Love Island’s Olivia Buckland and Alex Bowen named the show’s richest contestants ever – Irish Mirror

Love Island power couple Olivia Buckland and Alex Bowen are rumoured to be the richest contestants to have ever emerged from the hit ITV2 dating show.

In estimates from heat magazines Rich List 2019, it is claimed the married couple have amassed a huge 4.2million fortune since leaving the sun-soaked Mallorca villa back in 2016.

Olivia, 25, and Alex, 28, have reportedly made the most money after carving out careers as mega influencers with high street shopping collaborations, TV deals, a high profile wedding and creating their own fashion label.

This year's Heat Rich List has uncovered the pair - who didn't even win the show - as the reality programme's biggest earners.

The list, which reveals an under-30 list for nine years, with the help of various company accounts and TV contracts has highlighted Alex and Olivias incredible wealth.

They were the first couple from the show to tie the knot, getting married in September 2018 and netting a reported 25,000 magazine deal.

Their lucrative wedding ceremony captured the heart of the nation as their extravagant big day was also captured with a special TV show on TLC.

The power couple then scooped another reality show with Olivia & Alex: Happily Ever After? which explores their swanky Essex home, tropical holidays and everyday life as parents to their two French bulldogs.

They've both carved out careers as social media influencers, and Olivia has walked on the catwalk and released her own clothing range.

The couple recently launched their own fashion label, Exempt Society, which is expected to earn them 950,000 in the next two years.

It's thought they both earn around 2,000 per sponsored social media post, and do at least one each a day, as well as earning big pay packets for club appearances and modelling stints.

They've also had TV presenting jobs and taken part in other reality shows.

Before soaring to fame on Love Island, Olivia worked as a sales executive in Essex while, Alex made his living as a scaffolder in Wolverhampton.

The wealthy duo are currently enduring a 50-mile hike over the world overs highest mountain range the Himalayas.

The married couple are taking part alongside Frankie Bridge and Nadia Sawalha to hike eight hours each day to raise 1m for charity CoppaFeel.

Their challenging charity hike comes after they recently celebrated their one-year wedding anniversary last month with a lavish romantic break in Santorini.

The 30 Richest Celebrities 30 and Under appears in this weeks heat magazine (Tuesday 29 October).

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Love Island's Olivia Buckland and Alex Bowen named the show's richest contestants ever - Irish Mirror

Love Island’s Curtis Pritchard says Strictly may not be the right move for him – Mirror Online

Curtis Prichard dropped the bombshell Strictly Come Dancing may not be the right move for him.

The reality star, of Love Island fame, said he could simply be too busy to join his brother AJ Pritchard and Strictly's star-studded cast.

Having been catapulted into fame over the summer, the dancer has been thrown into the fast-paced life of a reality star.

The Greatest Dancer star bragged with all the opportunities he has going for him, he may not have time for Strictly.

Speaking at Pride of Britain, he told the Mirror Online: "Who knows what the future holds up.

"If the opportunity comes up at the right time, but Im so fortunate so lucky to have so many opportunities.

"It may not be the right move to do who knows really?"

Curtis found fame on Love Island in 2019 when he crossed paths and fell in love with Maura Higgins.

Now the professional ballroom star has been exercising his dancing talents to assist his girlfriend with her Dancing On Ice gig.

His brother AJ has been a star with a celebrity partner on Strictly since 2016.

And Curtis has made no secret of wanting to join his brother on the show previously.

The hunk will have a minor role on The Greatest Dancer next series.

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Love Island's Curtis Pritchard says Strictly may not be the right move for him - Mirror Online

Pollock will preserve island’s quality of life | Letter to the editor – Bainbridge Island Review

To the editor:

I want to recommend supporting Michael Pollock, candidate for the city councils South Ward.

Michael is a NOAA scientist and a defender of our comprehensive plan. We all know that pressure for population growth on Bainbridge Island is strong. The comprehensive plan, our guideline for managing that growth, stipulates where high density construction projects are to be permitted and where they are not permitted. This award-winning plan is our hard earned effort for compromise between the ever-present forces for growth and the need for reasonable preservation.

It is my observation that there are those on the council who chafe at governmental limitations on property owners development rights, and application for up-zoning exceptions will continue to be a tool available to property developers. Michael knows this and he promises to be a force on the council for honoring the comprehensive plan as written and resisting the profit motive of special interests.

Please take a look at Michaels website, http://www.pollock4council.com for an in-depth look at his policy proposals and perspectives. Michael understands that we need defenders of the common wealth in order to preserve the quality of life we share here on Bainbridge Island. Now more than ever.

SCOTT LAWRENCE

Bainbridge Island

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Pollock will preserve island's quality of life | Letter to the editor - Bainbridge Island Review

City of Davenport removing some flood measures, re-opening Credit Island – KWQC-TV6

DAVENPORT, Iowa (KWQC) - The City of Davenport is removing some flood measures as the Mississippi River continues to drop.

In an update released Tuesday, city officials said the river may fall below 15 feet this weekend.

"Keeping our fingers crossed that the Mississippi continues to drop before winter fully arrives," the post stated.

Officials say Parks and Public Works crews may have Credit Island reopened later this week after debris removal and temporary patching is complete.

Crews will also finish removing the temporary flood walls at Modern Woodmen Park by the end of the day on Wednesday.

The following measures will stay in place until river levels fall more and cleaning can be done:

Roads: - S Concord is closed between River Dr and Utah. The river will need to fall below 14 FT before portions can be re-opened.- Gaines St is closed S of River Dr. This stretch should re-open at the end of the day Wed Oct 30.

Recreation: - Credit Island may re-open later in the week. The recreational trail between Marquette and Credit Island will remain closed until river levels fall below 14.5 FT.- The riverfront walk between LeClaire Park and Marquette is closed. Look for news on re-opening next week.- The dock at Marquette St Landing is in place; however, it is unusable due to the river level.

