The Below Deck Crew Will Spill All the High-Seas Secrets in the Season 7 After Show – Bravo

If you thought this season of Below Deck was wild, just wait until you hear the whole story.

The Season 7 yachties are ready to reveal everything you didn't see on TV in the return of the Below Deck After Show coming soon to BravoTV.com and YouTube. Get ready to have all your burning questions about Season 7 of Below Deck answered, from behind-the-scenes intel to crucial updates on what happened with the crew after the charter season ended.

In last season's After Show, we saw anemotional side toCaptain Lee Rosbach as he reflected on Ashton Pienaar's overboard accident, got the dirt on all the hookups, and heard Kate Chastain's take on charter guest Krystal's unforgettable appearance on the show, just to name a few highlights. Revisit it all, above.

Catch up on this season of Below Deck here.

And you can relive the magic of the Season 6Below Deck After Show,below.

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The Below Deck Crew Will Spill All the High-Seas Secrets in the Season 7 After Show - Bravo

Storm surge, flooding caused by freak weather conditions – HeraldLIVE

Mondays storm surge, which resulted in flooding in low-lying areas between Amsterdamhoek and Port Alfred, was caused by a rare convergence of weather conditions, according to the South African Weather Service.

The flooding, which caused some road closures and disruption to businesses in low-lying areas, but no major damage, resulted from a spring high tide, high seas and strong winds all occurring at the same time, the Weather Services Garth Sampson said.

The passage of the cold front yesterday, in combination with a steeply ridging high-pressure system behind it, resulted in gale-force winds, which in turn caused high sea conditions of between 6m and 9m out to sea, Sampson said on Tuesday.

Simultaneously, there was a spring high tide which further enhanced the wave heights and resulted in a storm surge along the coast between Plettenberg Bay and East London.

While there have been other floods and instances where two of the three phenomena occurred concurrently, the last time all three conditions occurred at the same time in Port Elizabeth was in 2008.

Its the first time, other than during floods, that I have seen the roads in Amsterdamhoek flooded like that, Sampson said.

Had the winds turned onshore, places like Sidon Street [North End] and the N2 would have been flooded, as was the case on 1 September 2008.

He said the conditions were expected to subside from Tuesday night with wave heights still expected to be between 4.5m and 5.5m on Wednesday.

Moreover, abnormal waves are possible in the Agulhas Current between Port Alfred and East London from [Tuesday] afternoon until Wednesday morning, possibly causing coastal inundation, damage to vessels and affecting coastal recreational activities, he said.

While no major damage was reported, Port Alfred residents described Mondays stormy conditions as scary.

Port Alfred businessman Diederick Stopsorth said at about 4.30pm on Tuesday it appeared that the storm surge, which had resulted in road closures in some parts of the town, seemed to be easing.

There have been some road closures due to yesterdays [Monday] storm and right now as Im looking I can tell its making its way back.

There is no rain at the moment; its windy but yesterdays rain left a lot of flooding, flooding on roads, Stopsorth said.

Another resident, Siphesihle Msimang, said she had managed to drive home at about 5.30pm on Monday, before the storm worsened.

At the time, the water went just above my ankle but we could still drive about but it worsened after that and resulted in more flooding.

Even today theres still a lot of water and although its not raining at the moment, you can tell that its coming back, she said.

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Storm surge, flooding caused by freak weather conditions - HeraldLIVE

Long: The tragedy in Britain wasn’t unique – Roanoke Times

Thirty-nine people died last week who should not have. They were the victims of a growing international tragedy, and their story should touch the hearts of us all.

The thirty-nine were found locked in the back of a shipping container in Essex, England, and the evidence at the moment indicates they were victims of human trafficking.

You may have missed the story since it happened far away, but I took notice when I saw the reports online. Trafficking has been on my mind because of a presentation I recently attended (described below). Human trafficking takes many forms labor trafficking, sex trafficking, immigration scams. The stories too often are horrific; the victims frequently tragic. Trafficking is a problem that we all know exists but within our insulated shells we usually have the luxury of ignoring it. Thirty-nine people should not have to die as a reminder, but lets not miss the opportunity to call the problem to mind.

As I write this, there are many question marks in the Essex lorry deaths. By the time you read it, perhaps more will be known. The victims were initially identified as Chinese, but then Vietnamese migrants were included in the investigation. The container/trailer in which they were found had apparently crossed the English Channel from Europe, and people travel in such vessels only for one reason: to be out of sight of authorities.

For what reason is not yet clear. Thirty-one of the deceased were male, and likely were seeking work, or being exploited for labor. Eight were women, one a teenaged girl, and perhaps were intended for sexual exploitation. Certainly, whatever got them into that container, suffocating in the dark was not the fate they sought. Or deserved.

Millions of these shipping containers move across the globe daily, and ports or border crossings typically dont have the resources to inspect more than a fraction of them. Enough get through the minimal screenings to make it a profitable venture for the traffickers.

So the tragedy of the Essex thirty-none was sadly not a unique one. In an annual report on trafficking issued this summer, the U.S. State Department estimated that some 24 million people are trafficked annually thats equivalent to three cities the size of New York. Answers to the problem are not easy, and I dont pretend to have them. But these are numbers that should motivate the international community.

Not long ago, I got to hear a report from the frontlines of the war on trafficking. I spent an evening with R., who operates a Christian ministry rescuing exploited women from sex trafficking in an Asian nation (per the organizations preferences, I wont give his name or identify the nation because, frankly, he and his colleagues are in danger when they carry out their work).

R. described how young girls, often in dire poverty, are lured by promises of jobs, wealth, even marriage across the border to a larger neighboring nation. Some are even sold by the men in their families, steeped in a culture that tends to devalue daughters. Once taken, instead of the rosy futures that were promised, they find themselves trapped, either sold to foreign nations for unthinkable purposes or condemned to brothels in a large city.

R. and his colleagues attempt to interdict trafficking victims at the border and give them an avenue of escape; they then help them with rehabilitation, counseling, medical care, and job training so that prostitution doesnt remain their only option. R.s team does good work, but they are painfully aware that they only save a handful out of the thousands that are victims of trafficking.

Once upon a time, Britain not only outlawed slavery in its empire, it spent decades battling the international slave trade on the high seas, even though looking the other way was the path of least resistance. Its past time for the international community similarly to make human trafficking a higher priority. For the U.S., here is an issue which unites all our quarrelsome political factions, and it seems to me the weighty influence we have over international diplomacy could be focused more intensely on the subject. We should insist that nations seeking our amity prioritize the issue, and see that draconian punishments against those found guilty of trafficking are imposed.

The alternative is more daughters (and sons) lost to sex trafficking; more victims found dead in shipping containers. There are no easy answers, but shrugging our shoulders and looking the other way is no longer an alternative.

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Long: The tragedy in Britain wasn't unique - Roanoke Times

Rising Seas Are Going to Drown Way More Cities Than Wed Thought: Study – New York Magazine

Semarang, Indonesia, 2017. Photo: Ulet Ifansasti/Getty Images

Climate change will bring (and has already brought) a wide variety of menacing disruptions to human existence. Some of these are well-known and already operative, like the wildfires that have been racing along Californias freeways or the perpetual droughts that have been immiserating Mediterranean farmers. Others are more obscure, like the higher rates of interpersonal and geopolitical violence a warming climate is expected to bring (social science suggests that high temperatures make human blood figuratively boil).

But none of the challenges posed by our warming climate has loomed larger in the popular imagination than sea-level rise. With global populations and wealth heavily concentrated in low-lying coastal cities, humanity has been preoccupied by the prospect of the oceans reclaiming the high points of our civilization. And for good reason: The best available models suggest that 37 million people currently live in places that will be below high tide by 2050 in an optimistic low-carbon-emissions scenario.

Or rather, thats what such models suggested before this week. On Tuesday, a new study revealed that those alarming statistics which had gotten so many of us all worked up about our favorite cities impending doom were wildly inaccurate.

The actual impacts of sea-level rise are going to be much, much worse.

Previous estimates of the impact that rising tides would have on coastal cities relied on (essentially) a three-dimensional map of Earth derived from satellite readings. But those readings were fundamentally unreliable because they often measured the planets upper surfaces such as treetops and tall buildings rather than its ground level. These mistakes led scientists to overestimate the elevation of many regions of Earth, particularly those with lots of vegetation and/or skyscrapers.

In a new study published by the journal Nature Communications, scientists affiliated with the organization Climate Central and Princeton University detail this methodological problem, then use artificial intelligence to determine and correct for the previous literatures error rate. Their research yields some eye-popping (or stomach turning) updates to our conventional understanding of what the next century has in store for our coastlines. MIT Technology Review helpfully breaks down the corrections in this chart:

Photo: MIT Technology Review

The New York Times captures the studys results in more vivid and harrowing fashion by illustrating its implications for some of the globes most populous low-lying cities. Mumbai the financial capital of what will soon be the worlds most populous country is now at risk of being entirely erased by mid-century.

In its optimistic scenario, the Princeton study projects that lands currently occupied by 150 million people will lie below high tide in 2050. At mid-century, that number is all but certain to be higher because of both population growth and internal migration. Between now and 2050, the percentage of the global population living in urban areas is expected to increase from 55 to 68 percent. And climate change could accelerate migration from rural areas to coastal cities as warming devastates many of the worlds agricultural regions. In other words, many coastal cities in the developing world are likely to see influxes of climate refugees, just as rising tides begin displacing their existing populations.

The new study does include one piece of slightly encouraging news. While previous models suggested that 28 million humans currently live in places that already lie below high tide, the actual number is closer to 110 million which means seawalls and other barriers have proven sufficient to keep many cities dry even as sea levels have risen perilously around them. Still, the scale of barrier construction necessary to save low-lying cities from collapse is now, ostensibly, far greater than previously understood when the task already looked harrowingly expensive, particularly for developing countries.

If the Princeton researchers projections are correct, averting mass death and suffering in the coming decades will require not only rapidly reducing carbon emissions and ramping up construction of seawalls and other fortifications but also facilitating mass migrations away from low-lying cities and islands and toward higher ground.

Daily news about the politics, business, and technology shaping our world.

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Rising Seas Are Going to Drown Way More Cities Than Wed Thought: Study - New York Magazine

New charges announced in conspiracy to bring massive amounts of cocaine into US, central Ohio – 10TV

COLUMBUS, Ohio Federal authorities in Columbus Friday announced charges in what they call a conspiracy to transport massive amounts of cocaine from South America to the U.S.

Coast Guard video showed alleged drug pirates throwing bales of cocaine overboard as authorities move in.

