No I’m not afraid of sharks; like the well publicized Great
White sightings in Chatham.
In fact, I was in the water in Chatham
[where my parents happen to live] just a few weeks ago. I mean “come on” we
have plenty of sharks in sharks in Long Island’s waters.
I was actually bumped by a Tiger Shark while fishing a few years back. I was
wading in Fire Island Inlet up to my waist, trying to cast into a bait ball.
The shark was slow and graceful. I initially thought it was the shadow of one
of those slow flying airplanes that pull the banner ads at the beach. But when
that shadow bumped, or investigated me, it felt like someone dragged 50 grit
sandpaper across my thigh.
We see sharks more
often in the Fall through Spring months. Probably because the water visibility
is better. But I have no doubt there are out there. It’s there territory; their
home; we are the visitors. To be honest with you, I am more afraid of a school
of Bluefish. Now those guys will do
some damage; first you have that tell-tail smell, then you see the Blitz, as
they swim, mouths open, and bite anything. When they blow through a lineup
chasing bait fish, you do not want to be in the water.
So what am I afraid of? The rain. More specifically
downpours. And that seems to be the norm this year.
So why is that bad? Storm Run off.
The past decade’s Mc-Mansion craze, all the new black-top,
and
bulkhead-ing of our island is a bad thing. Every time is
rains, all the nitrogen rich fertilizer from our artificially green lawns,
along with anything else out there, goes straight into the water.
The loss of the natural marshland to land fill means we have
nothing to filter all that crap. Oh yea and I mean CRAP literally. Our sewage
treatment facilities were built when the population of Long Island
was about a third of what it is today. And that is even if you have a sewage
treatment plant. Many communities still rely on “theoretical’ septic systems
and leaching fields.
Water at Long Island beaches is experiencing
increased bacteria counts. In 2011 and the state as a whole dropped five spots
in a nationwide ranking of beach-water cleanliness. Stormwater runoff and sewage spills have dropped New
York’s ranking
to 24 out of 30 states in the "Testing the Waters" report issued by
the environmental advocacy group Natural Resources Defense Council.
I was able to leave work early on Friday, but I was afraid
to go in the water. Even the Ocean smelled like poop. This is really becoming a
health risk. Many Bunker, Blues, and Striped Bass I have caught this year are
showing signs of parasites.
The scariest in my opinion is mycobacteriosis. It is so bad
the DEC recommends you only handle these fish wearing rubber gloves!
For more information; or to report signs of a diseased fish
visit...
At least Massachusetts
has issued a warning. Most States are not. “I assume” they are afraid of losing
the revenue fishermen bring.
So I didn’t go windsurfing Friday in the pouring rain. I did
give a Kite-surfer who was separated from his kite a ride. But shampooed the
passenger seat after realizing he soaked it to the cushion. And on Saturday I
feel good about my choice.
Nassau County
officials announced 14 North Shore
beaches are closed to bathers Saturday after heavy rainfall. Suffolk
County officials issued
A beach advisory, warning residents to avoid bathing at 60 Suffolk
County beaches.
We just don’t get it.
2 comments:
How very sad that what appears to be a "natural" meeting of land and sea is tainted by pollution. When all is said and done there are just too many people on this planet. Best wishes from Yorkshire, England.
Thanks for posting, it's quite scary. I hope it gets to the local headlines at some point!
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