Facilities: - The flood wall at Modern Woodmen Park will be fully removed by the end of the day Wed Oct 30.- The River's Edge, Freight House Farmer's Market, and Modern Woodmen Park remain open for business.- The Compost Facility is accessible by taking Rockingham Rd/Hwy 22 to Wapello to Railroad Ave.

Other measures: - Pumps are set, and appropriate gates closed in various low-lying areas of the city.- Crews continue to monitor conditions and remain prepared to respond as necessary.

Another flood update will be issued next week.

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City of Davenport removing some flood measures, re-opening Credit Island - KWQC-TV6

A Bright-Green Island Stars in this Seriously Bold Forest Hills Kitchen – Washingtonian

The showstopper of an island is painted a custom shade. All photographs by Robert Radifera Photography.

If youre going to spend a lot of time in the kitchen, it might as well be in a bright, cheerful spot that makes you happyeven when youre washing dishes. That was the thinking that spurred this Forest Hills renovation by Nadia Subaran of Aidan Design.

The house, built in 1943, had seen several kitchen renovations over the years, which left a few too many quirky architectural flourishes. First, Subaran streamlined the bulkhead and got rid of some decorative columns, allowing the stunning circular windows to be front and center. From a functional standpoint, the single oven and small, inefficient island would have to go, though the ranges stunning copper hood got to stay. The client, a family of four, likes to cook and bake together, so a double oven was necessary, as was a bigger island with a second sink.

Inspired by her love of Mexican Otomi textiles and Swedish midcentury fabrics, the homeowner always knew that vibrant pops of color would figure prominently in the mostly white kitchen. That island turned out to be the perfect vehicle for a bold paint choice. When we saw that spring green, there was no going back, says Subaran.

While finding the right hue for the island happened quickly, the backsplash was another story. The owner was smitten with a tile shed seen in a photograph from almost 20 years ago. She tracked down the kitchens designer, who couldnt recall the manufacturer. Then she found a painter who could recreate it, but the colors werent quite right. Eventually, she traced the handmade clay tile to an importer in Austin. Nearly a year and a trip to Texas later, she finally had her backsplash. When the tile was delivered and installed, everything came together beautifully, says Subaran. Youd never know that tile created so much drama.

This article appears in theOctober 2019issue ofWashingtonian.

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Revealed: The law that means Argentina can never take Falkland Islands by force again – Express.co.uk

Peronist Fernandez is supported by former president Cristina Fernndez de Kirchner, and the populist left pair are making the British archipelago a central part of their nationalist campaign. Mr Fernandez said he wants to renew the claim of sovereignty of the Falkland Islands as one of his first points of business should Argentina elect him as their new leader in upcoming elections this Sunday. He is well on course to take presidency after storming to a 16 point lead in Augusts primary votes, leaving current President Mauricio Macri all but defeated barring a miracle.

However, Argentinas constitution makes this promise very difficult to fulfil.

Amended in 1994, it suggests that Argentina can never take the islands by force.

The documents instructs the nations government that any recovery of the territories must be done within the realms of international law.

It reads: The Argentine Nation ratifies its legitimate and non-prescribing sovereignty over the Malvinas, Georgias del Sur and Sandwich del Sur Islands and over the corresponding maritime and insular zones, as they are an integral part of the National territory.

The recovery of said territories and the full exercise of sovereignty, respectful of the way of life of their inhabitants and according to the principles of international law, are a permanent and unrelinquished goal of the Argentine people.

Even if Ms de Kirchner, who released a video earlier this year reiterating her desire to take back the islands, wanted to amend the constitution to justify a land grab, she is likely to find it politically impossible.

The constitution states that the document may only be amended with at least two-thirds support in Congress.

It reads: The Constitution may be totally or partially amended.

READ MORE:Falklands Islands warning: Argentina election sets alarm bells ringing

The necessity of reform must be declared by Congress with the vote of at least two-thirds of the members; but it shall not be carried out except by an Assembly summoned to that effect.

An Argentinian expert has suggested, however, that Britain need not worry about a repeat of the 1982 Falklands war any time soon.

Dr Daniel Ozarow, senior lecturer at Middlesex University, told Express.co.uk in August that it was highly unlikely Argentina would take any sort of drastic action against the islands.

He said: After the 1982 war, there was a lot of reflection in Argentina about the Falkland Islands.

DON'T MISS:BBC fury: How Thatcher raged at treacherous Falklands War coverageWas Argentina cheated out of the Falklands? Online row eruptsFalklands Islands warning: Argentina election sets alarm bells ringing

They realised that they would never be able to take back the islands by force.

Argentina never gave up its sovereignty claim, but the United Nations decolonisation committee obliges Britain and Argentina to sit down and discuss the future of the island.

In April 1982, Argentine troops invaded the islands, but capitulated 74 days later to the British forces, with the death toll as a result of the war a devastating 649 - of which 255 soldiers were from the UK.

After the conflict between the UK and Argentina over the territory, a referendum was held in 2013 that saw 99.8 percent of Falklands residents vote to remain under British rule.

Just three of the 1,571 voters said they wanted to be under Argentine rule.

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Revealed: The law that means Argentina can never take Falkland Islands by force again - Express.co.uk

Seal of approval: Farne Islands population boom gathers pace – The Guardian

They are one of the worlds rarest seal species, officially endangered by a combination of water pollution, fishing nets and seaside tourism. But on the Farne Islands, off the Northumberland coast, the population of grey seal pups has increased by 57% in five years, with 2,737 born last year.

Rangers from the National Trust, which owns the islands, were predicting another bumper year as they began their pup count this week, taking aerial shots by drone and spraying newborns with special paint to keep tabs on their movements.

