Deadly swell closes beaches from Kauai to the Big Island

Warning level surf shut down several beaches along the north and west-facing shores of several islands Saturday.

Big and sloppy waves crashed into the rocks at Shark's Cove on Oahu's North Shore, where yellow tape kept people out of the water and away from the shoreline. Visitors were cautioned to keep a safe distance.

"Although we are not enforcement people, we like to support the lifeguards, and we will recommend that today is not a day to go in the water," said John Cutting of the group Malama Pupukea-Waimea. Group members had an informational tent set up at Shark's Cove, and were talking to visitors about the Pupukea Marine Life Conservation District -- and the big waves.

"The surf is large, it's unruly, and wind is blowing from the ocean to the land, making it confused, chaotic, not really user-friendly for swimmers, surfers or anybody," said Ocean Safety Capt. John Hoogsteden.

On Kauai, the Fire Department's Ocean Bureau closed beaches at Kee, Haenaand Pine Trees, and allowed only limited swimming at Hanalei Pier. Big waves yesterday swept two men, 46-year-old Adam Griffiths and 47-year-old Brian Baker, out to sea. Both men were visitors from San Francisco.

On the Big Island, officials closed Kahaluu and Laaloa Beach Parks for another day Sunday.

On Oahu, the Emergency Services Division reported that as of late Saturday afternoon, Ocean Safety lifeguards had performed one rescue andhad taken1,090 preventative actionson the North Shore.The rescue involved a man in his 50s who was rescued after getting trouble near the shoreline at Waimea Bay. He was transported to the hospital in serious condition.

There were four rescues and 1,725 preventative actions on west shore beaches. Authorities also reported that a man who was rescued Friday from waters off Makaha Beach had died. He was identified as 40-year-old Eassie Miller of Waianae.

A High Surf Warning has been extended for the north and west facing shores of Niihau, Kauai, Oahu, Molokai and Maui and the west shores of the Big Island until 6 p.m. Sunday.

Related story: Rescue crews recover one of two bodies off Kauai Beach

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Deadly swell closes beaches from Kauai to the Big Island

Bakau and Paradise beaches, Brikama craftmarket – Gambia – Video


Bakau and Paradise beaches, Brikama craftmarket - Gambia
We made trips to different beaches on the different days. Bakau is the nortmost resort of the South side, and was peaceful beach with kingfisher birds and smaller waves.. Paradise Beach is in south and has some restaurants and beautiful white sand beach, and lots of local fishing boats. Brikama craftmarket Home to some of the most talented wood carvers in the country, this craft market offers a wonderful selection of woodcarvings and souvenirs that can be bought at a reasonable price. More of our adventures in Gambia: http://www.jokisaari.net

By: JokisaariTravels

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Bakau and Paradise beaches, Brikama craftmarket - Gambia - Video

Northern Ireland scientist warns of disaster facing famous beaches

Cannes, Cancun, Torremolinos and West Palm Beach this is the roll call of some of the worlds favourite beaches which are facing wipeout due to sea level rise.

Scientists in Northern Ireland are warning it could take a sea level rise of just a few feet to threaten some of the world's most famous beach resorts.

According to Professor Andrew Cooper, Professor of coastal studies in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of Ulster, the problems caused by changing sea levels are being compounded by a lack of political will and a lack of short-term coastal management initiatives.

While sea level rise is the most pervasive driver of coastal change, beaches are not necessarily threatened by sea level rise alone.

The problem arises when beaches are artificially hemmed in and not given room to move, the Coleraine-based academic said.

Beaches have survived 120m of sea level rise over the last 10,000 years. Problems only arise if we dont give beaches room to move and to adjust to the changing sea level, Professor Cooper said.

A key attractor in most of the worlds examples of coastal resort cities has been the presence of an adjacent beach.

Some well-known examples are Benidorm, Torremolinos, Cannes, West Palm Beach, Florida, Atlantic City, New Jersey, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, Virginia Beach, Virginia, Cancun and the most rapidly developed of all coastal resort cities, Dubai.