That 2017 bust near the Galapagos Islands led to the arrests of four men, and intercepted $25 million worth of cocaine bound for the United States, and central Ohio.

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"In 2017, I stood right here to announce our prosecution of four pirates caught on the high seas. What I could not say at that time, was that those pirates were couriers for this organization," said U.S. Attorney Ben Glassman Friday, announcing another arrest from the same drug operation.

"We are here to announce the extradition from Panama of Francisco Golon-Valenzuela, a Guatemalan national also known as El Toro."

Golon-Valenzuela is charged with conspiracy to import massive amounts of cocaine into the United States.

"This was an enormous and sophisticated operation," Glassman said. "The Mexican cartels need suppliers. There is no cocaine grown in Mexico it's grown in Colombia. So the allegation is that this organization, of which Mr. Golon-Valenzuela is a co-conspirator, was the supplier. It then goes to the cartels in Mexico, which distribute throughout the United States. Some of that is distributed here in Ohio."

The arrests are the result of a multi-year, international investigation between federal prosecutors, the Ohio State Highway Patrol and the Drug Enforcement Administration.

"Our message is quite simple," said DEA Assistant Special Agent in Charge Mauricio Jimenez. "If you distribute drugs and destroy communities in Ohio, we will find you and bring you before justice."

Prosecutors say so far, seven people have been indicted from this drug operation.

Those indictments remain sealed until those suspects are taken into custody.

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New charges announced in conspiracy to bring massive amounts of cocaine into US, central Ohio - 10TV

Cities to be erased by 2050: Rising seas could affect three times more people – NEWS.com.au

In just 30 years, a whopping 340 million people living on the coast can expect annual flooding or permanent inundation, according to a grim new report released by scientists.

By 2050, the worlds coastlines will look incredibly different with 70 per cent of the projected 340 million at risk living in China, Bangladesh, India, Vietnam, Indonesia and Thailand. The 340 million projection is well above the previous estimate of 80 million.

The report, from Climate Central and published in the journal Nature Communications, paints a harrowing picture for most of Asia as sea levels are projected to rise between 0.6m and 2.1m.

By 2100, with the stability of the Antarctic ice sheet already worsening, as many as 640 million people could be threatened by rising sea levels.

Using a form of artificial intelligence known as neural networks, the new research corrects ground elevation data that has up to now vastly underestimated the extent to which coastal zones are subject to flooding during high tide or major storms.

Sea-level projections have not changed, co-author Ben Strauss, chief scientist and CEO of Climate Central, said.

But when we use our new elevation data, we find far more people living in vulnerable areas that we previously understood.

Previous data on rising sea levels made the crisis seem manageable but as Mr Strauss said, governments must act on these new maps to avoid economic and humanitarian catastrophe.

With the global population is set to increase two billion by 2050 and another billion by 2100 mostly in coastal megacities even greater numbers of people will be forced to adapt or move out of harms way.

Already today, there are more than 100 million people living below high tide levels, the study found. Some are protected by dikes and levees, most are not.

Chinas low cities are particularly at risk including Shanghai and Tianjin. Hong Kong also faces severe flooding risks by 2050 while the report projects much of the southern part of Vietnam could also be wiped out.

Ho Chi Minh City is in the south of Vietnam, the countrys largest and most populated city.

The numbers at risk of an annual flood by 2050 in Bangladesh also increased more than eightfold in the study.

But it isnt just Asia that will face inundation by 2050.

Parts of Brazil and the UK could see permanent land loss by 2100. The report estimates more than 3.6 million Brits could be at risk of annual flooding by 2050.

If our findings stand, coastal communities worldwide must prepare themselves for much more difficult futures than may be currently anticipated, the study warned.

Recent work has suggested that, even in the US, sea-level rise this century may induce large-scale migration away from unprotected coastlines, redistributing population density across the country and putting great pressure on inland areas.

The report will leave millions of people around the world questioning how long they want to live on the coast, lead author and Climate Central scientist Scott Kulp said.

Climate change has the potential to reshape cities, economies, coastlines and entire global regions within our lifetime, Mr Kulp said.

As the tideline rises higher than the ground people call home, nations will increasingly confront questions about whether, how much and how long coastal defences can protect them.

Several factors conspire to threaten populations living within a few metres of sea level.

One is the expansion of water as it warms and, more recently, ice sheets atop Greenland and Antarctica that have shed more than 430 billion tonnes per year over the last decade.

Since 2006, the waterline has gone up nearly four millimetres a year, a pace that could increase 100-fold going into the 22nd century if carbon emissions continue unabated, the UN Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) warned in a major report last month.

Major storms that until recently occurred once a century will, by 2050, happen on average once a year in many places, especially in the tropics, the IPCC report found.

Annual coastal flood damages are projected to increase 100 to 1,000-fold by 2100, it said.

Finally, many of the one billion people living at less than nine metres above sea level today are in urban areas literally sinking under their own weight.

With AAP

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Cities to be erased by 2050: Rising seas could affect three times more people - NEWS.com.au

19 tons of cocaine and cannabis worth $380MILLION seized off Florida making massive dent in Colombian drug – The Sun

OVER 19 tons of cocaine and marijuana worth almost 300 million has been seized at sea.

The huge haul of class As was made in Fort Lauderdale, Florida after ten Coastguard Crews worked with "international allies" to intercept illegal drug-running rings in international waters.

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The drugs were seized in international waters in the Caribbean Basin and the Eastern Pacific Ocean off the coast of Mexico.

The cocaine alone was worth $367 million (285 million) on the street, while the cannabis was worth $10 million (7.7 million).

Narcos gangs use the seas to ship large amounts of illegal drugs, favouring submarine-style boats as they're virtually undetectable on radar, sonar and infrared systems.

The high seas is prey to specialist machines devised by Colombian gangs to smuggle cocaine, heroin, cannabis and methamphetamine to American buyers.

The first incognito vessel was detected in 1993.

It was built from wood and fiberglass, but could not fully submerge and only travelled at 10 miles per hour.

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In a statement, Lt. Cmdr. Jason Neiman, Seventh Coast Guard District public affairs officer said: "The offload of over 13 tons of drugs represents the efforts of not only 10 Coast Guard cutters over 18 separate interdictions, but also the commitment and dedication of international allies and partners, like the Colombians.

"As we work together to disrupt the networks that profit from their them."

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19 tons of cocaine and cannabis worth $380MILLION seized off Florida making massive dent in Colombian drug - The Sun

High winds expected for most of Friday, especially along the coast – Bangor Daily News

Nick Sambides Jr. | BDN

Nick Sambides Jr. | BDN

A crew from Sargent Electric Co. awaits an Emera Maine representative on Oct. 17, 2019, at the intersection of routes 175 and 15 in Sargentville before beginning work repairing outages caused by the wind storm.

Trick-or-treaters will miss the worst of a windstorm expected to hit coastal Maine with gusts of up to 60 mph starting after midnight Thursday.

A high wind warning is in effect for Hancock and Washington counties plus Bangor, Old Town and areas as far west as Greenville on Friday from 2 a.m. to 6 p.m., according to Todd Foisy, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service office in Caribou.

Temperatures in the mid-60s, a steady, light rain, 15 to 25 mph winds and gusts topping out at 25 mph are expected in those areas until midnight Thursday, Foisy said.

The good news is that it will be warm [for Halloweeners], but it will be wet, Foisy said. As long as they avoid the puddles, they should be fine. Were not expecting any thunderstorms.

The high winds after midnight 39 to 45 mph, with gusts at 60 mph will cause power outages, uproot trees and dislodge boats along coastal Maine, particularly between Penobscot Bay and Eastport, right until it gets dark on Friday, Foisy said. Elsewhere winds will blow as hard as 35 to 45 mph. Seas will run as high as 18 feet, with light rain until 11 a.m. and a chance of showers until 2 p.m.

The strong low-pressure system creating the winds and rain is moving northeast from Lake Erie to the St. Lawrence Seaway.

It will be a long event, Foisy said. The main threat is the strong winds.

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High winds expected for most of Friday, especially along the coast - Bangor Daily News

Let’s Send the U.S. Navy’s ‘Stealthy’ Destroyer Back in Time to Fight a World War II Battle – The National Interest Online

If the U.S. Navy had to refight the Battle of Leyte Gulf in contemporary timesclashing arms with a new Asian contender along Asias first island chainhow would it use its latest surface combatant ships to advance the cause?

To send the antagonists surface fleet to the bottom of the sea, one hopes. Back then the U.S. Third Fleet leadership got hoodwinked into chasing Japanese aircraft carriers with mostly empty flight decks around the open ocean. In their haste commanders neglected to bar a key passage through the Philippine archipelago, the San Bernardino Strait, to Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) battleships and cruisers. They didnt even keep watch.

And courted disaster. Amphibious forces on the island of Leyte and their naval protectors offshore would have paid a fearful price for the leaderships neglect but for the heroics of navy aircrews and tin-can sailors. Destroyers and destroyer escorts stormed the mammoth superbattleship Yamato and its consorts when they hove over the horizon on the morning of October 25, 1944. Meanwhile warplanes swooped overhead, pelting Japanese ships with bombs, torpedoes, and machine-gun fire. The defenders ferocity induced the ultracautious IJN commander, Vice Admiral Takeo Kurita, to beat a retreat from Leyte Gulf in the face of vastly outgunned American forces. In other words, aviators and small-ship crews salvaged a predicament in which the amphibious host never should have found itself.

Lesson of Leyte: keep your eyesand your firepowertrained on the straits. Thats where the foe will try to burst through the island chain. Thats where the foe has to be stopped to keep the chain intact.

Enter USS Zumwalt, the U.S. Navys otherworldly-looking new guided-missile destroyer. U.S. maritime strategy vis--vis Communist China, todays successor to imperial Japan, seemingly aims to bottle up Chinas Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) and merchant fleet within the first island chain, levying economic and military pressure on the leadership in Beijing. Built to deposit gunfire on hostile coasts in support of marines ashore, the DDG-1000 spent some years in the wilderness, looking for a mission. Thats because navy leaders pronounced its gun ammunition unaffordable after it exceeded $800,000 per (very modest-caliber) round. So much for supplying naval gunfire support in large volumes.

Yet Zumwalt packs a punch for surface warfare even with its main guns laid up, as they are now. The vessel boasts eighty Mk 57 vertical launch cellsin effect silos embedded in the hullarrayed along the periphery of its main deck. The leadership redesignated the destroyers chief mission as surface strike a couple of years ago. In simpler language, the DDG-1000 is now a shipkiller, a capital ship in the classic mode. It is destined to fight capital ships, much as armored dreadnoughts or sail-driven ships of the line pummeled rival battle lines for oceanic supremacy in ages past. In parlance beloved of oldtimers, Zumwalt will duel enemy surface fleets for command of the sea rather than concentrate on exploiting maritime command after the U.S. Navy has won it.