They use four colours in rotation to work out how many are born and how many die over the six-week pupping season. Natural selection means up to 50% of baby seals do not make it past their first year, with 30% dying in their first month, says Tom Hendry, who for the past four years has been one of the small group of rangers who are the only humans allowed to live on the islands.

He pointed to a forlorn bundle of white fur lying in the grass near the boat landing on Brownsman, one of 20 Farne islands visible at low tide. The pup was born at the weekend, but had not survived the bitter northerly winds and icy rain. It can be quite sad when you see the mum tapping the baby with their flipper to try to rouse them, but so many die that you do become a bit desensitised to it, he said.

Seal pups are not waterproof. It takes three weeks until their birth fluff is replaced with water-resistant fur and they have drunk enough fatty milk to develop a thick layer of insulating blubber.

Counting the pups can be tricky, says Hendry. Despite their image as the friendly teddy bears of the sea, seals can be quite aggressive, especially the males, known as bulls, who can be 2.7 metres long and weigh up to 233kg. Seals can move quite fast, particularly the bulls. Its all about not getting hemmed in between them and the sea, he said.

The bulls fight over territory and cows (females), competing to get a whole harem pregnant, says Hendry. They even have a macho name: beachmasters. The rangers try to spray the pups when the beachmasters are off hunting, or at least looking the other way.

They work as a team of five, two armed with a spray bottle of the sort a gardener might use to spritz roses, two creating a distraction, and another keeping watch. I do like seals, but by the end of the count I do tend to have developed a love/hate relationship with them, says Hendry, watching as a mother tries to get her newborn to understand the concept of suckling 20 metres further down the beach.

At least two rangers live on Brownsman for nine months of the year, sharing a rundown cottage with no running water. Usually they do five-day stints and then go back to the mainland for a shower, but on Wednesday Hendry was 10 days in and very ready for a wash that did not just involve baby wipes.

In the early 19th century, the cottage was the childhood home of Grace Darling, who became a national hero after helping to rescue survivors from the shipwrecked Forfarshire in 1838. Little seems to have changed since her day, the floors still primitive stone slabs and the grubby sash windows still single-glazed, rattling in the wind. The rangers have a TV to pass the time and play board games; this years favourite has been a card game called Unstable Unicorns, where players compete to build a unicorn army while betraying their friends.

The rangers do not know for sure why the grey seal population has grown so quickly in recent years, with an estimated 300,000 now living worldwide. The main theory is that they have plenty of food and a lack of predators, Hendry said. In the North Sea they have not had an enemy since orcas stopped patrolling the waters in the 1970s and are omnivorous, eating pretty much anything that swims or scampers on the seabed.

While celebrating the grey seal baby boom, the National Trust has begun to worry that these large mammals may come to over-dominate the fragile ecosystem of the Farne Islands, which is also a breeding ground for puffins, Arctic terns, shags and many other birds. An electric fence has been put up around one area of Brownsman to protect the flora and fauna, and to stop the lumbering seals flopping over the puffin burrows, destroying their summer homes.

But for now, they are enjoying the renaissance. Normally, National Trust stories are doom and gloom, about what climate change is doing to the natural world, said the trusts press officer, Jessica Harrison-Thomas, cooing over a newborn pup trying to work out how to use his flippers. This is lovely.

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Seal of approval: Farne Islands population boom gathers pace - The Guardian

An ancient island at the centre of the world – BBC News

With its crumbling ancient forts, narrow cobblestone streets and buildings made of coral rock and mangrove timber, Lamu Old Town in Kenya feels almost frozen in time. As the oldest and best-preserved Swahili settlement in East Africa, the Unesco-designated town (located on an island of the same name) was one of the most important trading centres in Africa during the 14th Century.

Lamu lies in the Indian Ocean about 240km north-east of the port city of Mombasa, which it rivalled as an entrept for gold, spices and slaves until most trade partners abolished slavery in the late 19th Century. As trade activity declined, Lamu Old Town held fast to its multicultural identity. Drawing influences from the Chinese, Portuguese, German, Indian and Arabian visitors who landed on its shores, Lamu created a unique amalgamation of food, language, art and architecture all its own over the centuries.

Now, though, Lamu island faces a wave of change that threatens to alter the isle and its unique culture forever. A massive seven-part, 20bn development infrastructure project called Lamu Port, South Sudan, Ethiopia Transport Corridor looms on the horizon. When completed, this ambitious undertaking in Lamu county will link Kenya, Ethiopia and South Sudan through railways, highways, pipelines and a 32-berth deep-sea port in Lamu. In addition, the transport corridor will be built alongside a Chinese-funded coal plant that could increase greenhouse gases in the area by up to 700%.

Only time will tell if Lamus historic, multicultural charm survive this new outside influence.

(Video by Thomas Lewton and Alice McCool, text by Emily Cavanagh)

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City breaks ground on new $77M Staten Island school – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- New York City officials broke ground Tuesday on a new $77 million four-story school building that will serve students on the North Shore.

The new building, which will be named PS 70, will be located in Stapleton on property that was previously occupied by an unused moving and storage warehouse. Located at 357 Targee St., the school is expected to provide 773 elementary school seats when it opens for the 2022-2023 school year.

School Construction Authority (SCA) President and CEO Lorraine Grillo was joined by Councilwoman Debi Rose, Department of Education (DOE) officials and community members to officially kick off construction of the state-of-the-art school building that will address overcrowding in District 31 and a projected population growth in the area.

Construction began in July after a $77 million contract was awarded to the Leon D. Dematteis Construction Corporation.