In all of these resorts the challenge is to preserve the real estate behind the beach and still save the beaches, which are being pushed landwards by rising sea level.

People are responding to the threat of rising sea level by building walls to protect valuable property.

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Northern Ireland scientist warns of disaster facing famous beaches

Our beaches are the best, say Aussies

Australian families ranked The Whitsundays in Queensland as the best spot for a coastal break. Source: Supplied

IT'S official - Australians may be travelling to Bali, Thailand and Fiji in record numbers, but they have realised our beaches are better.

Six out of ten Australians rate local beach destinations higher than our biggest Asian and South Pacific rivals, a new survey shows.

While young, childless travellers prefer overseas beach holidays, families ranked The Whitsundays in Queensland as the best spot for a coastal break.

Western Australia's north-west coast ranked highest amongst older travellers without children.

With the strong Australian dollar and cheap flights luring a record number of Australians overseas, Tourism Australia's Domestic Consumer Demand Survey tested six of Australia's most iconic beach holiday destinations popular with domestic travellers against Bali, Thailand and Fiji.

The Australian destinations were the Gold Coast, Whitsundays and Tropical North Queensland, the north-west coast of Western Australia, South Australia's Fleurieu Peninsula and Kangaroo Island and Tasmania's Freycinet Peninsula, which includes perennial favourite Wineglass Bay.

Tourism Australia managing director Andrew McEvoy said the survey put paid to the myth that Australians had fallen out of love with domestic beach holidays.

''This research confirms our country offers some of the most beautiful, safe and high quality beach holiday experiences in the world,'' he said.

''There's a place, of course, for overseas holidays but it never fails to amaze me that people are prepared to battle queues and immigration to sit on busy beaches, sharing the sea frontage with noisy pubs and heaving night clubs, when Australia has some of the world's most incredible pristine coastline and beaches.''

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Our beaches are the best, say Aussies

Red tide reported off Collier beaches

Photo by COREY PERRINE // Buy this photo

Corey Perrine/Staff The footprint evidence is clear where a fish was picked away by birds Friday, Oct. 19, 2012, at Barefoot Beach State Preserve in Bonita Springs, Fla. An agal bloom, known commonly as red tide, is a phenomenon where high concentrations of Karenia brevis, a microscopic marine algae, contain toxins that paralyze the nervous system in fish. In large quantities, they cause the water to appear red or murky, hence the name. The blooms can affect humans causing eye and respiratory conditions such as coughing, sneezing, tearing and itching.

Dead fish have washed ashore on North Naples beaches as a red tide continues to hang on offshore of Southwest Florida, Collier County beach monitors reported Wednesday.

Red tide is a bloom of microscopic algae that releases a toxin that can kill marine life and cause respiratory irritation in humans, including as recently as early last week. The county is warning people with emphysema and asthma to avoid the beaches.

One beachgoer estimated that Barefoot Beach was littered with one dead fish every five feet for a mile, and 20 fish were reported on Vanderbilt Beach north to Wiggins Pass, county pollution control worker Rhonda Watkins said.

Watkins said the county's regular beach rake routine picked up the Vanderbilt Beach fish, but beach raking is not allowed on Barefoot Beach, which is within a preserve area.

Satellites are tracking patches of elevated to high chlorophyll levels stretching offshore from southern Pinellas to Collier counties. More water samples are scheduled to be taken from the beaches Thursday.

Water samples collected earlier this week showed red tide at very low levels at Vanderbilt Beach and Seagate and at low levels at the Naples Pier and South Marco Beach.

To report dead fish or red tide symptoms, call 239-252-2502. Red tide updates are available by calling the county's hotline at 239-252-2591.

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Red tide reported off Collier beaches

Sonoma County planners to weigh parking fee proposal for state beaches

Goat Rock State Beach in Jenner.