This is fitting. Never assume what the verdict of arms will be when the foe is entitled to cast a vote. After all, there is no landing troops or answering calls for fire unless offshore waters have been cleared of hostile shipping. Such missions are among the fruits of battle, not substitutes for it. And battles first have to be won. Only after seaborne dangers are at bay will the Zumwalt crew turn gimlet eyes ashore.

This shift in primary functions, then, rebalances the fundamental premises governing the DDG-1000 class from shore bombardment to high-seas action. How, more specifically, will the vessel deploy for island-chain contingenciesfor future Leytes? The basic concept underlying island-chain defense is that light, numerous forces will scatter along the first island chain, bearing the brunt of closing the straits to maritime movement. Small bodies of marines and soldiers armed with anti-ship and anti-air missiles will menace hostile ships and aircraft. Minefields, submarines, surface patrol craft, and aircraft will prowl in and above the straits, adding more obstacles to the barricade.

This adds up to a formidable deterrent. But it is a form of perimeter defense. The strategic canon teaches that a force defending a long, distended line takes on a challenge of unforeseen proportions. It demands that the perimeters guardians spread themselves thin. Trying to be strong at every point along a lineand recall that mathematicians define a line as infinitely many points strung togetherstrains the brawniest force. Even an outmatched opponent could mass its forces at some point along the line, overpower beleaguered sentries, and punch through to freedom.

Thats why martial sage Carl von Clausewitz seems to despair of this form of defense, which he terms cordon-warfare. This ruinous military method, he says, is worthless without powerful fire to support it. Clausewitz does hedge, however. His criticism appears to stem from the shortcomings of military technology. The effective firing range of gunnery remained short in his day, the era of the Napoleonic Wars. It covered little territory. He nonetheless suggests that gunnery can shore up defensive lines within firing range, defending all points effectively within reach.

Clausewitz never got a load of precision strike weaponry, which has extended the range and destructive power of fire support by orders of magnitude beyond that of Napoleonic cannon. And like all good soldiers, he was a great believer in putting terrain to work. The first island chain amounts to a line of immovable guard towers, all belonging to powers allied or friendly with the U.S. military. Geography divides up what looks on the map like a lengthy, porous frontier into a series of manageable segments. Fire support from the sentinel towers and mobile platforms coupled with obstacles strewn along the line renders the Clausewitzian critique of perimeter defense mootin this instance at any rate.

Or if you dont believe the greatest military strategist of all time, ask Bill Belichick, the greatest NFL coach of all time. Football is little more than mutual perimeter defense. The offense attempts to keep defenders out of the backfield, punch holes in the defense through the running or passing game, and march downfield to score. The defense replies by attempting to prevent running backs or receivers from penetrating a line backed up by a defense in depth. Coach Belichick would slaver at the idea of a New England Patriots defensive line whose linemen werelike Asian islandsimpassable to the offense. Plugging the seams between the blockers while mounting a defense in depth behind the linejust in case the offense punctured it through savvy blocking or passingwould become any New England defensive schemes paramount goal. Easy!

Take it from the G.O.A.T.

Transposing the analogy back into the military realm, joint U.S. and allied forces would firm up the line with light missile-armed units, sea mines, and so forth. Together with the islands, that defensive line might well hold. But the coaches, U.S. and allied commanders, would still need to defend in space behind the perimeter, just in case massed PLA forces burst through the linemost likely through one of its longer segments such as the Miyako Strait south of Okinawa, a passage thats about 150 miles wideor vaulted over it.

Thats where Zumwalts (and other heavy combatants) come in. DDG-1000s can constitute only part of the layered defense behind the perimeter. With only three hulls in the classwhich in practice means one or two ready for combat action at any time, to cover contingencies anywhere across the globethe U.S. Navy could never mount an impermeable defense with them alone. Short of that, commanders could look to NFL defenses for inspiration. For instance, a DDG-1000 could act as a free safety, or last line of defense. As the name implies, the free safety roams the backfield independently, using his eyes and intuition to judge where the offense might break through the defense and rushing to points of impact.

Hes a lone wolf. He may not prevent a long yardage gain, but he could save a touchdown. Zumwalts carry a serious missile load and, with their stealth, appear well suited to the sneaky role played by a free safety. They could ply the waters well eastward of the island chain and try to turn back PLA forces that penetrate into the allied backfield.

Or a DDG-1000 could act as a strong safety. Strong safeties linger fairly close to the line of scrimmage, typically concentrating on the strong sidethe side of the gridiron where offensive players mass, suggesting the play will go to that side. Their goal: stop the ground game before rushers gain significant yardage, or box in tight ends to keep the offense from striding down the field through short-yardage passes. Positioning a Zumwalt close behind the island chain would alter the geometry of backfield defense, preventing a single destroyer from patrolling a major arc of the island chainlet alone the whole thing. Like an NFL strong safety, a DDG-1000 would need help from fellow strong safeties. To cover all necessary sectors it would operate in concert with DDG-51 Arleigh Burke destroyers or CG-47 Ticonderoga cruisers; with nuclear-powered attack submarines lurking in the depths; with light surface combatants such as frigates; or with unmanned craft as they join the fleet in the coming years.

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Let's Send the U.S. Navy's 'Stealthy' Destroyer Back in Time to Fight a World War II Battle - The National Interest Online

Ecuador: A Cocaine Superhighway to the US and Europe – Insightcrime.org

Little attention is paid to Ecuador. The murder rate is low, and there are no drug cartels like those that have dominated the criminal landscape in Mexico and Colombia. Yet Ecuador is one of the worlds cocaine superhighways. This is how the international drug trade likes it. Low key, low profile.

Over a third of Colombias booming cocaine production now flows into Ecuador, according to Ecuadorean anti-narcotics sources. From the countrys ports, coastline and airports, it is then dispatched around the world, destined for the United States, Europe and even Asia and Oceania.

Behind this trade is a complex and fluid underworld of specialist groups and sub-contractors coordinated by the brokers of powerful transnational drug trafficking organizations, and protected by corruption networks that penetrate deep into the state.

*This article is part of an InSight Crime investigation into how Ecuador became one of the global cocaine trades primary dispatch points.

Ecuadors role in the drug trade dates back to the 1980s, when it was a transit route for Peruvian coca base trafficked into Colombia, and home to precursor chemical trafficking networks that supplied the Colombian laboratories that processed that base into cocaine.

However, it wasnt until the turn of the century that Colombias quiet neighbor emerged as a cornerstone of the transnational cocaine supply chain. It began with the dollarization of the economy in response to an economic and political crisis in 2000, which instantly made Ecuador a money launderers dream: a country bordering the worlds biggest cocaine producer that uses the currency of the worlds largest cocaine market.

Around the same time, a military assault and mass aerial spraying of coca crops in Colombia was pushing both the guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia FARC) and coca cultivation towards the Ecuador border. The FARC established control over cocaine production in the region, and began supplying traffickers from the Norte del Valle Cartel, who opened up routes into and out of Ecuador. The Mexicans soon wanted in on the action, and Sinaloa Cartel leader Joaqun Guzmn Loera, alias El Chapo, ordered his lieutenants to set up their own networks in the country.

SEE ALSO: Ecuador News and Profile

The convergence of these underworld forces on Ecuador coincided with a turning point in both the countrys political and criminal history: the 2006 presidential election that brought Rafael Correa to power.

Correas administration would prove a paradox. He oversaw a dramatic fall in violence and record drug seizures while bringing in an era of unprecedented political stability. But his government was plagued by drug trafficking scandals, andhis strongman style weakened the capacity of the Ecuadorean state and civil society to resist drug trafficking.

One of Correas first moves as president was to end the lease of the US naval base in Manta an election promise made to the FARC in return for campaign financing, according to recovered guerrilla communications, although Correa denies all knowledge of this. The decision created a huge blind spot in Ecuadors waters and skies that was soon filled with drug boats and planes.

The closure of Manta was just the start of an antagonistic foreign policy approach that saw his government fall out with both Colombia and the United States. As a result, anti-narcotics cooperation with both the supply and demand countries Ecuador is caught between was pared back to a bare minimum.

Correas domestic policies also created space for drug trafficking to flourish. He politicized the judiciary, using it as a tool to take down opponents. He also directed the security forces and intelligence units away from combating organized crime, and instead turning them on his political adversaries, according to police and intelligence sources, and cowed the press and non-governmental watchdogs with his fiery rhetoric and legal action.

Whether by accident, design, or both, Correas administration lowered Ecuadors resilience to drug trafficking at a crucial moment. Over a decade on from his election, and Ecuador is now an organized crime haven and arguably the main dispatch point for Colombian cocaine outside of Colombia itself.

There are two pathways cocaine takes through Ecuador the Pacific route and the Amazon route.

The Pacific route is largely supplied by cocaine produced in Nario, the border department that has more coca than anywhere else in Colombia. Drugs either enter Ecuador on small boats navigating the tangled jungle waterways that converge on the Mataje river separating Nario from the Ecuadorean province of Esmeraldas, or hidden in vehicles crossing the Rumichaca international bridge into the province of Carchi.

Shipments are collected at stash points near the border. Drugs that cross into Esmeraldas are hidden on properties and beaches dotting the Esmeraldas coastline, while loads that move through Carchi are stored on at farms and ranches in the province of Santo Domingo de los Tschilas. Some loads are then moved by boats that hug the coastline and hide in craggy inlets. Most of the drugs, however, are moved by road, stashed in commercial trucks, private vehicles and even public transport.

The Amazon route is mostly supplied by cocaine from Putumayo, the Colombian department with the second highest levels of coca cultivation after Nario, and leads through the Ecuadorean province of Sucumbos.

The main border crossings are the San Miguel and Putumayo rivers, where small boats deposit loads at stash points in lawless underworld outposts, such as Puerto Nuevo, Puerto Mestanza, and Tarapoa. However, drugs also move directly across the San Miguel international bridge after being loaded into vehicles in Colombia. From Sucumbos, traffickers take the countrys main highways to dispatch points.

Figures obtained from anti-narcotics sources, show that in 2018, 44 percent of drug seizures were destined for the United States, 22 percent for Europe, 4 percent for Central America, and one percent for each Asia and for Oceania, while 28 percent was unknown. The US market is mainly supplied by boats launched from the coast, and light aircraft, while cocaine is sent to Europe on contaminated cargo shipping.