We are here to celebrate the groundbreaking of our new school from the foundation up, said Rose. For those of you who have been on the North Shore for decades, I ask -- when was last time you saw a new school on the North Shore? And this school will accommodate 773 students. That is huge. This will be a massive infusion of classroom space, more than weve seen on the North Shore in years. It will help alleviate our overcrowding. Thats a big problem in the North Shore schools, and it will give our students a better opportunity to learn with the amenities and the resources that they need.

A rendering of the new PS 70 school building in Stapleton that is slated to open for the 2022-2023 school year. (Courtesy/SCA)

The new building will be air-conditioned and fully accessible to serve the specialized needs of all students, including 96 District 75 students.

District 75 includes school sites throughout the city that provide special education services to students with disabilities.

This new school building will include everything we expect in a world class educational facility, and were proud to bring this state-of-the-art space to the students and families here on Staten Island, said Grillo. Today, we see another example of how government agencies, families, community members and elected officials can get together to provide our students with the technology, facilities and resources they need to succeed.

The new school will contain four pre-K classrooms, four kindergarten classrooms, 20 standard classrooms (grades 1-5), reading and speech resource rooms, three district special education classrooms, eight District 75 classrooms and rooms for physical and occupation therapy.

Other amenities include: a computer classroom; art classrooms; gymnasium; playground; full kitchen complex; library; guidance and medical suites; science resource room; music room; exercise room; administrative suite; conference room; teacher work room, and a parent and community room.

PS 70, Stapleton, is a four-story state-of-the-art school building slated to open for the 2022-2023 school year. (Staten Island Advance/Annalise Knudson)

Our children thrive in state-of-the-art school facilities, and this new school building will include all the amenities we expect in a world-class educational facility, said Richard A. Carranza, city schools chancellor, in a statement. Thank you to our partners at SCA and to the Staten Island community for helping us provide our students with 21st-century learning spaces. This is equity and excellence in action.

As part of the SCAs Public Art for Public Schools program, the school will also have permanent public artwork. The artist selected for the commission, Daniel Agdag, will be creating a site-specific piece for the school lobby.

While the school is on tap to be named PS 70 when it opens to students, members from the Staten Island chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) attended the groundbreaking to encourage others to sign a petition to name PS 70 after Rose.

PS 70, Stapleton, is a four-story state-of-the-art school building slated to open for the 2022-2023 school year. (Staten Island Advance/Annalise Knudson)

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Roosevelt Island Restaurant Granny Annies Bar and Kitchen to Open in Spring 2020 – Eater NY

By the time developers finish adding more than 2,000 residential units to sleepy Roosevelt Island, new neighbors will have another place to eat and drink in their midst: Granny Annies Bar + Kitchen, a pub from the proprietor of popular Woodside, Queens bar the Beerkeeper.

Dympa Rogers has signed a lease on the 3,500-square-foot restaurant space, which will occupy the ground floor of the 216-unit Riverwalk Landing building at 426 Main Street. Her business, with partner James Paul McDaid and support from husband and Beerkeeper partner Stephen James Rogers, could open as soon as spring 2020, according to a representative for the developer.

The forthcoming pub is one small part in the large, nine-building Riverwalk neighborhood, the latest development from the mega firm behind Hudson Yards, Related Companies, and residential developer Hudson Companies. Like their Hudson Yards Development, construction of Riverwalk on Roosevelt Island is decades in the making: Related/Hudson began work on the housing, which has 40 percent affordable housing and was designed by Handel Architects in 1997. Most recently, they topped out on construction on the eighth of the nine buildings in the complex.

Hudson/Related is busy signing more leases in Riverwalk: Last month, they announced plans to install a speakeasy, bistro, and events space inside the vacant Dayspring Church, and sounds more like its trying to get tourists from Manhattan scampering onto the Roosevelt Island tram. Granny Annies, though, will cater to Roosevelt Island locals.

A good bar and restaurant is really needed, where people can go relax and chill out, Stephen Rogers tells Eater NY. Thats whats missing, from what we see.

A menu is still in development. Stephen and Dympa are Irish and will serve some Irish dishes, but thats not the extent of their business. The new bar is named for Dympas mother, Annie grandmother to twenty.

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426 Main St., Roosevelt Island, NY 10044

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Roosevelt Island Restaurant Granny Annies Bar and Kitchen to Open in Spring 2020 - Eater NY

Portion of ceiling collapses at Thruway’s welcome center on Grand Island – Buffalo News

Bob Dickie said he heard a "huge bang" as a portion of the ceiling in the state's new $25 million Western New York Welcome Center collapsed, nearly hitting him.

He was heading home Monday morning to Plattsburgh from a weekend visit with his daughter in Youngstown when he stopped for a cup of coffee at the year-old center on Grand Island "because I thought it was beautiful."

But as he approached the restroom, a 3-by-21-foot section of ceiling panels fell, missing him by about 2 feet, he said.

"I was unhurt but I could have absolutely been hurt or potentially killed. This was not like wafer board. These were significant panels," Dickie said. "They were about three-quarters of an inch thick ... "

The New York State Thruway Authority's welcome center, which opened in August 2018 adjacent to the I-190 section of the Thruway, has come under fire for other reasons. Opponents of the facility say it is underutilized because motorists have to exit the Thruway to get to it. State money from the second phase of the Buffalo Billion that was used to build the center could have been better spent on a year-round tourist attraction, they say.

The welcome center has been praised by supporters for its design, which was inspired by Frank Lloyd Wrights Prairie-style architecture.

Thruway spokeswoman Jennifer Givner said Tuesday that maintenance workers have inspected all of the panels in that section of the welcome center ceiling and reattached them with additional screws.

The spokeswoman offered assurances that the facility is safe and that the remaining panels, approximately a dozen in that area, are secure.

Within seconds after the ceiling panels crashed to the floor, Dickie said a worker ran up to him to check on his condition.