The state's plan to expand the number of beaches along the Sonoma Coast where visitors would be charged for parking faces its first crucial test in Santa Rosa today.

The Sonoma County Board of Zoning Adjustments is scheduled to vote on whether to give California State Parks the authority to install 15 new self-pay machines at beaches on the Sonoma Coast.

The state's application for a county coastal development permit does not spell out any fees, but parks officials previously said they plan to charge visitors $8 for parking.

The plan faces stiff opposition, including from Jason Liles, chairman of both the zoning board and the county's Planning Commission.

"I don't like anybody charging for beaches," Liles said this week.

His main concern with the plan is that people will park outside the designated areas and put themselves at risk getting to the beach. He said emergency personnel "already spend a fair amount of time helping people" who get into trouble at the coast.

County staff are recommending that the permit be denied. The decision can be appealed to county supervisors and ultimately the California Coastal Commission.

State officials say the new day-use fees are necessary to keep the beaches open and to reopen others as the park system grapples with budget cuts and a deferred maintenance backlog of more than $1 billion.

Within Sonoma Coast State Park, eight day-use areas and two environmental campgrounds are closed, along with two-thirds of Bodega Dunes Campground. Only a few day-use areas with restroom facilities remain open, in addition to 49 camping spaces at Wrights Beach and Bodega Dunes.

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Sonoma County planners to weigh parking fee proposal for state beaches

San Clemente's parks, beaches wish list grows

Restore the aging Ole Hanson Beach Club all at once not in multiyear phases.

Rehabilitate or replace six San Clemente beach restrooms, one per year, without delay.

San Clemente is planning upgrades for a restroom that shares a building with the city's North Beach concession stand. The restroom is at left, concession at right.

FRED SWEGLES, REGISTER FILE PHOTO

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Budget money to replace an aging playground in one of San Clemente's parks.

Supply the city's beaches with lifeguard towers equipped with retractable legs.

Those are four projects that San Clemente parks commissioners view as top priorities this year as the City Council gets ready to evaluate a wish list of programs and projects. Various city departments will submit requests at a goal-setting meeting expected in March.

THE WISH LIST

On a 6-0 vote Tuesday night, the Beaches, Parks & Recreation Commission asked the council to fund the four projects and to hire experts to craft a design for a new stairway down a bluff to the entrance to El Portal Beach. Commissioners figure on seeing the stairway built the next year.

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San Clemente's parks, beaches wish list grows

Beaches, bombs and gangsters — Corsica’s dilemma

AJACCIO, Corsica The bombs exploded across hundreds of miles of Corsican coastline, gutting two dozen villas nearly simultaneously on some of Europes most beautiful and valuable land. Elsewhere on the same French island off the Mediterranean coast, a young man was shot to death in his car, his stepson wounded beside him.

The night of violence in early December epitomized the problems of Napoleons native island today: Organized crime is gaining ground, spreading beyond the usual vices on the mainland to real estate, tourism and politics back home. And separatists, who extinguished themselves in a spasm of deadly infighting in the late 1990s, have come back with a vengeance, as they wage a desperate battle to prevent mob-dominated mass tourism from dooming their dreams of self-rule.

Corsican coastal land prices have risen as much as five times in as many years, and the number of tourists also has shot up as a once-exclusive haven for the wealthy and their yachts and private vacation homes became a destination for cruise ships and budget flights. Corsican mobsters infamous in mainland France and the United States for their ties to gambling, nightclubs and drugs saw a killing to be made back home.

Gang warfare over Corsican spoils and the separatist bombing campaign have created a climate of lawlessness, although the combatants have been careful not to turn the violence on the tourists themselves.

The state has completely failed, said Dominique Bianchi, a former nationalist leader who recently stepped down as mayor of the southern village of Villanova. In this world, theres only one thing that counts: how to divide the loot.

