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Without a doubt, some of the countrys finest beaches can be found in the coastal waters of Davao Gulf.

The Gulf has an area of 308,000 hectares that cuts into the island of Mindanao from the Celebes Sea and is surrounded by all four provinces in the Davao Region, and likewise circled by seven cities, namely: Davao, Tagum, Panabo, Samal, Digos, Panabo, and Mati.

The largest island in the gulf is Samal Island. While Davao City, on the Gulfs west coast, has the largest and busiest port.

Skimboarding at Dahican Beach.

Kopiat in Mabini, Compostela Valley

Link:
Nine secluded beaches of the Davao Gulf you must experience

Byline: Wells RNLI volunteers aiming to make our beaches safer Page Content: Twenty-five Wells RNLI crew volunteers and Yarmouth Coastguard took part in an exercise assessing Coastwatch volunteers so that their facility can become an official part of the coastal search and rescue organisation. Conditions couldn’t be more perfect: a wet, blustery Sunday morning ideal for an exercise like this …

Originally posted here:
Wells-RNLI-volunteers-aiming-to-make-our-beaches-safer

Feb 182013



Ao Nang, Thailand
Ao Nang (Source: Wikipedia), is a central point of the coastal province of Krabi, Thailand. The town consists chiefly of a main street, which is dominated by restaurants, pubs, shops and other commerce aimed at tourists. The main beach is used by sunbathers to a certain extent, but there are a large number of longtail boats which offer access to other beaches on the mainland and on nearby islands.

By: PlanetTraveler

Continued here:
Ao Nang, Thailand – Video



Tomb Raider 3 – South Pacific: Coastal Village [2/3]
Still in search for the rest of the artifacts, Lara travels to some South Pacific Islands. What will she find there? Besides enraged natives, of course.

By: slayra

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Tomb Raider 3 – South Pacific: Coastal Village [2/3] – Video



Tomb Raider 3 – South Pacific: Coastal Village [3/3]
Still in search for the rest of the artifacts, Lara travels to some South Pacific Islands. What will she find there? Besides enraged natives, of course.

By: slayra

Originally posted here:
Tomb Raider 3 – South Pacific: Coastal Village [3/3] – Video

Feb 122013



Xplora Puerto Vallarta
Puerto Vallarta offers more culturally-minded visitors a wide array of places to see, including the Plaza de las Armas, Saucedo Theatre Building, Cuale Archaeological Museum, and the Parish Church of Our Lady Guadalupe. For those just looking to relax, this balneario has beaches that few other coastal cities can match, and many have a rich history that you can mull over as you enjoy their eggshell-white sands and turquoise waves. If you enjoy snorkeling or SCUBA diving, you'll delight in the abundant and diverse sea life that fills these waters.

By: raintreevacationclub

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Xplora Puerto Vallarta – Video

ELIZABETH CITY There has been little change in beach erosion patterns in North Carolina over the past seven years.

A new report from the state Division of Coastal Management shows most beaches are eroding at about the same levels as usual.

Currituck County’s beaches receded anywhere from 2 to 7 feet along nearly 23 miles of the barrier island in 2011.

Ken Richardson with the coastal management division said that’s about the same as 2003.

Richardson says some beaches with high erosion rates, such as Rodanthe, still have the same problem they’ve had for decades.

Other beaches with lower erosion rates, such has Corolla, have seen little change.

The erosion rate determines how far from the water new homes or significant improvements can be.

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Little change in erosion on NC beaches

ELIZABETH CITY (AP) There has been little change in beach erosion patterns in North Carolina over the past seven years.

The Daily Advance of Elizabeth City reported a new report from the state Division of Coastal Management shows most beaches are eroding at about the same levels as usual.

Currituck Countys beaches receded anywhere from 2 to 7 feet along nearly 23 miles of the barrier island in 2011.

Ken Richardson with the coastal management division said thats about the same as 2003.

Richardson says some beaches with high erosion rates, such as Rodanthe, still have the same problem theyve had for decades. Continue Reading

Other beaches with lower erosion rates, such has Corolla, have seen little change.

The erosion rate determines how far from the water new homes or significant improvements can be.

Read more from the original source:
Little change in erosion on N.C. beaches

From Liberty athletics:

LYNCHBURG, Va. The Liberty men’s basketball team avoided starting Big South Conference play 0-3 for the second straight season, defeating Coastal Carolina, Saturday night, 64-56. The Flames win inside the Vines Centers marks its second straight victory against the Chanticleers.

Liberty improves to 5-12 on the year and 1-2 in Big South action. The Chanticleers fall to 7-7 overall and 2-1 in conference play. The Flames now lead the all-time series 27-23.