"When I told him I was OK, he then proceeded to get another employee. When I came out of the restroom, they had pulled the fallen panels to side," Dickie said.

He contacted The Buffalo News about the incident, he said, out of concern for other visitors.

"It bothered me that it appeared the panels had been put up there only with adhesive. I couldnt see any any hardware holding them," Dickie said.

Givner, the Authority spokeswoman, said there are nails holding the panels in addition to the adhesive. Screws were used to secure the panels, she said.

Critics: $25M welcome center on Grand Island is like a ghost town

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Portion of ceiling collapses at Thruway's welcome center on Grand Island - Buffalo News

‘Camano will feel a lot more like an island’ as of this week – The Daily Herald

STANWOOD As the tide rose in Port Susan Monday afternoon, water inched up a dirt berm on the edge of Leque Island. Just before 5 p.m., the flow seeped over the berms edge, rushing into a channel that cuts through the islands grassy plain.

It was the first time saltwater flowed naturally onto the island in over 150 years, since before the almost 300-acre swath of land was diked off for farming in the early 1900s.

The last of those dikes were removed Monday as the final step in a project to restore the land to its original state as a salt marsh.

With water now on both sides of the highway at high tide, Camano will feel a lot more like an island, said Loren Brokaw, restoration project coordinator for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Hes been working on the project for about seven years.

I remember when this was just a glimmer in our eyes, he said, and now its here.

Without the dikes, saltwater will filter into six channels that excavators chiseled into the island and flood the area with about 2 feet of water, creating essential habitat for salmon and water fowl.

The project also adds more public access to the island with a walking trail, two parking lots and two boat launches.

Leque Island lies on the south side of Highway 532, to the west of Stanwood on the way to Camano Island.

More than 40 years ago, the state began purchasing pieces of Leque Island, intending to focus on farming grain for waterfowl but later turning its attention toward estuary restoration. The agency now owns all of Leque.

Until about five years ago, contract farmers planted cereal grain to feed wintering waterfowl. Farming has since ceased. The area has become a popular spot for hunting, bird-watching and bird dog training.

The former dikes had been been failing for years, according to the Department of Fish and Wildlife. Theyve given way during high tides and storms. Temporary patchwork has been done, but repairs were expensive and breaches were a recurring problem.

Officials started looking at options for either removing or repairing Leque Islands levees in the early 2000s, and the state Salmon Recovery Funding Board supported the effort with grants in 2004 and 2007. A plan that would have removed levees around half the island and repaired the rest was in the works in 2005 when concerns about saltwater intrusion into a Camano Island aquifer stalled the project.

The Environmental Protection Agency ruled that removing the levees wouldnt pose a threat to the freshwater aquifer, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife returned to the project in 2013. Planners formed a 31-member volunteer advisory committee and held public meetings to gather questions, concerns and suggestions. The committee had representatives from groups that have repeatedly opposed removing dikes around the island. Opponents included the Washington Waterfowl Association and Camano Water Systems Association.

Kevin Plambeck, president of the Juniper Beach Water District on Camano, said the district would have preferred a plan that floods less of Leque.

Were still concerned about the aquifer and the saltwater, he said. Thats never diminished or changed.

The project cost about $6 million.

As Leque Island flooded Monday, a pair of ducks made themselves at home on a newly formed pond. The island will continue to flood twice a day, and the water will begin to change the land as it forms small channels and settles into low spots. The habitat will also begin to transform as freshwater plants die off and are replaced by sedges and rushes.

These changes will take years, but fish will begin using the site almost immediately, Ducks Unlimited biologist C.K. Eidem said.

Estuary habitat is one of the most important factors in a juvenile salmon reaching adulthood, he said.

If youre making a sandwich and you have 10 pieces of bread but two pieces of baloney, you can only make two baloney sandwiches, Eidem said. The limiting factor is the baloney. For Chinook, the limiting factor is the amount of rearing habitat.

The Leque Island restoration will also support waterfowl and migratory birds, but the focus is on Chinook salmon, Brokaw said.

As Chinook come out of the river, its not good for them to immediately go out into the saltwater bay. Theyre too small, and have a good chance of getting eaten, Brokaw said.

Now, the juvenile fish can spend several months hanging out in the estuary, feasting on a rich food supply and getting larger quickly.

The area will be used by fish from the Skagit, Snohomish and Stillaguamish rivers, department habitat biologist Lindsey Desmul said.

Leque Island has the potential to support thousands of juvenile salmon.

The restored 200-acre Fir Island estuary in Skagit County supports 50,000 to 65,000 baby fish, but Brokaw said thats not an indication of how many will take up residence on Leque Island.

As excavators zipped around making finishing touches early Monday, eagles and hawks began to circle the sky.

They know a vole exodus is about to happen, Eidem said.

The raptors remember when small critters scurried away from the flooding next door at zis a ba, an 83-acre estuary that was restored in 2017 by the Stillaguamish Tribe.

Leque Island is one of three restoration projects in the Stillaguamish watershed, including zis a ba and another Port Susan site.

Similar work is happening regionwide, with big projects on Smith Island and other tidally influenced areas in the Snohomish River delta.

The Leque Island project will have benefits for human visitors as well.

Along the northeast portion of the area there is now a .7 mile-long berm with a walking trail instead of Eide Road and a brush-lined dike. Without a dike blocking the line of sight, views of Stanwood and the Cascade peaks of Whitehorse mountain, Three Fingers and Mount Pilchuck are now visible.

The berm also acts as a wave barrier to protect Stanwood from from extreme weather, which can create waves up to 5 feet.

There are two new boat launches. One is upriver to the east, where the department partnered with Stanwood to build a motorized boat launch near the Hamilton smokestack. On the west side of the project, theres a new parking lot with a non-motorized boat launch. Theres also a parking lot at the head of the berm trail, where the old Eide Road was.