Shaken by the bombings, and the recent assassinations of a defense lawyer and community leader, the Paris government is making new promises to clean things up on an island where separatist sentiment has simmered ever since France officially took charge in 1769. Corsica has emerged as a jewel of French mass tourism only recently: More than 4.2 million tourists visited the island last year, compared to 2.4 million in 1992. The 2013 Tour de France, the worlds premier cycling competition, will begin here adding to the sense that Corsica has joined the big leagues as a top travel destination.

Complicating the challenge for France is what mainland officials describe as a code of silence known as omerta that also runs through areas of mafia-plagued southern Italy. Locals say its fear, not omerta, that keeps people silent.

Of the 85 gangland killings and attempted assassinations in Corsica in the past eight years, only one case a plot against a former nationalist turned president of Corsicas biggest soccer team has ended in conviction.

Both the mob violence and the bombings claimed by militant nationalists have the same root, Corsicans say: the land.

Three-quarters of the coastline is untouched, the beaches and Mediterranean views achingly empty of a human presence just a 90-minute flight from Paris as developers were scared off by gangland warfare and separatist militancy. Where else could you go and have this kind of virgin land? It doesnt exist anymore, said Dominique Yvon, who is part of an anti-corruption group on Corsica.

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Beaches, bombs and gangsters — Corsica’s dilemma

Councillor warns uncovered bombs could close beaches

Councillor warns uncovered bombs could close Southend's beaches

4:00pm Monday 14th January 2013 in Southend By David Trayner

A COUNCILLOR fears Southends beaches could be shut as erosion of the foreshore unveils an ever increasing number of Second World War explosives.

Peter Wexham, Lib Dem councillor for Leigh, claims the apparently increasing levels of ordinance being found on the foreshore of Leigh, Chalkwell, Southend and Shoebury is a clear sign the covering layer of mud is eroding.

The retired fisherman said: This stuff is explosive and if we are starting to get 30 or 40 at a time the beaches could be shut off if there is that much ordinance left out there.

It seems to be getting worse. It has gone up from single figures to finds in their 30s.

The Echo reported that the Army had to be called to detonate 32 shells found by bait digger Peter Tutt on New Years Eve.

The coastguard regularly calls in the bomb squad after shells left over from the world wars are uncovered by fishermen, bait digger and bathers along the estuary.

But Mr Wexham, who has been raising concerns over the erosion of the foreshore since last August, fears the number of shells found each time has increased dramatically over the past year, suggesting the mud is receding.

He said: I can only assume it shows the erosion is going further out towards the edge of Hadleigh Ray between Westcliff and Chalkwell.

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Councillor warns uncovered bombs could close beaches

Beaches, bombs and gangsters _ Corsica's dilemma

AJACCIO, Corsica (AP) The bombs exploded across hundreds of miles (kilometers) of Corsican coastline, gutting two dozen villas nearly simultaneously on some of Europe's most beautiful and valuable land. Elsewhere on the same French island off the Mediterranean coast, a young man was shot to death in his car, his stepson wounded beside him.

The night of violence in early December epitomized the problems of Napoleon's native island today: Organized crime is gaining ground, spreading beyond the usual vices on the mainland to real estate, tourism and politics back home. And separatists, who extinguished themselves in a spasm of deadly infighting in the late 1990s, have come back with a vengeance, as they wage a desperate battle to prevent mob-dominated mass tourism from dooming their dreams of self-rule.

Corsican coastal land prices have risen as much as five times in as many years, and the number of tourists also has shot up as a once-exclusive haven for the wealthy and their yachts and private vacation homes became a destination for cruise ships and budget flights. Corsican mobsters infamous in mainland France and the United States for their ties to gambling, nightclubs and drugs saw a killing to be made back home.

Gang warfare over Corsican spoils and the separatist bombing campaign have created a climate of lawlessness, although the combatants have been careful not to turn the violence on the tourists themselves.

"The state has completely failed," said Dominique Bianchi, a former nationalist leader who recently stepped down as mayor of the southern village of Villanova. "In this world, there's only one thing that counts: how to divide the loot."