Currently, the bulk of the cocaine shipped from Ecuador for the US market is dispatched from the coasts of Esmeraldas, Manab, Santa Elena, and to a lesser extent Guayas and El Oro in motorboats, although traffickers also use fishing vessels, submersibles and the stripped-out boats with fibre-glass coverings that anti-narcotics authorities call Low-Profile Vehicles (LPV).

The trafficking often begins with a hijacking. Pirate crews lurk off the coast, preying on fishermen to steal their boats and outboard motors at the point of a gun. The boats are then manned with crews recruited from struggling fishing villages, where $30,000 for a five-day trip is an enticing proposition, despite the risk they will end up joining hundreds of other Ecuadorean fishermen in foreign prisons, or will be among the many others that disappear without a trace.

Traffickers then have a choice of three routes. From Esmeraldas they can make a direct run to Central America, but this brings them perilously close to US and Colombian patrols. Instead, most prefer to loop around either north or south of the Galapagos Islands. The most recent US National Drug Threat Assessment estimated that in 2017, 17 percent of all US-bound cocaine first passed around the Galapagos islands, up from just 4 percent in 2016, and 1 percent in 2015.

The boats traffickers use for the Pacific runs are not equipped for long-distance high seas travel and must refuel as many as six times along the way. The fuel is provided by fishing vessels, which leave the city of Manta laden with gasoline and a satellite phone and wait at pre-arranged locations. The fishing boats carry five tanks at a time, allowing them to refuel several boats. Each tank is sold for $35,000, potentially earning them $175,000 per 1-2-week trip.

The traffickers journeys usually end off the Pacific coasts of Mexico or Central America, above all Guatemala or Costa Rica. Here they may be met by boats to hand over loads, but fear of being violently double-crossed has fueled the use of GPS-enabled radio or satellite buoys. This allows them to drop their shipments overboard before passing the coordinates to the pickup crews, which find them by following the signals emitted by the buoys.

While coastal dispatches remain the main method for trafficking US-bound cocaine, the use of Ecuador as an air bridge is on the rise, a result, authorities believe, of increased pressure on maritime routes.

Traffickers mostly use Cessna aircraft that are stripped out and modified so they can carry more drugs and fuel, and are even capable of refueling themselves mid-air. These aircraft can carry between 400 and 700 kilos, and take around six hours to reach Costa Rica or Guatemala, where they either unload or refuel and continue to Mexico.

Planes take off using a variety of clandestine or improvised airstrips. Traffickers construct airstrips by leveling off land in isolated areas, use existing strips on private or commercial properties such as strips used for crop dusting planes on fruit plantations, or they use abandoned airports or even roads closed for construction.

For cocaine shipped to Europe, however, the main routes run through Ecuadors ports: Puerto Bolivar, and above all, the countrys international trade hub of Guayaquil. Control of the ports is low, while corruption is high, and traffickers have an array of options for hijacking the freight that moves through them.

Some seek total control of the shipment by using front export companies as a faade for their shipments. These shell companies are set up in the names of frontmen, commonly people with few economic resources and no criminal background. In other cases they buy existing companies with long histories of clean exports to reduce the risk of them receiving anything but the most cursory inspection. Ostensibly legal export shipments are then arranged, and the cocaine is concealed within the products.

However, a more common technique is to contaminate legal shipments, hiding drugs in containers either before they enter the port, in the port or after the ships leave the docks.

To get their drugs into shipments before entering the port, traffickers target not the goods but the containers themselves. They pack drugs into compartments in the floor, ceiling or walls of empty containers in storage yards then use contacts in shipping companies to ensure their container is sent to a company planning an export to their target destination.

The containers may also be contaminated after entering the port district. Freight trucks with drugs hidden in secret compartments enter the district and move to known blind spots in security camera coverage to unload. Dock workers then break open containers and load the drugs among the legal produce. A cloned or fake custom seal is then put in place to mask the tampering.

Containers and even the ships themselves may also be contaminated after they have set sail. Smaller boats approach the ships in Guayaquils estuaries and pass the drugs on to contacts among the crew, who pack it into a container or a hiding place on board.

The actors that run these drug routes are a combination of Ecuadorean, Colombian, Mexican and European criminal networks.

Colombian cocaine brokers, such as the criminal group La Constru in Putumayo and the mysterious drug trafficker known only as El Contador in Tumaco, negotiate deals in Colombia or in Ecuadorean criminal hubs such Lago Agrio near the Putumayo border, and Guayaquil.

The deals struck are for a quantity of cocaine puesto en or delivered to. For Mexican cartels in particular, the handover can be around the Colombian border. However, the Colombian traffickers can also arrange delivery to dispatch points in Ecuador or to handover points in Europe or off the coasts of Mexico and Central America.

These cocaine brokers sub-contract the work of sourcing and transporting cocaine to the criminal service providers that operate at each link in the chain.

In the frontier region, the key players are the networks left behind from the demobilization of the FARC, which are active on both sides of the border. Rearmed and criminalized guerrilla cells take charge of compiling loads in Colombia and ensure their safe transport into Ecuador. Trafficking is coordinated using the logistics and transport specialists and networks of corrupt officials that used to work trafficking FARC produced cocaine.

The transport networks handover to specialist Ecuadorean dispatch networks. These sophisticated, low-profile organizations are led by individual traffickers, many of whom live disguised among regional social, economic and political elites.

These traffickers organize the logistics of a shipment: coordinating corruption networks, recruiting smugglers, securing fuel, equipment and any other supplies needed. They also hire armed actors to provide security, collect debts and carry out assassinations.

The different trafficking methods all demand different logistical capacities and contacts, and although some traffickers have been known to work with different methods, most are specialized.

Coastal shipments are organized by crime clans, many of which are concentrated in the city of Manta. These networks recruit fishermen from coastal communities to man their boats, organize refueling stops, and equip the boats with communications equipment and supplies.

In addition to securing access to airstrips, networks sending shipments by small aircraft provide fuel through corrupt private sector or state contacts, communications equipment that allows them to coordinate with the incoming pilots, and cloned license plates of planes with permission to fly in the area where they will be landing.

For port dispatches, the key is corrupt contacts. To contaminate containers before loading, they need contacts in the shipping companies, above all with the container dispatchers that control which containers get sent to which companies, and in the storage yards so they can work to load up the drugs. If they contaminate containers within the port district, they need truck drivers, stevedores, security guards and the winch operators that have access to information on the movements and locations of containers.

These traffickers and the routes they control are protected by corruption networks of astonishing reach.

Police and military not only wave drug shipments through their controls, they have even provided security for drug shipments and their traffickers, transported cocaine in their official vehicles and are even believed to have carried out assassinations, according to intelligence sources.

If traffickers are caught, then most are able to buy their way out of trouble. Sources describe how they pay off prosecutors and judges to sabotage investigations and to obtain favorable rulings. Traffickers are also able to call upon politicians on their payroll, who pull the necessary stings to put an end to their problems.

Although such corruption has been present in Ecuador as long as drug trafficking, official and expert sources all concur that under Rafael Correa it reached epidemic proportions, taking root in all branches of the state.

The 2017 election of President Lenin Moreno promised a new approach. Moreno reached out to the international partners estranged by Correa. Renewed US support has already vastly increased Ecuadors capacity to track drug boats, while close cooperation with Colombia enabled the two countries to hunt down the border regions most wanted criminal and dismantle a large part of his network.

Moreno also oversaw the arrest of senior political figureson corruption charges, and promised to investigate the ties between Rafael Correa and underworld groups, although Correa supporters and other critics denounce this as a political purge masquerading as an anti-corruption drive.

However, when a wave of public protests snowballed into violent riots in October 2019, the political terrain again shifted. Moreno blamed Correa loyalists and groups with links to organized crime and drug trafficking for hijacking what had begun as an indigenous protest against fuel subsidies. While those claims remain unverified, one thing is clear: the polarization and political crisis the protests unleashed now threaten to swallow his administration, pushing drug trafficking off the agenda and back to where it thrives in the shadows.

Top Image: Cocaine hidden in banana cargo at the Guayaquil port. Photo courtesy of anti-narcotics unit.

*Additional reporting was contributed by Mayra Alejandra Bonilla.

*This article is part of an InSight Crime investigation into how Ecuador became one of the global cocaine trades primary dispatch points.

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Ecuador: A Cocaine Superhighway to the US and Europe - Insightcrime.org

Rising seas will erase more cities by 2050, including Ho Chi Minh City, Bangkok and Mumbai, new research shows – The Straits Times

NEW YORK (NYTIMES) - Rising seas could affect three times more people by 2050 than previously thought, according to new research, threatening to all but erase some of the worlds great coastal cities.

The authors of a paper published on Tuesday (Oct 29) developed a more accurate way of calculating land elevation based on satellite readings, a standard way of estimating the effects of sea-level rise over large areas, and found that the previous numbers were far too optimistic.

The new research shows that some 150 million people are now living on land that will be below the high-tide line by mid-century.

Southern Vietnam could all but disappear. More than 20 million people in Vietnam, almost one-quarter of the population, live on land that will be inundated.

Much of Ho Chi Minh City, the nations economic centre, would disappear with it, according to the research, which was produced by Climate Central, a science organisation based in New Jersey, and published in the journal Nature Communications.

The projections dont account for future population growth or land lost to coastal erosion.

Standard elevation measurements using satellites struggle to differentiate the true ground level from the tops of trees or buildings, said Dr Scott Kulp, a researcher at Climate Central and one of the papers authors.

So he and Dr Benjamin Strauss, Climate Centrals chief executive, used artificial intelligence to determine the error rate and correct for it.

In Thailand, more than 10 per cent of citizens now live on land that is likely to be inundated by 2050, compared with just 1 per cent according to the earlier technique.The political and commercial capital, Bangkok, is particularly imperilled.

Climate change will put pressure on cities in multiple ways, said Ms Loretta Hieber Girardet, a Bangkok resident and United Nations disaster risk reduction official.Even as global warming floods more places, it will also push poor farmers off the land to seek work in cities.

It is a dire formula, she said.

In Shanghai, one of Asias most important economic engines, water threatens to consume the heart of the city and many other cities around it.

The findings dont have to spell the end of those areas. The new data shows that 110 million people already live in places that are below the high-tide line, which Dr Strauss attributes to protective measures like seawalls and other barriers.

Cities must invest vastly greater sums in such defences, Dr Strauss said, and they must do it quickly.But even if that investment happens, defensive measures can go only so far.

Dr Strauss offered the example of New Orleans, a city below sea level that was devastated in 2005 when its extensive levees and other protections failed during Hurricane Katrina.