Tomasz Gielo finished with a career-high night in points for the second straight game, pacing the Flames with 19 tallies. John Caleb Sanders chipped in 13 points, followed by Tavares Speaks who had 11. Joel Vander Pol led Liberty in rebounds with eight, while adding seven points.

Kierre Greenwood led the Chanticleers with 27 points, finishing the contest as Coastal Carolina’s only double-digit scorer. The Liberty defense held Coastal Carolina leading scorer Anthony Raffa to eight points after the senior went scoreless in the first half.

Liberty concluded the night with its third highest field goal percentage of the season, shooting 47.6 percent (20-of-42) from the field. Defensively, the Flames held Coastal Carolina to 29.2 percent shooting (19-of-65), marking the first time a Liberty opponent has finished under 30.0 percent from the field since Campbell shot 29.0 percent (18-of-62) in the Flames’ 49-41 regular-season finale win on Feb. 25, 2012.

Liberty also held the Chanticleers to 10.0 percent (2-of-20) from three-point range, while shooting 46.7 percent (7-of-15) from long distance.

Greenwood started things off for Coastal Carolina, posting six unanswered points. The Flames answered with a 14-2 run, highlighted by three-pointers from Davon Marshall and Gielo, followed by a traditional three-point play by Casey Roberts. The Chanticleers responded with another 6-0 burst to knot the contest, 14-14, at 8:41.

Gielo put the Flames on top with another three-pointer over a minute later. On the defensive end, JR Coronado caused the Vines Center crowd to erupt at the 6:45 mark after swatting a layup attempt by Charles Ashford. The Flames closed out the half outscoring Coastal Carolina, 10-6, including four unanswered tallies before the buzzer to take a 27-20 halftime lead.

Liberty began the second half with six straight points, including a third Gielo trey at 16:30 to stretch its advantage to 13. The Chanticleers chipped away at the deficit over the ensuing 5:31, making it a six-point game, 39-33, following a Michel Enanga layup at 10:59.

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Liberty Wins First Conference Game

Enlarge Photo

SPRING LAKE, N.J. The average New Jersey beach is 30 to 40 feet narrower after Superstorm Sandy, according to a survey that is sure to intensify a long-running debate on whether federal dollars should be used to replenish stretches of sand that only a fraction of U.S. taxpayers use.

Some of New Jerseys famous beaches lost half their sand when Sandy slammed ashore in late October.

The shore town of Mantoloking, one of the hardest-hit communities, lost 150 feet of beach, said Stewart Farrell, director of Stockton College’s Coastal Research Center and a leading expert on beach erosion.

Routine storms tear up beaches in any season, and one prescription for protecting communities from storm surge has been to replenish beaches with sand pumped from offshore. Places with recently beefed-up beaches saw comparatively little damage, said Farrell, whose studys findings were made available to The Associated Press.

It really, really works, Farrell said. Where there was a federal beach fill in place, there was no major damage no homes destroyed, no sand piles in the streets. Where there was no beach fill, water broke through the dunes.

The beach-replenishment projects have been controversial both for their expense and because waves continually wash away the new sand. The federal government picks up 65 percent of the cost, with the rest coming from state and local coffers.

How big the beaches are or whether there is a beach at all to go to is a crucial question that must be resolved before the summer tourism season. The Jersey shore powers the states $35.5 billion tourism industry.

But the pending spending showdown between congressional Republicans and Democrats could make it even harder to secure hundreds of millions of additional dollars for beach replenishment.

From 1986 to 2011, nearly $700 million was spent placing 80 million cubic yards of sand on about 55 percent of the New Jersey coast. Over that time, the average beach gained 4 feet of width, according to the Coastal Research Center. And just before the storm hit, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers awarded nearly $28 million worth of contracts for new replenishment projects in southern New Jerseys Cape May County.

See the article here:
Study: N.J. beaches 30-40 feet narrower after storm

Nov 222012

The average New Jersey beach is 30 to 40 feet narrower after Superstorm Sandy, according to a survey that is sure to intensify a long-running debate on whether federal dollars should be used to replenish stretches of sand that only a fraction of U.S. taxpayers use.

Some of New Jersey’s famous beaches lost half their sand when Sandy slammed ashore in late October.

The shore town of Mantoloking, one of the hardest-hit communities, lost 150 feet of beach, said Stewart Farrell, director of Stockton College’s Coastal Research Center and a leading expert on beach erosion.

Routine storms tear up beaches in any season, and one prescription for protecting communities from storm surge has been to replenish beaches with sand pumped from offshore. Places with recently beefed-up beaches saw comparatively little damage, said Farrell, whose study’s findings were made available to The Associated Press.