Shaken by the bombings, and the recent assassinations of a defense lawyer and community leader, the Paris government is making new promises to clean things up on an island where separatist sentiment has simmered ever since France officially took charge in 1769. Corsica has emerged as a jewel of French mass tourism only recently: More than 4.2 million tourists visited the island last year, compared to 2.4 million in 1992. The 2013 Tour de France, the world's premier cycling competition, will begin here adding to the sense that Corsica has joined the big leagues as a top travel destination.

Complicating the challenge for France is what mainland officials describe as a code of silence known as "omerta" that also runs through areas of mafia-plagued southern Italy. Locals say it's fear, not omerta, that keeps people silent.

Of the 85 gangland killings and attempted assassinations in Corsica in the past eight years, only one case a plot against a former nationalist turned president of Corsica's biggest soccer team has ended in conviction.

Both the mob violence and the bombings claimed by militant nationalists have the same root, Corsicans say: the land.

Three-quarters of the coastline is untouched, the beaches and Mediterranean views achingly empty of a human presence just a 90-minute flight from Paris as developers were scared off by gangland warfare and separatist militancy. "Where else could you go and have this kind of virgin land? It doesn't exist anymore," said Dominique Yvon, who is part of an anti-corruption group on Corsica.

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Beaches, bombs and gangsters _ Corsica's dilemma

Law introduced to replenish beaches

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (WAVY) - New legislation is set to protect the beaches of Chesapeake Bay by speeding up replenishment requests.

The City of Virginia Beach denied Sheldon Wetherington the request to build a bulkhead by his home at Chick's Beach fearing it would lead to even more erosion on the beach.

Residents of Chick's Beach have watched their community beaches wash away from storms and surges for years.

"It's going away. Pretty soon, you'll be walking on water," President of the Chesapeake Beach Civic League Brad Sike said. "If we get the sand and the beach is extended like they do at the main beach in Virginia we'll be in good shape."

Senate Bill 946 and House Bill 1531 ask agencies that grant requests for sand replenishment to speed up the process of the applications.

Residents would like sand to be mined from the Chesapeake Bay and filled onto Chick's Beach. It's similar to the what the city has done for other beaches.

"They pump sand from the Rudee Inlet [at the main beach] and made that beach beautiful and wide," Sike said.

Senate Bill 946 was approved in a Committee on Thursday, and is working its way through the full Senate.

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Law introduced to replenish beaches

Orchid to chip in on dune restoration on beaches

ORCHID Dune restoration along Orchid beaches got a shot in the arm Thursday when the Orchid Town Board voted to cover about 30 percent of the cost of 20,000 cubic yards of new sand.

Up to $138,604 in dune restoration costs will be paid by the town out of reserve funds originally earmarked for the building of a new town hall. The remainder of the $462,000 will come from beachfront homeowners, condominium owners and the Orchid Island Golf & Beach Club.

The beach and dunes lost about 10 to 12 feet of sand in Hurricane Sandy, according to Orchid Mayor Hal Ofstie. The damage was defined by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection as "Condition IV, Major Dune Erosion," and includes most of the sand put on the beach by the county in 2012.

On Oct. 26, the hurricane grazed Florida's Atlantic coast, causing widespread erosion and destruction of dune crossovers, beaches and boardwalks. The state Department of Environmental Protection on Oct. 31 issued an emergency order allowing municipalities to repair such damage without state permits.

"It appears that neither the county, state nor FEMA will provide any funding to replace the sand lost, or to provide any other protective measures for Orchid beaches in 2013," said Ofstie. "The dunes appear to be vulnerable should a hurricane or similar event occur this year. While the county has the responsibility for the beaches on an ongoing basis, for this year at a minimum, any repair effort would be Orchid's effort."

The Town Board took action on dune restoration after their attorney, Anthony Garganese, advised Thursday that it would be legal as long as there was a "municipal purpose" for the expenditure.