How deep a bowl do we want to live in? he asked.

The new projections suggest that much of Mumbai, Indias financial capital and one of the largest cities in the world, is at risk of being wiped out.

Built on what was once a series of islands, the citys historic downtown core is particularly vulnerable.

Overall, the research shows that countries should start preparing now for more citizens to relocate internally, according to Ms Dina Ionesco of the International Organisation for Migration, an inter-governmental group that coordinates action on migrants and development.

Weve been trying to ring the alarm bells, Ms Ionesco said. We know that its coming.

There is little modern precedent for this scale of population movement, she added.

The disappearance of cultural heritage could bring its own kind of devastation.

Alexandria, Egypt, founded by Alexander the Great around 330BC, could be lost to rising waters.

In other places, the migration caused by rising seas could trigger or exacerbate regional conflicts.

Basra, the second-largest city in Iraq, could be mostly underwater by 2050.

If that happens, the effects could be felt well beyond Iraqs borders, according to Mr John Castellaw, a retired Marine Corps lieutenant-general who was chief-of-staff for US Central Command during the Iraq War.

Further loss of land to rising waters there threatens to drive further social and political instability in the region, which could reignite armed conflict and increase the likelihood of terrorism, said Mr Castellaw, who is now on the advisory board of the Centre for Climate and Security, a research and advocacy group in Washington.

So this is far more than an environmental problem, he said. Its a humanitarian, security and possibly military problem too.

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Rising seas will erase more cities by 2050, including Ho Chi Minh City, Bangkok and Mumbai, new research shows - The Straits Times

Tens of Millions Could Be Hit by Sea Level Rise Sooner Than Thought, New Study Suggests – The Weather Channel

A new analysis of coastlines around the world indicates that sea level rise linked to climate change could lead to annual flooding and eventually to daily inundations at high tide more quickly than thought. More than 200 million people may be affected globally as soon as 2050, several times more than previously estimated, the study finds.

While the new study is not the last word on sea level rise, it highlights a persistent underestimation of the vulnerability of many coastlines, according to authors Scott Kulp and Benjamin Strauss of the independent research center Climate Central. The study was published Tuesday in Nature Communications.

As the tideline rises higher than the ground people call home, nations will increasingly confront questions about whether, how much, and how long coastal defenses can protect them, said Kulp in a news release. These assessments show the potential of climate change to reshape cities, economies, coastlines, and entire global regions within our lifetimes.

A car drives down a flooded street on Oct. 22, 2019, in Key Largo, Florida. King-tide level waters combined with earlier storms and other factors has forced water onto the streets in parts of the Florida Keys, which will likely see increased flooding as sea levels continue to rise.

Coastal vulnerability is well assessed in the United States, where high-resolution data is widely available. The new findings confirm earlier work by Climate Central showing that U.S. vulnerability will increase this century as sea level continues to rise. NOAA estimates that the national average of five high-tide flood days per year about twice as much as 20 years ago might reach 7 to 15 days by 2030 and 25 to 75 days by 2050, with the largest increases along the Gulf and Atlantic coasts.

The new paper shows that coastline vulnerability may be greatly underestimated in developing nations, where high-resolution data is unavailable or sparse.

The study finds that roughly 190 million people currently occupy global land that could be inundated by regular high tides (mean higher high water) by 2100, even if greenhouse gas emissions peak by midcentury. This compares to an estimate of 110 million people from a widely used NASA model.

Under the same scenario, less-frequent annual flooding could affect much more territory as soon as 2050, including land where some 237 million people live today within six Asian countries (China, Bangladesh, India, Vietnam, Indonesia, and Thailand). This compares to earlier estimates of only about 50 million people.

Improved elevation data from CoastalDEM significantly expands the area around Bangkok, Thailand (in red) expected to experience, on average, once-a-year coastal flooding by 2050.

If emissions keep rising through the century, regular high-tide flooding could occur by 2100 on coastal land where 250 million people now live in those six countries.

Even if greenhouse emissions are cut drastically, more than 20 other nations could see regular high tides by 2100 over land where at least 10% of their population is now located, the study finds.

The new findings are based on output from CoastalDEM, a digital elevation model (DEM) developed by Climate Central. Because sea level cannot be directly measured with instruments along every inch of coastline, DEMs are used to produce regional and global estimates of which coastlines are most vulnerable to sea level rise.

One of the most commonly used DEMs for international assessment of coastal flood risks is NASAs satellite-based Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM). Like most of its counterparts, the SRTM tends to overestimate the height of topography near coastlines, because it detects objects such as trees or buildings that extend higher than the coastline itself. As a result, the impacts of sea level rise can be underestimated.

Some studies have properly handled the vertical uncertainty, said Dean Gesch (U.S. Geological Survey) in a 2018 paper on best practices for DEM use. However, many other studies ignore the vertical uncertainty stemming from the underlying elevation data.

The CoastalDEM model uses neural networks a form of machine learning that allows software to make continuous improvements over time in order to reduce systemic errors in the SRTM data. The model was trained on a subset of U.S. coastal locations where dense, high-resolution data was available. It was then tested on other U.S. and Australia locations before being extended to other parts of the world.

According to Climate Central, CoastalDEM reduces the typical coastal elevation error to an average of about 4 inches, compared to 6 feet or more in SRTM.

To calculate vulnerability, the CoastalDEM model output was combined with previous estimates of expected sea level rise, including both lower- and higher-end estimates. The lower scenario assumes that greenhouse emissions will level off by 2040 and then decline (the IPCCs RCP4.5 scenario).

The higher scenario assumes more rapid emissions increases through the century (RCP8.5), together with the possibility that instabilities within Antarctic coastal ice cliffs could lead to rapid sea level rise later this century, as past research has suggested.

Melissa Moulton, a scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research who specializes in coastal oceanography and remote sensing, said in an email that the new findings are a valuable contribution to better assessing impacts of sea level rise.

These estimates are an important indicator of the threat to our coastal populations, said Moulton. She noted that actual inundation at any one spot will also depend on how land use changes and on the small-scale hydrologic and geologic evolution of the coastline, factors that are not considered in this study.

I think this is a very interesting study to assess uncertainties in projecting the impacted population by rising sea level, said Aixue Hu, a climate researcher at NCAR. It gives us another angle to look at this problem.

Hu points out that a number of uncertainties remain, as called out by the researchers themselves. According to Hu, the results also suggest that better coverage of DEM observations could potentially further reduce the uncertainty.

A far more precise technique than using DEMs is to carry out fine-scale elevation measurements using airborne lidar (laser-based radar). Such lidar-based data has not yet been collected along many coastlines around the world, but it is available for U.S. coastlines. Using publicly available lidar-based data, Climate Central has published high-resolution risk zone maps for U.S. coastal locations.

The study estimates that some 900,000 U.S. residents are in locations that would be flooded regularly by high tide were it not for levees and other protections.

The authors found that even the CoastalDEM data consistently underestimated the coastal vulnerability in the United States when compared with the finer-scale lidar-based U.S. data.

Ultimately, the most accurate assessments of vulnerability to rising seas, especially for smaller areas, will require development and public release of improved coastal area elevation datasets building directly off of new high resolution observations increasingly collected by satellites today, the authors conclude.

The Weather Companys primary journalistic mission is to report on breaking weather news, the environment and the importance of science to our lives. This story does not necessarily represent the position of our parent company, IBM.

Excerpt from:

Tens of Millions Could Be Hit by Sea Level Rise Sooner Than Thought, New Study Suggests - The Weather Channel

The ice used to protect them. Now their island is crumbling into the sea. – msnNOW

An abandoned road is crumbling into the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Adele Chiasson, a widow who lives nearby, said visitors are shocked at the changes that erosion has wrought on the cliffs.

ILES-DE-LA-MADELEINE, QUEBEC High on a bluff overlooking the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Adele Chiasson no longer ventures into her backyard for a simple reason: It is falling into the sea.

Im afraid to go out there, the widow said one afternoon from the safety of her kitchen. She nodded toward the 70-foot-tall, red sandstone cliffs out back that creep closer with each passing year. You never know when a section will fall off.

Decades ago, when she and her husband moved to this modest house with its majestic views, they never imagined a vanishing coastline might one day drive them away. But the sea long ago claimed the ground where their children once played. An abandoned road out back has mostly crumbled into the surf below. Two of her neighbors homes have been moved inland.

The day might come when she, too, will be forced to abandon this precarious patch of earth. I might not have a choice, she says.

The more than 12,000 residents of this windswept Canadian archipelago are facing a growing number of gut-wrenching choices, as extreme climate change transforms the land and water around them. Season after season, storm after storm, it is becoming clearer that the sea, which has always sustained these islands, is now their greatest threat.

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A Washington Post examination of the fastest-warming places around the world has found that the Magdalen Islands, as they are known in English, have warmed 2.3 degrees Celsius (4.2 degrees Fahrenheit) since the late 19th century, twice the global average.

As in New England, Siberia and other global hot spots at higher latitudes, winters here are heating up even more quickly, eclipsing 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit). That change has fueled freezing and thawing cycles here that wreak havoc on the famous and famously fragile sandstone cliffs.

The sea ice that used to encase the islands most winters, shielding them from the brunt of fierce storms and pounding waves, is shrinking at a rate of about 555 square miles annually, data shows. Thats a swath of ice larger than Los Angeles.

Even as that natural defense collapses, sea levels have been rising at a rate roughly twice the global norm in recent years, researchers say.

The result is an escalating battle against erosion and flooding one that a growing number of coastal populations face, from islands in the South Pacific to communities along the U.S. East Coast.

In the Magdalen Islands, the consequences are unmistakable: Some parts of the shoreline have lost as much as 14 feet per year to the sea over the past decade. Key roads face perpetual risk of washing out. The hospital and the city hall sit alarmingly close to deteriorating cliffs. Rising waters threaten to contaminate aquifers used for drinking water. And each year, the sea inches closer to more homes and businesses.

Guillaume Marie, a geography professor at the University of Quebec at Rimouski, has studied coastal hazards around Quebec for years. He said the islands inhabitants are pioneers of a sort, as they wrestle with the daily challenges posed by climate change.

In Quebec, its clearly the most vulnerable place, he said. They are the first ones who are facing these kinds of problems.

Even the good news is worrisome, as Mario Cyr, a Magdalen Islands native and renowned underwater cinematographer, discovered last summer.