Public access should be open in about a week, Brokaw said.

Ducks Unlimited engineer Steve Liske has worked on the Leque Island project for a decade. He spent Monday camped out at the site waiting for it to flood.

Although he likened waiting for high tide to watching paint dry, he could see his work come to fruition as water filled each of the six engineered channels.

Its amazing, he said.

Moving forward, the project site will take care of itself. All thats left to do is monitor its natural transition and track how wildlife changes.

By spring, department communications manager Seth Ballhorn said officials expect to see juvenile Chinook there gaining strength and growing bigger.

Julia-Grace Sanders: 425-339-3439; jgsanders@heraldnet.com.

Gallery

Before the Port Susan tide rose on Monday, a break was cut on the shore of the Stillaguamish River (lower right) on Leque Island near Stanwood. (Chuck Taylor / The Herald)

Ducks Unlimited Engineer Steve Liske watches as water pours onto Leque Island on Monday near Stanwood. (Julia-Grace Sanders / The Herald)

Seawater begins to inundate Leque Island on Monday after levees and dikes were removed or breached along the Stillaguamish River (lower right) near Stanwood (upper right). (Chuck Taylor / The Herald)

As the tide from Port Susan (top) rose on Monday afternoon along the mouth of the Stillaguamish River (left), saltwater poured over a break in a levee that used to protect Leque Island near Stanwood. Wildlife officials have been preparing for years to turn what was farmland into natural habitat for birds and salmon. (Chuck Taylor / The Herald)

A berm (lower left) now protects the Stillaguamish River and Stanwood after the removal of levees and dikes along Leque Island (right), which was inundated with saltwater on Monday for the first time in more than a century. (Chuck Taylor / The Herald)

As the sun set on Monday, saltwater filled what had been farmland on Leque Island near Stanwood. Levees and dikes were removed to let the tide onto land that had been protected for over a century. (Chuck Taylor / The Herald)

Restoration projects near Stanwood, Washington, including Leque Island. (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)

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'Camano will feel a lot more like an island' as of this week - The Daily Herald

Staten Island teen transforms her first car into a work of art using 10 permanent markers – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Giovanna Campagnino wanted her first car to be unique.

So the 17-year-old Princes Bay resident grabbed some permanent markers and transformed her Mazda 6 -- which she inherited from her mother, Marjorie -- into a work of art on wheels, drawing a mural on the hood of her car.

I saw my car as a blank canvas and I was inspired by everything around me, Campagnino, who is homeschooled, told SILive.com. I thought it would be out of the box and different.

Unsure how her mom might react, she asked for permission first.

She was very encouraging ... and she had a lot of faith in me, Campagnino said. It took two days and 10 Sharpie markers to accomplish.

The illustration incorporates the artists interests, including New York City landmarks and fashion.

Campagnino said she has been practicing illustration for a year, and takes classes at Art Lab School of Fine and Applied Arts on the grounds of Snug Harbor Cultural Center and Botanical Gardens in Livingston. She said she particularly enjoys creating portraits and acrylic paintings.

Giovanna Campagnino, 17, of Prince's Bay illustrated the hood of her Mazda 6 vehicle using 10 Sharpie markers. (Courtesy of Marjorie Campagnino)

Campagnino, who said she uses her pimped out ride as an everyday car, has gotten a lot of compliments on the design.

This is the first car Ive illustrated, and Id love to do more, she said. I found my passion for art and it has inspired me to work harder.

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Staten Island teen transforms her first car into a work of art using 10 permanent markers - SILive.com

Cheap meals on Hawaii Island for less than $20 – Los Angeles Times

Hot stuff. Thats the island of Hawaii, which is nearly twice as large as the other Hawaiian islands combined.

You can walk through pristine rain forests, swim at world-class beaches, hike trails through snow-covered mountains or check out spectacular Kilauea volcano, which hasnt erupted in more than a year.

Hawaii Islands attributes include fantastic food such as line-caught fish, tropical fruit and tiki cocktails ideal for toasting the sunset. Plus, Hawaii, like other islands in the chain, has embraced mainland food trends, with chefs enthusiastically joining the farm-to-table movement.

But island prices can take a huge bite out of a vacationing familys budget. Youll pay $40 for adults and $20 for kids for breakfast, for example, at the Big Island Buffet at the popular Hilton Waikaloa Village. A family dinner for four at famous Merrimans in Waimea costs $79 per person.

The solution: Eat where the kamaaina (locals) eat.

More than a decade ago, the Travel section developed lists focusing on inexpensive places to eat in Hawaii. We canvassed the islands to bring you articles we called 20 for $20, tasting our way across the four main tourist islands in search of great meal deals at restaurants locals like best. But things change in a decade.

Weve spent the last several months updating the lists for Kauai, Oahu, Maui and now the island of Hawaii, relying on local experts to help us find the best food at the best prices.

Times photographer Mel Melcon and I crisscrossed Hawaii island for this article, racking up nearly 700 miles on our foodie adventure. Our faves encompass the island, from Hilo to Volcanoes National Park in the south to Waimea and Kailua-Kona, with several stops in smaller cities.

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Cheap meals on Hawaii Island for less than $20 - Los Angeles Times

Endangered bandicoots released to new island home in bid to hold off extinction – The Guardian

A decades-long fight to save a tiny endangered Australian marsupial the eastern barred bandicoot hit a major milestone last night as conservationists released 55 into the dusk of a new island home in Victoria.

Conservationists hope French Island, which is free of the invasive European red fox, will be a perfect spot for the bandicoots, which have never lived on the island before.

Recovery plans for the bandicoot started in 1988 after numbers on Australias mainland sunk as low as 100, with a captive breeding program starting in 1991.

