosted a vigil to ease stress many feel since a grand jury did not indict NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo. Pantaleo is still the center of several investigations into Garner's death.

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Nor'easter erodes Jersey shore beaches

Popular Beaches in Goa Best beaches in Goa Top beaches in Goa Tourism in Goa – Video


Popular Beaches in Goa Best beaches in Goa Top beaches in Goa Tourism in Goa
Find the List of best Goa beaches with all info about unexplored best beaches in Goa crowded highly, popular and most famous beaches in Goa. Popular Links Places to visit in Goa (http://youtu.be/...

By: Sightseeing.Trekking Travel

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Popular Beaches in Goa Best beaches in Goa Top beaches in Goa Tourism in Goa - Video

Beaches Toronto Chiropractor – Hip Flexor – Health and Wellness tips – Video


Beaches Toronto Chiropractor - Hip Flexor - Health and Wellness tips
Some tips on care for the hip flexor - very important to the low back mechanics. With prolonged sitting or driving these muscles are often chronically contracted and shortened.

By: Beaches Health Group

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Beaches Toronto Chiropractor - Hip Flexor - Health and Wellness tips - Video

| Iran Today | Beaches, ports Eleventh International Conference | SaharTV Urdu – Video


| Iran Today | Beaches, ports Eleventh International Conference | SaharTV Urdu
Broadcast Date-:- 08 December 2014 -Website: http://urdu.sahartv.ir/archive/video/ -Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/saharurdutv -Twitter: https://twitter.com/SaharTvUrdu -Google+ http://www.gplus.t...

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| Iran Today | Beaches, ports Eleventh International Conference | SaharTV Urdu - Video