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NY Times: Seeking Answers on Oil Spill as Questions Mount
General overview.

Gambit Weekly:The Gulf Oil Disaster: Monitoring Air Quality - The Environmental Protection Agency has set up air sampling equipment in Lafourche, Plaquemines and St. Bernard parishes

"Q: The distinct "oil scent" has frequently appeared in the city, miles away from the oil. Is it toxic? 
"A:"Odors can come from most hydrocarbons or VOCs, and these are considered 'air toxics,' with each compound having different levels of health impact," Kura says. "If the odors were truly from the evaporating hydrocarbons or VOCs, they are of concern."
"Crude oil contains pollutants with potential short- and long-term health impacts. Benzene is a carcinogen — exposure to benzene can increase the probability of cancer. Other chemicals in crude also have the potential to impact health, and the elderly, young and sick may respond differently than healthier individuals. Kura says if people experience health problems, "they should make note of their symptoms and visit their health care professionals promptly.""

CNN:Sea turtle eggs being moved to Atlantic
"A sea turtle egg relocation project has been started in hopes of keeping hatchlings out of the oil that's spreading through Gulf of Mexico."

Does it sound like they've pretty much given up hope for the Gulf?

Huge oil-skimming ship makes Virginia stop en route to Gulf of Mexico

FactCheck.org:Oil Spill, Foreign Help and the Jones Act

"Q: Did Obama turn down foreign offers of assistance in cleaning up the Gulf oil spill? Did he refuse to waive Jones Act restrictions on foreign-flag vessels?

"A: No to both questions. So far, five offers have been accepted and only one offer has been rejected. Fifteen foreign-flag vessels are working on the cleanup, and none required a waiver."

Video via Rachel Maddow:Folk reporting about BP Video of a recent flight over the Gulf of Mexico.

Pensacola News Journal: Oil spill: Is Gulf safe for swimming?

"The Escambia County Health Department lifted a health advisory on Pensacola Beach on Friday on the advice of a beach official and against the advice of a federal environmental official."

[a few paragraphs down, the buried lede is revealed]

"So far, 400 people have sought medical care for upper or lower respiratory problems, headaches, nausea, and eye irritation after trips to Escambia County beaches, Lanza said."

Since the headline asks a question, "Is Gulf safe for swimming?", I'll venture an answer: NO.

"We're flying the yellow flags. And that means you need to be careful where you step," Lee said. "Just be careful and have a good time."

"But oil chips, tar balls and submerged oil slicks and the odor of petroleum still were present.

"And people complained about getting a petroleum jelly-like substance on them from sand that was tainted brown."

Sheesh. SHUT DOWN THE BEACH. However much you treasure your tourism destination status, letting people go to the beach in this situation will damage it much more than putting up notice "BEACH CLOSED". Mmkay?

YouTube video: Covered in greasy oil on Pensacola beach from the BP spill Short demonstration of water quality.
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AP: Pensacola Beach is closed after oil from Gulf spill washes ashore

"Lifeguard Collin Cobia wore a red handkerchief over his nose and mouth to block the oil smell. "It's enough to knock you down," he said."

Pictures on the news or web can show what the oiled water or beach look like, but they don't convey what's in the air.

Note as well, major efforts to clean up all the tar that washes up on to a beach doesn't mean it's good as new.

St. Petersburg FL Times:USF scientists find long line of oil 6 inches under the sand at Pensacola Beach

"PENSACOLA BEACH — The sugar-sand beach here appeared cleaner Thursday, after workers picked up tar balls overnight with shovels and nets. By noon they had collected 44,955 pounds of tar balls and oil material, according to the Escambia County Emergency Operations Center.

"But a University of South Florida geologist made a grim discovery Thursday morning, 24 hours after the worst oil onslaught in Florida so far. [...] A dark, contiguous vein of oil, about 6 inches beneath the surface of the sand. [...] "It's a continuous layer" [up to the wave high tide line] "The problem is they're only cleaning up the top of the beach. [...] The beach is not going to be the same for a long time.""

CS Monitor: In Gulf oil spill 'war,' cleanup foot soldiers threaten mutiny

"The main problem, they say, is the confusing command structure, which to them seems to have too many generals and not enough battlefield commanders, thus gumming up the ability of local leaders to react to approaching oil.

""How can you fight a war when you don't let the people on the ground make decisions," says Escambia County Commission Chairman Grover Robinson. "You're going to lose that war.""