“It really, really works,” Farrell said. “Where there was a federal beach fill in place, there was no major damage no homes destroyed, no sand piles in the streets. Where there was no beach fill, water broke through the dunes.”

The beach-replenishment projects have been controversial both for their expense and because waves continually wash away the new sand. The federal government picks up 65 percent of the cost, with the rest coming from state and local coffers.

AP

How big the beaches are or whether there is a beach at all to go to is a crucial question that must be resolved before the summer tourism season. The Jersey shore powers the state’s $35.5 billion tourism industry.

But the pending spending showdown between congressional Republicans and Democrats could make it even harder to secure hundreds of millions of additional dollars for beach replenishment.

From 1986 to 2011, nearly $700 million was spent placing 80 million cubic yards of sand on about 55 percent of the New Jersey coast. Over that time, the average beach gained 4 feet of width, according to the Coastal Research Center. And just before the storm hit, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers awarded nearly $28 million worth of contracts for new replenishment projects in southern New Jersey’s Cape May County.

Continued here:
NJ Beaches Narrower After Sandy

SPRING LAKE, N.J. (AP) Towns along the Jersey shore that made use of federal money to build up beaches came through Superstorm Sandy with far less damage than those that didn’t, findings that are sure to intensify a debate that has raged for years over the wisdom of pumping millions of dollars’ worth of sand onto the coastline, only to see it wash away continually.

That dispute pits coastal advocates for some of the most valuable shoreline in the country against elected officials from inland states who say it’s unfair to ask taxpayers from, say, the Great Plains to pay to keep rebuilding beaches they don’t even use.

The storm caused major erosion along New Jersey’s famous 127-mile coastline, washing away tons of sand and slimming down beaches. Some lost half their sand; the average loss statewide was 30 to 40 feet of beach width, according to findings that are not yet public but were revealed to The Associated Press.

Routine storms tear up beaches in any season, and even normal waves carry away sand. Over the years, one prescription for insulating communities from the invading sea has been to artificially replenish beaches with sand pumped from offshore. The federal government picks up 65 percent of the cost, with the rest coming from state and local coffers.

“It really, really works,” said Stewart Farrell, director of Stockton College’s Coastal Research Center and a leading expert on beach erosion. “Where there was a federal beach fill in place, there was no major damage no homes destroyed, no sand piles in the streets. Where there was no beach fill, water broke through the dunes.”

From 1986 to 2011, nearly $700 million was spent placing 80 million cubic yards of sand on about 55 percent of the New Jersey coast. Over that time, the average beach had gained 4 feet of width, according to the Coastal Research Center. And just before the storm hit, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers awarded nearly $28 million worth of contracts for new replenishment projects in southern New Jersey’s Cape May County.

The pending spending showdown between congressional Republicans and Democrats could make it even harder to secure hundreds of millions of additional dollars for beach replenishment.

U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat, predicted lawmakers from New Jersey and New York would be able to get additional shore protection funds included in the next federal budget, despite partisan wars.

“I think we will be able to make the case,” he said. “We can show that this provides long-term protection to property and lives. You can either pay up front to keep on top of projects like this, or you can pay on the back end” through disaster recovery funds.

U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn, an Oklahoma Republican, used a close-up photo of a pig to grace the cover of his 2009 report “Washed Out To Sea,” in which he characterized beach replenishment as costly, wasteful pork that the nation could ill afford.

Read more here:
Superstorm shines light on federal beach program

Strunz

Beaches Comments Off
Nov 122012



Strunz Farah – Balada ♫ ▄ █ ▄ █ ▄ █ ▄ ♫
Photo : La Digue – Seychelles. At just over 3 miles long and 2½ miles wide, La Digue is located off the East coast of Africa in the Indian Ocean 660 miles NE of Madagascar and 995 miles East of Kenya. La Digue is named after a ship in the fleet of French explorer Marc-Joseph Marion du Fresne, who visited the Seychelles in 1768. La Digue is more than just an island, It's a way of life. This tiny island of about 2000 people is full of charm and character, retaining an untouched ambiance and slow pace of life. It is growing in popularity as a tourist destination, with visitors drawn here by the island's beautiful, palm-fringed coves and beaches with their spectacular granite backdrops; off shore lies a ring of coral reefs popular with scuba-divers. Most of the coastal area is flat, but Eagle's Nest Mountain (also known as Belle Vue) covers almost the entire center of the island, rising to a height of 1000 ft and offering good hiking possibilities and stunning views.From:NADER675Views:11 2ratingsTime:03:40More inMusic