"Declaring dune preservation would serve as a municipal purpose," said Garganese. "There is currently a declaration of emergency and the expenditures would be authorized."

Council member Bud Oatway asked Garganese what specific public purpose would be served by the expenditure since the town has no assets other than streetlights, and all of the property where the dunes are located are private lands.

"I'm having trouble getting my hands around what the public purpose is," said Oatway.

After the hurricanes of 2004, homeowners along Orchid's beaches had to pay for dune restoration without any help from the town. Orchid resident Joe Lawyer said he thought it was "appalling" that homeowners paid to protect an asset of the entire community.

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Orchid to chip in on dune restoration on beaches

Esperance beaches closed over pollution

The contaminate is seen floating on top of the water at Bandy Creek Boat Harbour, Esperance. Photo: David Green, Esperance Express.

Beaches at Bandy Creek Boat Harbour have been closed by the Department of Transport and the Shire of Esperance due to pollution.

An oily substance, suspected to be diesel, was observed by a member of the public on the surface of the water at the beach on the town side of the groin on Wednesday morning.

As a precautionary measure, the Shire of Esperance and Department of Transport closed the beaches at about 8.30am on Thursday.

The contaminate is seen floating on top of the water at Bandy Creek Boat Harbour, Esperance. Photo: David Green, Esperance Express.

The cause of the contamination is yet to be determined.

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The Shire of EsperanceChief Executive OfficerMatthew Scott said the shire had closed a number of beaches within the Bandy Creek Boat Harbour on Thursday as a precautionary measure to protect the public from a suspected minor diesel spill that was reported and investigated late Wednesday afternoon.

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Esperance beaches closed over pollution

Gorgeous beaches of Nueva Gorgona – Video


Gorgeous beaches of Nueva Gorgona
Gorgona is a small fishing village, with beautiful white and black beaches on the Pacific Ocean, located at 79.5 km from Panama City. Gorgona has three very unique salt and pepper beaches with bright white and black sand coming from the quartz and magnetite minerals as a result of the volcanic ground of the sleeping volcano in El Valle. For more information or reservation go to: http://www.bananasandals.com or call 778-773-1356.

By: gloria black

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Gorgeous beaches of Nueva Gorgona - Video

'Boracay beaches turning brown'

MANILA, Philippines - A stakeholders group on Tuesday welcomed a government order to demolish structures of 80 Boracay resorts, saying the move will help restore the beauty of Boracay's beaches.

Speaking to ANC, Boracay Foundation Inc. director and beach front resort owner Nenette Graf welcomed the government order to re-establish the easement portion area of the 4-kilometer white sand beach in Boracay.

"This is a welcome move from our side, the stakeholders. I think it is about time that we protect our white beach, to preserve it. At this point in time, we are really at a panic because our beaches...is becoming brown already," she said.

Tourism Secretary Ramon Jimenez earlier said at least 80 establishments on Boracay island face possible demolition by end of March this year for building too close to the water line.

He said a government task force, composed of the tourism, environment, health, justice and interior and local government departments, has already ordered the establishments to self-demolish.

Graf said she knows of 11 Boracay resorts that have received the government order to self-demolish. One of them is the Nandana Boracay Resort, while the others are in Station 3, she added.

She said none of the establishments have yet to comply with the government order.

Graf admitted that some resort owners deliberately violated the rules after seeing other establishments do the same thing. "Now, it's payback time," she said.

Jimenez earlier said the deadline for the self-demolition is non-negotiable because of the deterioration of the island's beaches. He said resorts that ignore the order will still be demolished and the expenses shouldered by the owners.

He confirmed some of the structures, including embankments to prevent floods, will be completely demolished for building too near the water line.