Times-Picayune:Shoddy disposal work mars Gulf oil spill cleanup from Mississippi to Florida

"There's no point in collecting this stuff if they're just going to spread it around."

Elsevier Global Medical Network: BP’s $20 Billion: Not A Single Dollar For Health

Times-Picayune: Monitoring health of residents affected by Gulf oil spill is urged by experts

Times-Picayune: Gulf of Mexico oil spill health concerns take center stage at open house

"Residents worried about the public health effects of the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico pressed officials from BP, the Coast Guard and even New Orleans City Hall on Wednesday about the use of chemical dispersants, the long-term availability of medical care for spill victims and other answers they said are not readily available."

[...] "Another woman wanted a commitment from BP spokesman Larry Thomas that the company will continue to pay for medical services "20 years from now, when people have cancer" and when children who live near the spill zone may experience post-traumatic stress disorder"."

Background; BP has long history of lousy safety and ecological spoilage:

Huffington Post:BP: Come for the Gulf Disaster, Stay for the Great Lakes Pollution

"British Petroleum didn't just fall out of the sky one day and decide to start polluting the Gulf of Mexico with the worst oil disaster in United States history. Oh no, they've been at this a while and their exploits are not confined to destroying important ocean ecosystems with risky, unsafe technology."

Beach

Aug. 4th, 2009 06:08 pm
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Am at the beach with Ms. H. and Ms. B.

Yay!

[edited to add]

We had a nice time at Perdido Key, with a stop in Pensacola.

Vacation pix on Flickr
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Beth, Hollie, and I had very nice mini-vaction to Gulf Shores, Alabama. We checked out some of the Mississippi Coast on the way back.

Read more... )
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Beth, Hollie and I are taking a road trip to Gulf Shores, Alabama. To the beach in Beth's new Honda Fit. Yay.
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This was about as pleasant a day as could be asked for if such a day had to include a long Interstate highway drive and getting a flat tire at 75 mph.

This morning I woke Ms Hollie up at first light to walk out of our hotel to the beach and watch the sunrise over the ocean. Flocks of pelicans and at least 2 species of gulls abounded, a number flying and frolicking within 2 meters of us.

We drove north up the peninsula. I pulled over safely as the tread seperated on the one tire that's more than 13 months old (my last tire that predated Katrina, with only a few roofing nail patches). After getting the luggage out of the trunk, I found that somehow I had no lug wrench with the jack equipment. Hollie didn't have one either. Fortunately the friendly Florida Highway Patrol did.

We made it to St. Augustine at dusk, and succeeded in finding a conveniently located place in the old town-- a very nice B & B & B (Bed, Breakfast, and Broadband). We're pampering ourselves a little before going back home to Debrisville. We had dinner at "Havana Village Cafe", a good Cuban place with excellent mojitos.

Our bed has that electromechanical firmness control thingie like Garrison Keilor talks about, so we're going to check that out.
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Fort Walton Beach, through Alabama & Mississippi to Monroe, on to Texas

Friends in Florida, Worst Beach Ever, Bug attacks in a Birdless Wilderness, High Civilization in North East Louisiana, and other post hurricane observations

From Jacksonville, Florida, [livejournal.com profile] mshollie and I drove from the Atlantic to Florida's Gulf Coast. We availied ourself of a short free winery tour at De Funiac Springs, then took a look at De Funiac's cute old town, before heading out to the coast to Fort Walton Beach, where [livejournal.com profile] tal_greywolf showed us the Indian Mound, took us out to dinner, and put us up for the night.

The next morning Tal took us to "The Breakfast Place". After dropping him off at work we took care of some evacuee business; change of addresses to Austin, and stopped by a Salvation Army building that was a busy evacuee processing center. We still havn't gotten registered with FEMA (despite trying various ways), and there was a several day wait there, but we did register with the Red Cross.

While there we both took a can of water from one of the ice chests. It's Anhauser Busch Not For Sale Water in white cans. It tasted stale and metalic. Hollie & I are usually up for a nice cold container of water, but we didn't finish these.

Late morning we got together with fellow New Orleans evacuee Cristina (of National Ahh Spa Day). Cristina and her 15 month old daughter Ayala were staying with her dad in Fort Walton Beach, where she had grown up.