Cyr, who has crisscrossed the world from the Arctic to Antarctica to film nature documentaries, was astounded by what he found when he went diving in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

It was the end of the annual lobster season. Fishing crews had hauled millions of pounds of lobster from the gulf, reveling in historic catches. But when Cyr ventured roughly 50 feet down, he saw that the seafloor remained full of lobsters, almost as if the fishing had yet to begin.

Its not normal, he said one morning inside Bistro Plonge Alpha, the restaurant he owns on the northern tip of the islands.

Like baffled clammers in Uruguay and the struggling lobster industry off the fast-warming coast of Rhode Island, islanders here are anxious about the shifting sea. The deep waters of the gulf also have warmed more than 2 degrees Celsius over the past century, scientists have found, raising concerns about the fisheries that power the economy in communities around coastal Quebec.

As residents witness the changes, they worry their children and grandchildren will inherit a far different place than the one they have always known. And as the growing problems threaten fragile infrastructure, local officials spend their days figuring out how to try to hold back the encroaching sea and where to simply surrender to it.

They remember the ice.

The fishermen, the mayor, the 101-year-old woman in her hilltop house built with wood from an old shipwreck all of them describe the mystical look the frozen gulf once had in winter and the feeling of utter isolation from the rest of the world.

It used to be all ice, as far as the eye could see. ... Youd look out, and all you could see was white. Now you look out, and its just the ocean, said Geraldine Burke, now 72. The changes Ive seen in the last 10 years have been astounding.

My grandfather said he could remember when there was one winter with no ice, said Serge Bourgeois, 53, the planning director for the municipality of Iles-de-la-Madeleine. Now, if ice materializes at all around the islands in winter, it is exceptional.

While year-to-year variability exists, the amount of sea ice that blankets the Gulf of St. Lawrence is shrinking at a rate of roughly 12 percent per decade, according to data from the National Snow and Ice Data Center.

Walt Meier, a senior research scientist at the center, said the loss of sea ice leaves the islands exposed and ripe for erosion. The presence of ice acts like a cover on the ocean that dampens the waves of winter storms, he said.

A number of harrowing storms have clobbered the islands in recent years, including last November, when 75 mph winds and massive waves knocked out power and communication with mainland Quebec. Sections of the main road were damaged and sand dunes obliterated. The Canadian military flew in workers to help restore power and check on residents.

Isabelle Cormier, 42, who returned last year from Australia to raise her children on her native islands, said that storm left many people particularly rattled.

This is home, and hopefully it will be here for a while. But I dont know, its going quick, said Cormier, who saw her familys small beach cottage inundated after a towering dune that had shielded it for decades washed away in hours. To witness it in one lifetime, its shocking.

The islands have long been home to hardy French and English seafarers, who are no stranger to the risks posed by nature.

Inside a small, century-old church in Old Harry, hundreds of black-and-white portraits hang in tribute to those lost at sea over the decades.

The Acadian refugees who colonized the archipelago in the latter half of the 18th century brought with them their unique strain of French and their Catholic faith. Other residents, including the islands minority English-speaking community, trace their roots to the survivors of shipwrecks that claimed vessels off these shores in the 18th and 19th centuries.

The land they occupy is an Edward Hopper landscape come to life. Brightly colored houses dot rolling green hills. Lighthouses cling to jagged sandstone cliffs. Massive sand dunes guard salt marshes and serene lagoons, and unspoiled beaches stretch for miles.

But as the sea ice that traditionally protected these islands shrinks, the sea that surrounds them is swelling.

Between 1964 and 2013, the waters along the coast of the archipelago rose an average of about 4.3 millimeters per year. Since 2000, that rate has been closer to 7 millimeters, or more than a quarter of an inch per year, said Marie, the geography professor. That trend is expected to continue.

While the numbers seem small and the data covers only a limited period, the change could result in multiple feet of sea level rise by centurys end.

For more than a decade, researchers have maintained a network of more than 1,100 coastal monitoring stations around the islands perimeter, which paint a portrait of how erosion is altering the shoreline. While some spots are relatively stable, others have steadily receded year after year. Severe storms have claimed as much as 55 feet of shoreline all at once.

The Post relied on data from Berkeley Earth, an independent group that analyzes temperature data, for its findings about how the islands have already warmed more than 2 degrees Celsius a threshold world leaders have pledged not to allow the globe to surpass.

Canadian researchers, who drew on air temperature records dating to 1873, have documented a similar change. Researcher Peter Galbraith and colleagues found the region has warmed about 1.9 degrees Celsius (3.4 degrees Fahrenheit).

Milder winters and longer summers have kept the tourists coming some 80,000 trekked here last year to wind surf, bike and bird-watch many arriving on a ferry that now runs year-round.

But the islands fragility has brought them a sort of grim notoriety. Time magazine put the Magdalen Islands on its list of 10 amazing places to visit before they vanish. Architectural Digest included them on its 30 places to visit before theyre gone forever.

Madelinots, as locals call themselves, have no intention of vanishing anytime soon. But researchers estimate that without serious action, hundreds of structures and miles of roads could fall victim to erosion and flooding in coming decades.

We can try adaptation. We must try it, Marie said. But the solutions could be very expensive.

At 17, Bourgeois left his native islands to study in Montreal. Eventually, like many Madelinots, he felt the pull of home.

When he began his career, the idea that climate change would seriously threaten the islands seemed a stretch. Now, he spends his days worrying about how to protect infrastructure from crumbling cliffs, eroding dunes and rising seas.

It wasnt part of the job description. Now, its my priority, he said. In 30 years, it has completely changed.

As climate change bears down on the islands, he views them as a laboratory, a place where we can study ways to adapt.

In recent years, local officials have singled out a half dozen locations that must somehow be protected including the municipal headquarters and the hospital.

Another priority is the low-lying, historic fishing village of La Grave, a bustling tourist destination lined with shops and restaurants. Its weatherworn buildings sit on a spit of rocky beach only feet from the rising gulf.

Marie-Claude Vigneault, co-owner of Caf de la Grave, said last falls storm ripped away the rear terrace from her 150-year-old building. It does worry me, she said of future storms, noting that when the restaurant closes each winter, workers remove the tables and anything else that could get damaged by flooding.

Then there are the roads, none more critical than Route 199, the islands main artery. Maintained by the provincial government, it connects the islands with bridges and causeways, often running along slivers of land hemmed in on both sides by water.

Officials have added a dozen miles of massive rocks around parts of the island to shore up dunes and protect power poles and stretches of road. But much of the rock must be imported from New Brunswick or Nova Scotia. It is expensive and can be an eyesore. And officials have realized that protecting one spot can divert water and create another problem nearby.

A lot of what we are doing is trial and error, Bourgeois said. And there are unintended consequences.

In locations in need of immediate attention, officials often rely on huge amounts of sand to replenish dunes and beaches. Its a quicker, cheaper solution, and sand is abundant on the islands. But its a temporary fix the sea is always hungry.

Jonathan Lapierre, now in his second term as Iles-de-la-Madeleines mayor, refers to the approach as nourrir le monstre. Feeding the monster.

Officials say the local government simply cant afford to spend huge sums to protect places that arent economically essential.

Not everything can be fixed; not everything can be saved, Bourgeois said, noting that parking lots, hiking trails and scenic overlooks already have been relocated to sturdier ground. In some cases, you have to accept retreat.

Already, nearly a dozen homes on the islands have been relocated, and most everyone expects that number to grow.

The government of Quebec has set aside tens of millions of dollars to help with coastal erosion across the sprawling province. But Lapierre estimated it will take upward of $100 million in coming years to shore up infrastructure on the Magdalen Islands alone much of it to safeguard Route 199, raise buildings and reinforce the shoreline near the hospital and city hall.

The municipalitys total annual budget is roughly $26 million.

We need more money, more human resources, more help, the mayor said. With just the municipality alone, its impossible to protect the islands completely.

But the Canadian government, where lawmakers in June declared a national climate emergency, is navigating an array of calamities.

Thousands in eastern Canada were forced to evacuate this year after monumental flooding. In the countrys Northwest Territories, melting permafrost is threatening roads and structures. Troops have been strained not only by overseas deployments, but also by constant missions to help after floods, wildfires and other disasters.

Amid so many priorities, Lapierre and other officials keep lobbying for aid, emphasizing the islands importance as a vacation destination, its history and its future.

I hope my daughter will be able to live her life here, Lapierre said, and also my daughters daughter.

Across the islands, the wharfs brim with tales about fishermen ordering bigger boats, upgrading their engines and buying new pickup trucks. A local boatbuilding shop is booked with orders more than a year out.

For now, the hundreds of lobster fishermen and women on the Magdalen Islands, are delighted to be catching double or more what boats here caught barely a decade ago. Fishermen who once expected to haul in 15,000 pounds of lobster during the nine-week season that begins each spring now say 30,000 to 40,000 pounds isnt uncommon.

Last year was the best year in 40 to 50 years. And this year has been even better, Claude Cyr, 67, said one morning as he unloaded the days haul from his boat, Cap Bleu.

But the captains who have long fished these waters know that if the gulf continues to warm, the lobsters that have flocked north from places such as Maine might one day keep moving, taking the good times with them.

Were all worried about that, said Sidney Clark, 63, as he checked each of his nearly 300 traps one morning.

Mario Cyr, the underwater cinematographer, said the bizarre lobster scene he witnessed on the sea floor last summer brought to mind Inuit hunters hed met in the Arctic, where climate change has shifted hunting seasons in confounding ways and altered the rhythms of everyday life.

Right now, we are lucky, said Cyr, 59. We have the ideal temperature for lobsters. But nobody knows how long it will last.

In September, Hurricane Dorian delivered the latest lesson on fragility.

The storm, which ravaged the Bahamas on its way up the Atlantic coast, was weakening but still packed winds topping 80 miles per hour as it plowed through the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

That was enough to once again pummel the Magdalen Islands.

Business owners in La Grave watched as water flooded their shops. Several homes were destroyed, including along a popular strip lined with about 30 seaside cottages that officials now insist will be abandoned for good over the next year the latest retreat, but certainly not the last.

The storm tossed boats ashore like bath toys. Massive waves pounded the sandstone cliffs, tearing away large sections in places. Storm surges blocked roads. Thousands of homes lost power.

People are very emotional right now, Mayor Lapierre said during a news conference the day after the storm. It was a long night. Some probably havent slept and today are seeing their investments, their dreams and goals swept away.

One of those people was Cynthia Baril, who co-owns two rental cottages on the quaint strip that will now be surrendered to the sea. She has spent long hours trying to find a new place to move the homes, agonizing over the small fortune it will take to do so and mourning the loss of a place she called a little paradise.

Has Dorian caused significant damage? she asked. Yes, and not just to the cottages, but to people, too.