Invasive foxes and feral cats are the two major killers of Australian mammals and, for the bandicoot, it is foxes, together with destruction of habitat for grazing, that pushed the animal to the brink on the mainland. The species exist in healthier numbers in Tasmania.

A small number of fenced areas on Australias mainland were created but in 2015 conservationists released 20 in a trial on the 57-hectare Churchill Island in Western Port Bay, Victoria.

They have established themselves with about 130 there now. That became our demonstration site, said Zoos Victoria threatened species biologist Dr Amy Coetsee.

In 2017, 67 bandicoots were released on to the larger Phillip Island and, while survival numbers are not yet known, Coetsee said they had spread at least two kilometres from the release site.

On Thursday night, Coetsee joined other conservationists and locals from French Island in capturing 40 of the rabbit-sized bandicoots from Churchill Island to then transport them by boat to an area known as Blue Gums in the French Island national park.

There they joined 15 other bandicoots taken from the captive breeding program for the evening release, from 10 different sites, watched by scores of supportive locals.

Radio monitors on the tails of about 30 of the bandicoots, which like to forage for grubs and worms in grasslands, will help conservationists track the bandicoots for the first two weeks.

Coetsee said the existence of suitable habitat, the lack of foxes and also a plan to reduce the numbers of feral cats, together with a supportive local community, gave her hope the bandicoots would make a success of French Island.

Phillip Island Nature Parks deputy director of research Dr Duncan Sutherland said: The captive breeding program, the previous releases on to Churchill Island and Phillip Island, and now this latest release on to French Island, have provided a form of insurance for the survival of this critically endangered native animal.

The French Island release makes the third Western Port Bay Island to be used as a haven for the bandicoots.

Prof Sarah Legge of the Australian National University, and deputy director of the Threatened Species Recovery Hub at the National Environmental Science Program, said the bandicoot would be extinct were it not for some pretty extraordinary conservation efforts.

She said island havens that were free from foxes and cats were an essential tool for conservationists trying to save Australias native mammals. Island havens were being used to protect 13 Australian mammals.

She said: Australia has the worst mammal extinction record in the world, and it would be much worse had it not been for these island havens.

It is essential to find fox-free areas for bandicoots it seems they are more sensitive to foxes than cats. This translocation to French Island is a really positive step.

We do need to find a more effective and enduring solution to managing foxes and cats, but in the meantime we have to get species onto islands and fenced areas to prevent more extinctions.

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Endangered bandicoots released to new island home in bid to hold off extinction - The Guardian

A rare voyage to Pitcairn, the lonely island with a dark history – Telegraph.co.uk

Early on the morning of the sixth day at sea I stood on the bridge of Aranui 5 and watched an uneven grey shape materialise on the horizon, in the apricot-coloured dawn, beneath a vast bank of purple altocumulus. This was Pitcairn Island, refuge of Fletcher Christian and his band of mutineers in that most compelling of true-life maritime dramas, the Mutiny on the Bounty; and for most, if not all of the 216 passengers aboard Aranui 5, the principal focus and attraction of this voyage across French Polynesia and beyond.

It was 6.20am and we were 30 nautical miles to the northwest of Pitcairn, with the bows of the Aranui rising and falling in a distinct swell. As the island took on a deep-green colour and unfolded into three dimensions of ridges and cliffs, with a shifting hem of foam along its shoreline, I recalled the words of the Aranuis captain, Christophe Dupuy, the day before. In Pitcairn, the challenge is to get you ashore, he had told me.

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A rare voyage to Pitcairn, the lonely island with a dark history - Telegraph.co.uk

Are ‘Survivor 39’ Contestants Banned From Telling Other Competitors About the Island of the Idols? – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Elizabeth, Kellee, and Vince have been to the Island of the Idols and received a Survivor lesson from former champions Boston Rob Mariano and Sandra Diaz-Twine.

Theyve all lied about what happened when they returned to their tribe, and viewers dont understand why. Are the competitors banned from exposing the twist to their tribemates?

Elizabeth from the Lairo tribe was the first to experience the Island of the Idols after they lost their first immunity challenge. There, she met Boston Rob and Sandra, who gave her a lesson in fire-making.

If Elizabeth could make a fire faster than Rob, then she would earn an immunity idol. However, if she failed, then she would lose her vote at the Tribal Council.

The Olympic swimmer attempted the challenge but couldnt beat the master. Next, Vokais Kellee was sent to the Island of the Idols via a delivered note where she also met the Survivor champions.

For her lesson, they taught her how to properly listen when others are speaking to her to build a social game. Therefore, Sandra talked and talked about her life and family, and Kellee had to answer three questions correctly to earn an idol good for the next three Tribal Councils.

Even though she was initially nervous because she didnt think she was actively listening, the MBA student passed the test. Finally, Lairo tribe mate Vince went to the Island of the Idols, where he learned how to do bear crawls, hide behind trees, and be stealthy to steal fire from the other tribe.

Even though the Vokai did not have their fire going at the time, he took coals to prove he got close enough to complete the task. The proof was enough for Rob and Sandra as they awarded him the immunity idol.

When Elizabeth returned to camp, she lied and told everyone it was similar to Ghost Islands, where she had to smash urns to get an advantage or disadvantage.

Kellee also lied to her tribemates about what happened at the Island of Idols and began crying and unloading her bag to prove she didnt have the idol, all while it was hiding in her hair.

The show did not air Vinces return to camp, but he discussed it in an interview with Rob Cesternino. After spending 24 hours away from everyone, Vince returned and said Elizabeth greeted him immediately and tried to talk, but he wanted to wait.

Vince explained he told everyone he had a challenge where he had to memorize five sets of tiles with different animals on them, and then find them after they were scattered across the Island.