We packed up some soft drinks and Hollie and Cristina put on cute matching bathing suits for a visit to nearby Navarre Beach. Cristina hadn't been there since before Ayala was born. The sign for the turn-off said "Navarre Beach: Florida's Best Kept Secret". We were looking forward to a pleasant beach day. When we got there, we found that the auto turn-off to the clothing optional area was closed, the road still covered in vast dunes not cleared from Ivan last year &/or Dennis earlier this year. Still, the white sand looked nice and we started hoofing it. Cristina noted that the usually very clear water was all cloudy with strange black particles like asphalt in it. In the background was the fishing pier,the middle segment missing since Ivan. After we'd gone a ways Cristina started getting bitten by some bugs. We stopped to spray on bug repelent, but as soon as we stayed in one place for a while the nasty biting flies came on us in droves. (Someone later told us they were "Alabama flies".) Cristina said she'd never encountered anything like this. Even the Backwoods Off only slowed them down a bit. Retreat! We headed back towards the car at a brisk trot, with Cristina setting the pace in front with Ayala on her hip. When we got to the parking lot we realized that Hollie, who's had less exprience walking in sand, was red-faced and out of breath. Worst Day at the Beach Ever! After showers, Chinese food, and naps, Cristina took us to a friend's high-end subdivision, where we had a gorgeous complex with a gigantic swimming pool and a hot tub all to ourselves. Best pool ever!

Cristina left her clarinet in New Orleans, but when she found out I'd brought one of my trombones in the car (the c. 1913 White "King") she contemplated getting another clarinet, and noted her dad played accordian. This was the closest I've come to playing in a band again since leaving New Orleans.

The next morning Cristina made us French Toast and bacon (Nicest hostess ever!) before Hollie and I hit the road West. Lots of Hurricane Ivan damage evident, including one of the spans of the highway connecting Pensacola Beach with Pensacola still had large sections knocked out. Despite much damage still not repaired, it was good seeing Pensacola back in business.

Further west through Alabama, it was hard to tell where the Ivan damage ended and the Katrina damage began. We started heading inland at Mobile. Since Florida the love-bugs were out in vast clouds over the highways. I'd seen love-bug season while driving through northern Florida before, but never anything like this. I stopped every 90 minutes to clear bug corpses from enough of my windshield to see out of. I realized I hadn't seen any birds the whole day's drive-- and for that matter, no sea-gulls at the beach the previous day. I presume the birds were driven off by the storm, but it was strange that they were still gone some 2 weeks later.

Hurricane damage was especially evident in and around Hattiesburg, but the city seemed up & running. No problem finding gas.

The bugs and damage continued up to Jackson, MS. When we crossed the Mississippi River in to Lousiana, suddenly there were birds again, and no bugs.

Along I-20, those entering Louisiana from Mississippi find a liquor store before they get to the state welcome center. Priorities.

North east Louisiana was once one of the continent's great centers of civilization. But that was some 2,500 years ago.
As we were making good time, I made an unschedualed detour off the interstate to visit Poverty Point. This is a vast paleo-Indian site, with huge mound constructions. Excavations show trade goods from as far away as Michigan. Poverty Point is remarkable not just for its size, but also how early it was-- much of its heyday being pre-ceramic.

After our quick look around Poverty Point, on to Monroe, Louisiana. As Poverty Point had extensive trade contacts but no pottery, Monroe has an NPR station but as yet no Starbucks. They do, however, have a Copelands, which we nostalgically ate a mostly not bad meal at.

Lots of fellow refugees in Monroe. We talked to one who has spent the whole time since Katrina in a Motel 6 room. We're glad our situation is somewhat better than that.

Next day, we hit the road again early. We heard a Kermit Ruffins song on the radio while passing through Ruston.

Hollie & I are now at Bonner & Robbie's place in South Austin. They took us out to eat at Threadgil's last night.

And that catches things up.
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A sunny day, papa's okay, and Hollie & I finally got a chance to go to Jacksonville Beach for a couple of hours.

Yay!!

The sea was angry-- some surfers taking advantage of it. The waves were much foamyer than either of us had ever seen them-- and I've lived by and near the ocean before. It was like a convoy of tankers carrying extra sudsy detergent had sunk offshore. I presume it's something to do with Hurricane Ophelia. Either way, big gobs of foam on all the waves, and blowing around on the beach like tumbleweeds.

The grey sand beach was nice, however.

Afterwards, H & I ate at a Brazilian Restaurant.
This was the first time either of us had eaten Brazilian. Apparently it's fairly authentic, as Jacksonville seems to have a good sized Brazilian community, and everyone else there was speaking Portuguese. I had a yummy blackbeans & rice dish with powdered yucca and nicely seasoned collard greens. Hollie had a type of chicken & beef shish-kabob type dish.

Very nice being able to relax and recharge our batteries.

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