Bourgeois said residents have reacted with their typical resilience, but also with a measure of acceptance about what increasingly seems like a new reality. Two crippling storms had hit the islands in 10 months, the second during a time of year that typically is calm. Now, the winter storm season lies ahead, and with it, another season of uncertainty and angst.

Crews continue fortifying parts of Route 199, trying to hold the swelling waters at bay. The fishermen have stored their wooden traps until spring, when they can return to the lobster-filled gulf. Adele Chiasson sits in her house atop the bluff, hoping the cliffs keep their distance. She tried to sell several years ago, but there were no takers.

A lot of people really liked the house, she said, but when they went out back, they were afraid.

Like other Madelinots, she is left to wait and worry, to hope and to carry on.

Nous sommes entours par locan. Il ny a nulle part o se cacher, Bourgeois said.

We are surrounded by the ocean. There is nowhere to hide.

Chris Mooney and Olivier Laurent contributed to this report.

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The ice used to protect them. Now their island is crumbling into the sea. - msnNOW

Chef Curtis Stone takes fine dining to the high seas with Princess Cruises – 7NEWS

He's the home-grown chef who's sauteed his way to international success.

Curtis Stone has cooked for some of the biggest celebrity names, become a firm fixture on our televisions, and has also launched two critically acclaimed restaurants in Los Angeles.

Watch the full story above.

Now, the father of two has dropped anchor on Aussie shores for an exciting new project - serving up some delicious dishes on board the Ruby Princess for some fine dining at sea.

More on 7NEWS.com.au

"I haven't opened a restaurant here but I've brought one with me," Stone said.

"I've got three restaurants with Princess Cruises and we're celebrating the Ruby Princess' arrival into Sydney.

"The restaurant's called Share, and we celebrate local ingredients. When you're cruising you're stimulated through so many different ways - so we want to slow time down a little bit.

"We serve a six-course menu and we encourage people to chill out, relax and take their time. And it's food that we've developed from our travels around the world."

Find out more about Share by Curtis Stone here. You can also catch him at Brisbane's Good Food and Wine Show this weekend at the Princess Theatre.

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Chef Curtis Stone takes fine dining to the high seas with Princess Cruises - 7NEWS

Chocolate-themed cruise to become Willy Wonka factory on the high seas – INQUIRER.net

A chocolate-themed cruise is set to lift anchor next spring that will sail with master chocolatiers, and quite literally, a boat-load of chocolate.

You could call it a dream trip for chocoholics: for eight days, the Costa Pacifica cruise liner will be transformed into a floating Willy Wonka chocolate factory, with tastings,workshops, tours and chocolate sculpting demonstrations planned throughout the trip.

The Costa Pacifica. Image: courtesy of The Costa Cruises via AFP Relaxnews

The cruise departs from the coastal Italian town of Civitavecchia and sails to Genoa, Barcelona, Palma de Mallorca, Malta and Catania in Sicily. The program is organized in partnership with Eurochocolate, an annual chocolate festival that takes place in Perugia, Italy.

Also on the itinerary is a shore excursion to the Chocolate Museum of Barcelona, which traces the history of chocolate and features a model of the citys famous Parc Guell, in chocolate form.

The Eurochocolate Cruise departs on April 16.

Princess Cruises also developed a Chocolate Journeys program with chocolatier Norman Love, whose chocolate confections and desserts are served in select main dining rooms across the fleet. The program also includes chocolate and wine pairing tastings and chocolate spa treatments. CL/JB

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Chocolate-themed cruise to become Willy Wonka factory on the high seas - INQUIRER.net

Get Ready To Set Sail at Online Casinos On the High Seas and Join Peter Pan in LOST BOYS LOOT – Tunf.com News

iSoftBet takes us back to Neverland in this slot, Lost Boys Loot! This 5-reel 20 line game will be available from the 31st of October.

iSoftBet is a game provider of online casino games, they have developed a huge variety of successful slots. They mostly develop 5-reel slots, with popular branded titles such as TV programs and films as their themes.

It has over 170 game titles to its name. They are high quality games that are also playable on social platforms otherwise known as social casinos.

iSoftBet has been nominated many times for games award. In 2019, it was nominated for two awards which include Mobile Supplier of the Year category as well as being in contention for the RNG Casino supplier of the Year award.

Imagination has a significant role to play, in a game which involves Peter Pan. This online slot is a cartoon adventure of little boys sailing a ship and seeking for treasure. Pirate ship is the location of the game, while as the main symbols we get different characters, clocks and treasure maps, along with images of Peter Pan, Captain Hook, and Treasure Chests. The four card suits are part of the games symbols as well, in the less relevant positions. Theyve taken back the story of the children that never got old, into a game with fun features and big rewards.

Lost Boys Loot is a slot full of exciting features with 5 reels and 20 paylines. It is compatible with desktop and mobile devices, 20 fixed pay lines with single or double-stacked symbols. There are Hook stacked Wilds too and our main scatter is Peter Pan although a Chest can trigger a different bonus game here. The pays for 5-of-a-kinds are Gappy Kid 25x bet, Fat Kid 15x, Goofy Kid 10x, Alarm Clock or Map 7.5x with four coloured card suits paying 5 down to 2.5x. Its not all nappy changes and formula milk here though as the toddlers seem to get a fair bit of entertainment on this good ship.

Betting range is 0.20 20 per spin. The max bet is quite low, and the seasoned casino players are probably seconds away from hitting the Exit button. Although it is true that this is not the highest paying slot out there, it is a nice pick for casual players as it comes with the industry standard 96% RTP, combined with a decent hit rate.

The normal top wins of Lost Boys Loot will touch 500x total stake, which could mean $10,000 cash in a single spin. Add the potential multipliers of up to 8x, which some of the free spins can deliver, to get 4,000x, or up to $80,000 cash. Its a higher win than in many of the other iSoftBet slots.

Lost Boys Loot displays 2 wild modifiers that can be triggered randomly on any base game spin1. Tick-Tocks Wild Chomp feature: The Tick-Tock the Croc can be appeared under the reels. If a Captain Hook wild lands on the reels, Tick-Tock the Croc will hop out of the water and chomp Captain Hook, this will make any symbols under the wild to also mutate into a wild.2. Tinks Touch feature: This feature can automatically appear and turn between 3 and 5 symbols into wilds.

The other exciting feature is Duelling Free Spins feature which can br triggered when you get 3 or more Peter Pan bonus symbols on reels 1, 3 and 5 3, 4 or 5 Peter Pan bonus symbols will give you 10, 20 or 30 free spins respectively. While this feature is in action, Captain Hook extended wilds can appear on any reel. This will boost the multiplier by 1 each time he appears. If both a Peter Pan bonus and extended Captain Hook wild symbol land on the same free spin, they duel which will give you additional free spins or increases the multiplier level.

The Slot comes with a Hooks Treasure Trap Free Spins feature this can be triggered when you land an extended Captain Hook wild on the middle reel, then spin the wheel to win 5, 8, 10 or 12 free spins. During the feature, the Captain Hook extended wild remains fixed in position. Captain Hook then fires off traps onto any winning symbols which locks them in place until no more of the same symbols land on a winning payline.

This feature can be triggered when the treasure chest bonus symbol lands anywhere on the reels. You then simply pick from 3 treasure chests to win a cash bonus as well as gaining entry to 1 of the free spins features.

Lost Boys Loot will give us exciting features, decent graphics and excellent top payouts, so it has the potential to be a slot machine thats worth playing in the long run. The gameplay contains a lot of different elements. Its bright theme and smorgasbord of extras make the slot intriguing.

The only fail is that Peter Pan and Neverland were all about magic, about being young forever, and about flying. A bit more emotional soundtrack would have engrossed fans of the Pan fantasy a bit more.

It is an above-average slot that is surely easy on the eyes. It does possess a charm that makes spinning its reels adventurous. The number of extras iSoftBet has managed to bang in is interesting and fun to discover. This slot will be enjoyed by casual gamers who will admire the mix of features and the gentle volatility, and the players who look for a stronger hit wont be impressed much. A top prize of 500x the bet is technically possible on one spin, and when you factor in multipliers this could conceivably reach solid amounts. However the top prize has been capped at 48,190 coins, or around2,410x the total bet. So finally The Lost Boys Loot is a slot well worth a spin and sufficient enough to get entertained.

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Get Ready To Set Sail at Online Casinos On the High Seas and Join Peter Pan in LOST BOYS LOOT - Tunf.com News

SMOOTH SAILING: Couple tie the knot on the high seas – Morning Bulletin

KIHA Bonney grew up dreaming of a wedding at her childhood holiday spot, Great Keppel Island.

Fast forward to September 14, 2019 her dream came true - with a twist.

Kiha and her husband-to-be Dave Cowhan, were married on-board the Freedom Fast Cats boat, the Freedom Sovereign.

The couple said 'I do' in the middle of the ocean.

Kiha grew up visiting the island and her parents bought the old Rainbow Hut, renaming it Tropical Vibes, and moved to the island permanently a few years ago.

The wedding party on the Freedom Fast Cats glass bottom boat which was used to take them to get bridal photos.

Dave proposed to Kiha on holidays in Europe. He popped the question in Santorini, Greece, where Kiha's grandfather was from.

When they began planning the wedding, Kiha knew what she wanted.

"I always imagined if I was to get married it would be over on Great Keppel Island," she said.

The wedding was Kiha's childhood dream come true.

She wanted to do something different and came up with the idea of the getting married on the boat and when she contacted Freedom Fast Cats, they were really enthusiastic.

The girls got ready at Kiha's parents house and the boys next door.

The bridal party Mel Wright, Jess Roth, Bree Close, Courtney Taylor and Lucy Doxanakis with bride Kiha Cowhan.

Guests were picked up from the marina in Freedom Sovereign and those already on the island were taken on the glass bottom boat out to big boat.

The bridal party snuck on the boat and hide in the wheelhouse until it was time.

Kiha Cowhan with captain Max Allen of Freedom Fast Cats. The bridal party hide in the wheelhouse until the ceremony began when they docked at Long Beach.

The day turned out to be perfect with three to five knots and the wind blowing northerly, making their preferred location of Long Beach the best spot to anchor and the couple said their vows, amid the Keppel seas in front of 150 guests on the boat.

The married couple, Kiha and Dave Cowhan on the new boardwalk between Monkey Beach and Long Beach.

Long Beach had always been Kiha's favourite spot on the island, as it is private and you get to have it all to yourself.

The couple were also the first bride and groom to walk down the new boardwalk.

Reception party at Kiha's parent's business, Tropical Vibes on Great Keppel Island.