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Strunz

Nov 022012



nhatrangoverview
fareastour.com Located in the southern part of central Vietnam, this coastal city is endowed with a special natural beauty, with its untouched bays, dreamy islands, white sand beaches, coral reefs, Cham historical remnants and peaceful fishing villages. Beaches aside, there are a number of attractions not to be missed when visiting Nha Trang, including Ponogar Tower, Yen Island, and beautiful bays such as Van Phong and Cam Ranh.From:FareastourchannelTVViews:0 0ratingsTime:02:34More inTravel Events

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nhatrangoverview – Video

Join the Quincy Beaches and Coastal Commission at 10 a.m. Saturday Oct. 27 for an educational walk through the Black Breek salt marshes and the National Sailors Home Cemetery.

The tour will leave from the Beachwood Knoll school parking lot on Quincy Shore Drive. Participants should wear comfortable footwear. The event will be canceled for heavy rain.

Follow this link:
Quincy Beaches and Coastal Commission to lead tour of Black Creek, National Sailors Home Cemetery

As summer approaches, volunteer lifesavers are returning to beaches in New South Wales and Queensland to keep an eye on swimmers, surfers and fishermen.

Red and yellow flags will dot the coastal strip from now until the volunteer patrol season ends on April 28 next year.

Surf Life Saving NSW chief executive Phil Vanny says surf lifesavers spent more than 670-thousand hours a year patrolling beaches, and performed more than eight thousand rescues last season.

Mr Vanny says the statistics demonstrate the important service provided by Surf Life Savers in making our beaches safe for the community and visitors.

Original post:
Surf life savers returning to beaches

Ventura County’s beaches are much like beaches everywhere. They’re receptacles for trash for any number of reasons, not the least of which is the sheer fact that too many people don’t really do what should come naturally to all beach-users: Pick up after themselves.

Saturday, anyone who makes use of our local beaches and we can’t imagine that it’s more than a handful who don’t at some point during the year has the chance to show just how valuable the beaches are, by participating in this year’s annual Coastal Cleanup Day.

From 9 a.m. to noon at beach and inland locations throughout the county, volunteers will be out in force picking up trash and junk that mars the beauty of these precious places. To find a clean-up location, log on to http://www.vccoastcleanup.org.

Coastal Cleanup organizers offer some statistics that should put shame in the hearts of those who don’t make an effort to keep our beaches and inland waterways clean. A year ago, volunteers collected some 14,600 pounds of debris from local beaches and inland areas. Statewide, volunteers scoured California’s beaches and waterways to collect some 1.3 million pounds of trash. Now that’s a lot of junk.

The official Coastal Cleanup Day happens once a year. Therein lies the problem it should be a year-round effort by users of our beaches, creeks, lakes and rivers.

All of which makes good sense. All we have to do is do it.

See the original post here:
Editorial: Make a difference on Coastal Cleanup Day

The fledgling Islands High School football team may not have many experienced players, but the Sharks have a veteran coach who will prepare them well as he begins to build the program. Karl DeMasi has coached all over the Coastal Empire.

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Islands High starts football program

Jul 162012

State beaches comparatively clean

7/16/2012

Georgia ranked 9th out of 30 in the U.S. for health advisories issued to beach states in 2011, according to a report by the National Resources Defense Council.

The findings are based on analyses of the amount of time beaches nationwide spent under advisories and failed to meet state standards set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The agency sets standards for beach water quality to monitor the risk of contracting gastrointestinal illnesses from pollution and waste.

The Georgia Department of Natural Resources and the Coastal Health District monitor state beaches.

Although two Jekyll Island beaches spend more time than others in the county under advisory, it is not the fault of human action. Clam Creek and the St. Andrews Picnic Area beaches are on the marshland side of Jekyll Island where nesting birds account for bacteria in the water, according to Elizabeth Cheney, beach water quality program manager for the Coastal Resources Division of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources.

Beaches on Jekyll’s shore side see fewer elevated bacteria levels because of wave and tidal action, which keeps ocean-side areas flushed, Cheney said.

McIntosh County beaches ranked highest for not meeting state standards during the same time period, according to the report.

Beaches in McIntosh County are monitored monthly. Less testing means advisories may remain in effect longer, Cheney said.

Glynn County’s beaches are monitored daily or weekly.

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State beaches comparatively clean

Escort to freedom

Freedom Comments Off
Jun 082012

A dog looks at a sea turtle returning to the Mediterranean Sea after it was set free by the Israeli Sea Turtle Rescue Centre in the coastal town of Palmachim, south of Tel Aviv.

See the article here:
Escort to freedom



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