Showing posts with label geotextile bags. Show all posts
Showing posts with label geotextile bags. Show all posts

Friday, 17 February 2012

13th February


Finally the temperatures are rising - today is a comfortable 6 degrees... Yet, to my surprise, much of the snow that fell 10 days ago remains on the shingle.

Sea defence work is finshed but it doesn't look so at the northern end. I understand that a shingle bank is hoped to form over time as a result of the geotextile bags.

The eroding cliffs reveal fascinating textures and falling sand is scattered on the snow.

There is some angling litter (telltale signs: discarded newpaper and frozen fish packaging) and an unusual number of large bottles. There is also a considerable amount of foreign language items: eg water from Malaysia, juice from Dubai as well as the usual Dutch, Belgian and French offenders - almost certainly jettisoned illegally off ships. The high tide spits plastic cups and sanitary towels onto the shoreline.

A cormorant (or is it a shag?) flaps its wings by the water's edge.


low tide: 08.26 hrs 0.3m, high tide: 14.38 hrs 2.6m
time of arrival: 14.01 hrs
weather: cloudy with some drizzle and occasional near-glimmers of weak sunshine, wind NW 15mph, temperature 6c
marine litter: large amount of plastic bottles and litter from foreign sources (presumed to be from shipping)






 











 




Sunday, 13 November 2011

13th November


It is Sunday so we can squeeze through the barricades and, for once, walk the length of the beach. The bags continue to multiply and a portaloo stands like a tardis in their midst.

It's sunny and unseasonably warm (shorts weather for some) and there is a huge harvest of seaweed and plastic with balloons (McDonalds as usual), bottles, boots and turtles tangled in the the shiny fronds - and even a plant pot with its own harvest of sea plants. More paraffin wax too... and three Pot Noodles.

The anglers have been here also, leaving their packs of frozen calamari and pre-packed squid.

The Fa Ocean Dive Active shower gel - vitalising with plant extracts - looks tantalising nestling on the weed.

There are a lots of foreign language packs - including 4 tubs or lids of margarine and a large catering size pack of Ariel. The main languages that wash up are Dutch and French, perhaps not surprising given that Holland, Belgium and France are our nearest North Sea neighbours. Washing powder, dried parsley, shampoo and margarine certainly aren't beach visitors' normal picnic fare - so is this stuff washing down the big European rivers or being flung off ships??

On the way back I found a Smartie top (treasure to me) sitting amongst the weed.

high tide: 12.07 hrs 2.7m; low tide 17.51 hrs 0.7m
time of arrival: 12.48 hrs
weather: sunny, wind E 10mph, temperature 14c
marine litter: many plastic pieces, some quite large; 8 balloons mostly with strings, a lump of paraffin wax.