Dave moved to Rockhampton a few years ago to play for the CQ Capras.

Coming from country NSW, a wedding on a boat was quite different for his family but luckily it was all smooth sailing.

"I think it sounded crazy but when they saw the Sovreign it worked," Kiha said.

Dave and Kiha Cowhan were married on the seas around Kiha's dream location, Great Keppel Island.

"Being such an outdoor ceremony, weather was a concern and we didn't have a back-up plan, just faith it would work.

"Over there you are lucky you can always find a beach that is protected," she said.

"September, just from experience, is always known to be a beautiful time of year."

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SMOOTH SAILING: Couple tie the knot on the high seas - Morning Bulletin

Oldsmar wants to spend $125,000 on a climate assessment. Heres what that means. – Tampa Bay Times

OLDSMAR The city at the top of the bay is planning to spend upwards of $125,000 on a climate change plan.

The Oldsmar City Council voted unanimously this month to put a call out to consultants to come up with a rundown of the threats posed by climate change. The document, which the city is calling a climate resiliency study, will also include potential solutions to those challenges.

And there are challenges, said Nan Bennett, the citys director of public works, in an interview.

High water is our highest vulnerability, whether thats flooding or storm surge or sea level rise, Bennett said.

A map from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration that projects sea level rise onto coastal communities shows parts of southern Oldsmar threatened by water after just 1 foot of sea level rise. A recent series of projections by scientists with the Tampa Bay Climate Science Advisory Panel showed that the region as a whole is likely to see between 1.9 and 8.5 feet of sea level rise by 2100.

Related story: A group of scientists just presented updated sea level rise projections to Tampa Bay politicians. Heres what they say.

The sea level rise will be caused by climate change, those scientists project. Greenhouse gas emissions from the burning of fossil fuels trap heat in the atmosphere, gradually warming the globe. That warming causes water particles themselves to expand, and polar land ice to melt. Both phenomena lead to sea level rise.

Thats why Oldsmar is taking steps to adjust to a watery future. Ashlee Painter, Oldsmars sustainability coordinator, said the citys plan would cover topics ranging from infrastructure to public health. (A changing climate doesnt just mean higher seas, it means more extreme heat.)

In the study, officials are also asking for a way to include climate data in decision making, according to the October agenda item.

Some of the citys climate change planning is already underway. Oldsmars water reclamation facility on Lafayette Boulevard is just a few hundred yards from Tampa Bay. The city isnt waiting to hear from a consultant; its begun the process of raising the facilitys control building, Bennett said. Hopefully, those efforts will make the building more resilient.

Related story: Climate change is here. Will Tampa Bay finally get ready?

In the process of formulating a climate change plan, Oldsmar has taken more of a wait-and-see approach. Painter closely watched as other cities particularly Sarasota formed their own climate change vulnerability and adaptation plans in recent years. Because it observed other governments, Painter said, Oldsmar now has a better idea what to ask from consultants in a climate assessment.

The city will hear back from potential consultants next month. Its expected to finalize the $125,000 contract in January.

Once the study is complete, the recommendations wont automatically become law. But Bennett said the city council is looking for actionable items from the study.

We live here because we love it, but there are inherent risks with living here, Bennett said.

Related story: It might be the Pinellas city most threatened by climate change. Heres what its doing to plan.

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Oldsmar wants to spend $125,000 on a climate assessment. Heres what that means. - Tampa Bay Times

80 years ago a Connecticut inventor patented an icon of prepdom: the boat shoe. – Connecticut Magazine

Today, Sperry Top-Siders come in a variety of styles and colors.

It was a brush with death paired with a dogs surefootedness that inspired the now-classic piece of footwear: the boat shoe.

In the 1930s, Paul Sperry was an executive at New Havens Pond Lily Co., a dyer and finisher of fabrics and shoes. In his spare time he would often take to his beloved sailboat, a cutter named Sirocco, on the waters around Connecticuts coast. Sailing was part of Sperrys family: His great-grandfather had regaled him as a boy with tales of the South Seas, and Sperrys younger brother, Armstrong Sperry, would become a celebrated writer of sailing adventures, winning the Newbery Medal for his 1940 work Call It Courage.

But Paul Sperrys own sailing adventures didnt always go smoothly. According to the Sperry companys official history, after sailing through unusually rough seas, Sperry slipped on the wet deck and fell overboard, almost dying in the process. After this harrowing experience, he decided to try to make the sea a safer place by designing a shoe with better traction. The existing shoes for boating were merely ordinary leather shoes with rubber soles. Sperry wanted a shoe capable of gripping boat decks even when they became slick with water, as they inevitably would.

He began working on various designs, but with little success until the winter of 1935, when he watched his dog run without slipping across the ice on a cold Connecticut day. He examined his four-legged friends paw and noticed the pads contained an intricate pattern of cracks. These natural grooves helped account for the animals surefootedness. Sperry decided to imitate those patterns. He experimented with cutting patterns of grooves into gum-rubber shoe soles, The New York Times noted in 1986. Through trial and many errors, he finally discovered that slits carved into a sole in parallel herringbone patterns afforded the superior grip he was after.

In 1939, 80 years ago this month, Sperry was granted a patent for what would become the worlds first boat shoe. The most popular early design was the Sperry Top-Sider. It quickly became an in-demand item for boating enthusiasts. Many members of the Cruising Club of America wrote Sperry to request a pair of the shoes, and at the outbreak of World War II, Sperry attracted what is arguably the best client for a boating-related product: the U.S. Navy, which named the Top-Sider one of its official shoes.

U.S. Rubber bought the Top-Sider patents shortly after they were granted, but Sperry continued with the company as a consultant. And the boat shoes continued to increase in popularity. They had already conquered the high seas, but they were destined for success on land as well. Not only were the shoes comfortable, they came with an implied sense of status few other products did. After all, if you had boat shoes, the implication was that you had a boat. Landlubbers began to clamor for them. In the 1960s the Kennedy family was photographed wearing the shoes, and they became popular on college campuses and among surfers.

In 1980, The Official Preppy Handbook endorsed the shoes, cementing their link to popped-collar fashion. These days the shoes enjoy continued popularity and are worn by men and women alike during the summer months.

Earlier this year, Nick Sullivan, Esquires former fashion director, was asked by a reader of that magazine if it was OK to wear socks with boat shoes. Listen carefully and no one need get hurt, he wrote in response. Never put boat shoes and socks in the same sentence again the best-dressed sailors always go bare ankle.

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80 years ago a Connecticut inventor patented an icon of prepdom: the boat shoe. - Connecticut Magazine

Britain was built on the backs of slaves. A memorial is the least they deserve – The Guardian

Hows your Black History Month going so far? Ive given a dozen talks including one at a large firm where I was heckled by a senior partner who was furious that I was stressing the integral role of black people in British history. Ive talked to hundreds of black people about what life is like for them in predominantly white spaces.

If I were to boil all those interactions down to one issue, it would be how we remember what really happened what place it has in the nation, what visual guides exist to help us actually see this history, what narratives we tell. And the problem with Black History Month is that its still just that. A month. Even in the best-case scenario where it gets maximum airtime, its still just a twelfth of our annual headspace. Thats a minimisation that echoes the lived experience of black people, still feeling the pressure to make themselves smaller in a world that too often regards us as marginal.

The wrecks of slave ships speak of African resistance, of remarkable rebellions and subversion on the high seas

That there is very little of this history to see is undeniably part of the problem. Delivering this message to mostly white audiences, no matter how well intentioned, during the first half of Black History Month often makes me feel exoticised. So my survival strategy is to spend the second half in Ghana, whose flag blazes a black star, because here blackness is a source of both pride and normality.

Yet the same pressures of erasure have operated on the way history is remembered in Africa, too. One of the first events I went to this month, once I arrived in the Ghanaian capital, Accra, was about a project to take the architectural plans of the almost 50 slave forts built by the British and other Europeans, and which pepper the Ghanaian coast and turn them into pieces of art. These castles are being described as a crucial, visible part of the puzzle for those still struggling to understand the interconnectedness of people of African heritage to British history.

Another set of artworks, which I have spent this year exploring, is the wrecks of slave ships that are littered across the bed of the Atlantic Ocean but are barely seen or acknowledged. These watery graveyards speak to the full scale of European exploitation of Africans, but also of African resistance and agency, of remarkable rebellions and subversion on the high seas.

As I and others have argued before, one reason that British people feel complacent about Britains role in pioneering slavery, and the racism that underpinned it, is that it happened slightly farther away. The Caribbean is Britains own Deep South, where enslavement and segregation as brutal as anything that existed on American soil took place at the hands of British people. And that distance facilitates denial.

If there is one useful thing we can all do this Black History Month, it is to bridge that distance. And that raises the question: why is there no memorial to enslaved Africans, on whose backs Britain was built, on British soil?

Theres a simple answer, and a complex one. The straightforward explanation is that despite the work of one tireless group Oku Ekpenyon and her organisation Memorial 2007 campaigning for such a memorial for nearly two decades, the government has failed to support it. Ekpenyons Remembering Enslaved Africans and Their Descendants memorial secured planning permission for a space in the rose gardens in Hyde Park, commissioned a design by the sculptor Les Johnson and raised nearly 100,000. Many black British people myself included have given our money, time or energy to supporting it. But on 7 November the planning permission will expire, and the site will be lost if 4m cannot be raised.

Thats not for want of a sophisticated campaign, or high-profile backing. Patrons of Memorial 2007 include Kate Davson, the great-great-great-granddaughter of the abolitionist William Wilberforce; the archbishop of York, John Sentamu; Paul Boateng, the first black cabinet minister in British history; and Doreen Lawrence.

But without the support of the government, 4m is an impossible target to reach. Memorial 2007 has tried repeatedly to secure that support, having reached out to every prime minister from Tony Blair to Boris Johnson. The announcement in 2015 of 50m in support for a Holocaust memorial raised the groups hopes. It suggested that there was a renewed interest in remembering painful historic events. But that interest, it seems, does not extend to black Britons.

Its true that the countrys treatment of people descended from this history could not be more shameful. From the institutionalised racism they experienced fighting for Britain in both world wars, to the attempts to deport members of the Windrush generation just last year, they have endured the worst of what Britain has had to offer.

But this campaign is not requesting a favour for a marginal section of society. The history of how we came to be this nation is a history for us all. If we cant dignify it with a simple memorial, one whose location, design, importance and even planning permission have already been established, then we really have lost the plot.

Afua Hirsch is a Guardian columnist

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Britain was built on the backs of slaves. A memorial is the least they deserve - The Guardian