Because he couldnt complete the mission, he said he had to sleep outside all night with no shelter.

After three people have now lied about the Island of the Idols twist, it confuses some viewers as they dont understand why the contestants arent honest about it.

One reason could be a contestant might be afraid they will have a target on their back if they admit they just had a specialized lesson from Survivor royalty, Sandra and Rob.

Another reason is the competitor doesnt want to share that they have an immunity idol. However, why would Elizabeth lie when she lost the challenge, and why wouldnt Vince expose Elizabeth for lying and possibly pin the idol on her?

In Vinces interview, Cesternino asked if he could have told everyone about the Island of the Idols if he wanted to. Vince replied, saying hes being put in a hard place because he doesnt know if he can answer that.

While its unclear if theyre actually banned from speaking about the Island of the Idols, the competitors seem to be encouraged to make something up, possibly for another twist down the line or just good television.

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Are 'Survivor 39' Contestants Banned From Telling Other Competitors About the Island of the Idols? - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

UK fisheries agreement signed with the Faroe Islands – GOV.UK

UK and Faroese governments have signed an agreement to ensure UK fishermen can continue to access and catch fish in Faroese waters after the UK leaves the EU on 31 October.

Currently the UK fleet fishes in Faroese waters under the EU-Faroe Islands fisheries agreement. When the UK leaves the EU and becomes an independent coastal state this current agreement will cease, however the new agreement, signed yesterday (15 October), ensures that the existing arrangements between the two countries remain in place until the end of 2019.

The UK is committed to continuing to work together the Faroe Islands, providing certainty for respective industries and managing shared fish stocks sustainably.

These arrangement will:

This complements a separate agreement signed on the 30 September 2019 between the UK government and Norway to ensure similar continuity arrangements.

In further preparation for exit day, a new licensing authority - the Single Issuing Authority (SIA) - has also been set up jointly by the England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland administrations. This will ensure fishermen have the correct licences to fish legally after leaving the EU.

The SIA is calling on vessels owners in the over 12 meter fleet to ensure their vessel has an IMO number, which will be needed to fish outside UK waters when we leave the EU.

Owners of vessels are urged to register now for an IMO number from the International Maritime Organisation to enable the timely processing of the subsequent licensing documentation.

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UK fisheries agreement signed with the Faroe Islands - GOV.UK

Possible cougar sighting on Mercer Island turns out to be house cat – KING5.com

MERCER ISLAND, Wash. After reviewing the security camera footage from a Mercer Island resident, police determined that an animal that was believed to be a possible cougar was actually a house cat.

"This cat does not have the same dimensions; head, shoulders and general size nor gate as a cougar," Mercer Island Police Department Commander Magnan wrote in a email to KING 5 on Monday.

"It is clear this is not a cougar but an ordinary cat," the department wrote in a Facebook post.

The video was taken around 5:30 a.m. Saturday morning outside a home on the north end of the island at Faben Point.

The homeowner sent the video to Mercer Island Police for review. Police and the Department of Fish and Wildlife have been working to catch a cougar on the island since it was first spotted in August.

Police have been posting updates on the City of Mercer Island's website. On October 1, a report was made about a possible cougar sighting at Ellis Pond.

"When the officer met the reporting party onsite, there was some uncertainty as to whether the animal seen was a cougar or another dog," said the report.

Police said the only photo confirmed sighting of the cougar were on August 5 and 6.

RELATED: Cougar spotted in Mercer Island south of Pioneer Park

Call 911 immediately if you see a cougar in a residential area. If a cougar is found, experts will attempt to relocate it.

The animals are most active between dusk to dawn. Attacks on humans in Washington state are extremely rare.

If you have a close encounter with a cougar, Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlifeadvises the following to prevent an attack:

RELATED: What to do if you see a cougar in the wild

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Possible cougar sighting on Mercer Island turns out to be house cat - KING5.com

Royal Caribbean just announced a dreamy new private island in the South Pacific – INSIDER

On Monday,Royal Caribbeanannounced its latest plan to build a sustainable private island in the South Pacific, and its nameneeds no further explanation.

According tothe cruise line's press release,the island, aptly called "Perfect Day at Lelepa" in Vanuatu, will be built with sustainability in mind complete withfeatures designed to "safeguard the island's ecosystems." The company also explained the island will be the first carbon-neutral private cruise destination in the world.

"We believe our destinations should be sustainably designed," Royal Caribbean International President and CEO Michael Bayley said."That idea goes beyond simply protecting the ecological features of Lelepa and includes showing respect for the people and traditions that make this a special place."

Read more: Royal Caribbean has a $250 million private island for its cruise passengers that has a 135-foot-tall waterslide here's what it looks like

Bayley added, the island was created in partnership with the community of Vanuatu, "to showcase the distinct natural ecological beauty and diverse local culture of the island nation as well as provide employment and education opportunities."

In a ceremony announcing the island plans, Vanuatu's Prime Minister Charlot Salwai described the island as a "true paradise" and the venture with the cruise lineas a "major step forward" in their partnership,according toTravel Pulse.

"Today marks a major step forward in our island nation's close relationship with Royal Caribbean and one that will support sustainable growth for future generations," he said. "The Ni-Vanuatu people look forward to welcoming Royal Caribbean guests from around the world to enjoy extraordinary adventures and relaxation during their Perfect Day at Lelepa."

According to Royal Caribbean, Perfect Day will look and feel distinct from Royal Caribbean's other island experience,Perfect Day at CocoCay, because "our guests around the world all have different definitions for their perfect day and all of them are right. Our designers and nature have created the ideal South Pacific experience and we expect the results will be stunning."

The island is expected to open sometime in 2022.

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Royal Caribbean just announced a dreamy new private island in the South Pacific - INSIDER