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'Boracay beaches turning brown'

Cameron County partially reopens beaches

Readmore: Local, Community, Weather, News, Beaches Reopened, Beaches, South Padre Live, Boca Chica Beach, Isla Blanca Park, Beach Access 5, Beach Access 6, Strong Winds, High Tides, South Padre Island, Cameron County, Rio Grande Valley, Texas

Authorities have partially reopened Cameron County's beaches on Wednesday morning now that weather conditions have calmed down.

Rising tides and the threat of severe weather prompted Cameron County officials to shut down all of their beaches on Tuesday.

Officials shut down Boca Chica Beach on the mainlandas well as Isla Blanca Park, Beach Access 5 and Beach Access 6 on South Padre Island.

Cameron County officials reopened those beaches on Wednesday morning but asked the public to heed tide and wind conditions.

But officials shut down Boca Chica Beach and Beach Access 5 on South Padre Island again around 11 a.m. Wednesday due to dangerous conditions.

Action 4 News has partnered up with South Padre Live to provideLIVE web camsof weather conditions on South Padre Island and Port Isabel.

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Cameron County partially reopens beaches

Pinellas beaches still recovering from Tropical Storm Debby

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LUKE JOHNSON/STAFF

Kathy Popper walks along some erosion at Sunset Beach in Treasure Island.

LUKE JOHNSON/STAFF

"Before Debby, the beach was already narrow," said Ping Wang, from the University of South Florida. "It took away 20 feet. However, 20 feet was all that it had."

By KATE BRADSHAW | Tribune staff Published: January 08, 2013 Updated: January 08, 2013 - 12:00 AM

While not a full-blown hurricane, Tropical Storm Debby still gutted stretches of the Pinellas County coastline and created financial problems for an area whose economy is highly dependent on beach tourism.

Sunset Beach, an eclectic, close-knit community tucked into Treasure Island's out-of-the-way southern tip, was among the Pinellas beaches that saw the worst of the late-June storm. As Debby made landfall north of Cedar Key, storm surge and waves had already eaten their way through the beach and were working on the dunes here.

Months later, the county is still not sure if it can restore Sunset Beach to what it once was.

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Pinellas beaches still recovering from Tropical Storm Debby

Beaches All Inclusive Family Vacation Packages Just Released

Beaches All Inclusive Family Vacation packages have just been released by the company, showcasing some of the most exotic places on earth at incredibly affordable costs. From Negril to Ocho Rios, prospective customers now have a chance to get the most value out of their hard earned money.

New York, NY (PRWEB) January 07, 2013

The Beaches All Inclusive Family Vacation Packages start with a flat 65 percent discount on its Top Rated All Inclusive Family Beach resorts in Turks and Caicos and Negril. On the other hand, a 60 percent discount has been announced on the resort in Ocho Rios. These discounts significantly reduce the price on the rate per night offered by the resorts lowering them down to around 300 USD. Furthermore, a massive amount of air credits are also a part of the Beaches All Inclusive Vacation Packages. The achievable air credit can be as much as 355 USD. For those looking forward to making the most out of their time at the resort, the Spa credits will surely do wonders. These credits will be given along with the packages, giving people the freedom to explore exactly what the resorts have to offer. Also, upon selecting a suitable package, additional nights will also be awarded, up and above the selected number of nights by the customers.

We wish to reward our old clients for all these years of devotion and we also aim at telling newer ones, how much we care said Adam Stewart, CEO Beaches Resorts International. With such an immense discount on all these Top Rated All Inclusive Family Beach Resorts, the resorts have already started gearing up to welcome a large number of customers in the coming days. The website http://www.Beaches.com is the place to make a reservation.

Dealing in immaculate and budget-friendly travel solutions, Everyday Travel has been in business for a significant period of time now. Providing great Beaches International Resorts discounts and deals, the company has continued to serve clients flawlessly, over the last couple of years.

This Press Release is written and distributed by The Good Life Services Inc. http://www.thegoodlifeservices.com

Contact:

Everyday Travel

(631) 924-1546

167 Middle Country Rd

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Beaches All Inclusive Family Vacation Packages Just Released