Beaches a no-go zone for cars, Glenelg officials warn

Jan. 8, 2015, 4 a.m.

DRIVERS have been illegally parking their vehicles on the beach at Bridgewater Bay.

Drivers have been illegally parking their vehicles on the beach at Bridgewater Bay.

DRIVERS have been illegally parking their vehicles on the beach at Bridgewater Bay.

Glenelg Shire officers have put motorists on notice after complaints from the public during the busy Christmas-New Year period.

Beachgoers raised concerns about the safety of people using the foreshore when more than 30 cars and four-wheel drives parked on the sand on one hot day alone.

Bridgewater Bay is popular with families, particularly those with young children, because it offers a long expanse of beach and is patrolled by the Portland Surf Life Saving Club.

A Glenelg Shire spokeswoman said the council was responsible for the management of the main beach area at Bridgewater Bay.

The only vehicles permitted to drive on the beach in this area are the locally based surf life saving club and a vehicle towing a boat trailer while launching or removing a boat from the water, she said.

It is definitely not for use by the general public to drive to a chosen position on the beach for the time they spend there.

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Beaches a no-go zone for cars, Glenelg officials warn

Scientists remain puzzled by mass of dead birds along West Coast

TILLAMOOK, Ore., Jan. 7 (UPI) -- Dead seabirds continue to litter the beaches of Norther California, Oregon and Washington state. The massive die-off has been ongoing for the last two months, and biologists are still stumped as to the exact cause.

"It tends to come in waves," Dave Nuzum, a wildlife biologist with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, told The Oregonian. "Each time you get a significant weather event, you're going to get a crush of birds."

Nuzum says dead birds are likely to continue washing ashore in the coming months. Die-offs in autumn and winter aren't unheard of, but this season's death toll is particularly high.

The casualties have mostly been isolated to a single species, Cassin's auklets -- a small, chunky bird that dives in the frigid waters of the Pacific for food and builds burrowed nests in the mud and crevices of seaside cliffs. Because only auks have been found deceased in large numbers, biologists are confident the problem is not systemic and that the local food chain is relatively healthy.

"We're not seeing a widespread eco-disaster here," Julia Parrish, Aquatic and Fishery Sciences professor at the University of Washington, told the Santa Rosa Press Democrat late last year. "We're seeing a spike of (deaths in) one species that's giving us clues, and the clues don't suggest that the bottom is dropping out of the ecosystem."

Though unconfirmed, most biologists believe the mass die-off is simply a result of overpopulation. Cassin's auklets had prodigious mating seasons the last couple of years, so the numbers of young, inexperienced birds competing for food is high.

Combine large numbers of young birds not getting enough to eat with cold temperatures and rough seas, and it's not necessarily surprising that so many are ending up dead or dying on the beaches of the Pacific Northwest.

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Scientists remain puzzled by mass of dead birds along West Coast

Christchurch lifeguards 'very busy' as big waves catch out swimmers, surfers

Rachel Macdonald

Dozens have been rescued from the big surf at Taylors Mistake beach.

Strong swimmers are running into strife by underestimating conditions at Christchurch beaches, a senior lifeguard warns.

Surf Lifesaving Southern club development officer Henry Lawson says big surf at Taylors Mistake has caught out even normally "self-sufficient" surfers.

One, unable to make it back to shore, was brought in by an IRB rescue boat.

"He recognised he was in a situation he couldn't manage.

"Conditions were dangerous, with surf of over 1.5 metres funnelling into that confined area. He caught the attention of lifeguards.

"Generally, surfers are self-sufficient, so this meant he was in a terrible situation, " Lawson says.

"Most people are under-estimating surf conditions. They can be really good swimmers, but not taking account of drift and water movement."

That surfer figured in the 39 rescues to date this season.

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Christchurch lifeguards 'very busy' as big waves catch out swimmers, surfers