User not logged in - login - register
Home Calendar Books School Tool Photo Gallery Message Boards Users Statistics Advertise Site Info
go to bottom | |
 Message Boards » » Bird lays Egg in OBX...No beach for tourists Page [1]  
Wordsworth
All American
2888 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"Shore bird buffers close 3 popular Outer Banks beaches

Sometime before or on Thursday morning, a shorebird called a least tern laid a single egg in Cape Hatteras National Seashore. A National Park Service ranger spotted it at the end of Ramp 45 to Cape Point, a corner of the Outer Banks well known for surf fishing.

Buffers were quickly installed around the nest, making the road behind the dunes inaccessible to off-road-vehicle traffic. Even though much of Cape Point technically remains open, there is no way to get to it anymore.

Thursday's move was one of several closings of shore areas this week to protect birds, leaving beach drivers stunned at how much access has been limited barely a week after an agreement to keep beaches open, with conditions, was signed.

"Right now, they can't close much more than they have," said Libby Zentmyer, who has been fielding calls from livid beach drivers as executive secretary of the Cape Hatteras Anglers Club. "I didn't think it would be like this."

Beach driving is a long tradition on Hatteras and Ocracoke islands, and at one time it was the only way to get around. Now it is a link to fishing and recreation, and the lifestyle and economy largely depend on off-road access to remote beaches.

The agreement between the Park Service and the Defenders of Wildlife and the National Audubon Society was signed April 30 by U.S. District Judge Terrence Boyle. It settled a lawsuit brought by the environmental groups, which argued that an interim management plan was not doing enough to protect vulnerable shorebirds and sea turtles.

It also headed off an injunction that would have immediately banned driving on the beach. But it included strict wording on providing buffer zones for nesting birds and turtles.

http://media.hamptonroads.com/cache/files/images/93241.jpg " alt="" />On Monday, three favored off-road beaches and fishing spots - Cape Point in Buxton, South Ocracoke and the Bodie Island Spit at Oregon Inlet - were effectively closed to prepare for expected shorebird breeding. Large buffer zones preclude access by pedestrians and vehicles.

Virginia Luizer of Frisco said it may sound like a half mile or so of beach is closed, but the closed areas are blocking access to areas of open beach.

When seasonal closures are added May 15, Luizer said, very little will be accessible.

"The biggest impact will be this summer," she said. "I'm expecting worse than 2005, when every ramp was a glorified parking lot."

Carol Dillon, owner of the Outer Banks Motel in Buxton, said about five weekly reservations have already been cancel ed. Dillon, 79, said she remembers when the Park Service promised the beaches would remain open and free.

"We're all going bankrupt," she said. "It's a sad day when our government can't keep a promise. "

Closing beaches would hurt the tourist-dependent economy more than a report cited by the environmental groups in their earlier request for an injunction, said a response filed by Dare and Hyde counties and a beach driving coalition, which had joined the suit as "defendant-interveners."

Dare County predicted that if access just to the popular area around Oregon Inlet - Bodie Island Spit - were closed, $8 million in annual state, county and local tax revenue would be lost, the court document said.

It said one real estate company contended it would lose $2.2 million annually with an off-road vehicle ban.

At a meeting Thursday of a rule-making committee charged with negotiating a long-term management plan, Jason Rylander, an attorney with Defenders of Wildlife, said the buffers will change depending on the extent and location of nests.

"What we tried to do is ensure that nesting birds and sea turtles would have a chance at the time when they need it most," he said. "We anticipate that they will be lifted to provide traditional ORV access as birds fledge and turtles hatch."

But resentment toward the environmental groups was undeniable during a public portion of the meeting. Attorneys for the plaintiffs are members of the committee.

Carol Garris, owner of Fishin Fever Bait & Tackle in Kill Devil Hills, objected to the settlement provision that required the Park Service to pay the plaintiff's legal fees.

"I'm paying for you to screw up my job. I want my money back," she said. "We tried to work with you, but we give you an inch and you take the whole darn island."

John Newbold, with TW's Bait & Tackle, said business is down 31 percent so far this year. When he directed a question to Neal Moore, a committee member representing the Cape Hatteras Bird Club, Moore shot back: "Keep talking, sir. There's nothing I enjoy more than being bored to tears."

In an interview later, Moore apologized, saying he was frustrated and had lost his cool. "I've listened to a lot of informed people in their statements, and a lot of them are mis-, ill-, and un-."

Rob Alderman, an advocate of beach driving, said he was "thoroughly shocked" at what has transpired since the decree was approved.

Alderman said it is still unclear whether people may walk in the water beyond the mean low tide line to bypass the closure on Cape Point without getting ticketed.

"Is this some kind of Stephen King meets Greek tragedy thing?" he said. "This is horrible. I've got no problem going to jail for this."

National Park Service Outer Banks Group Superintendent Mike Murray said all parties were familiar with the specifics of the closures.

"Compared to the interim strategy, when we at least had access corridors, the consent decree buffers are larger and non-discretionary," he said. "So they're typically resulting in full beach closures."

But both plans involve "a bit of a crapshoot" because no one knows just where the birds will decide to nest.

Murray said the closures may continue to increase with the nesting season, but in mid-summer, they will tend to decrease. The Park Service plans to permit access to beaches by nonmotorized vessels outside of resource closure areas, he said.

Mike Cehrs, a Virginia Beach resident who has come to Hatteras Island for 30 years, said he is canceling his vacation this year because he won't be able to drive to the fishing spots he loves.

"It breaks my heart," he said in a phone interview. "What am I going to do - rent a cottage and sit in the cottage for a week? There's nothing else to do."

"

5/9/2008 12:25:29 AM

skokiaan
All American
26447 Posts
user info
edit post

yankees vs environmentalists

5/9/2008 12:27:21 AM

Fry
The Stubby
7784 Posts
user info
edit post

:carlface:'s all around

5/9/2008 12:30:52 AM

casummer
All American
4755 Posts
user info
edit post

^^that couldn't be further from the truth.

one of the largest groups of opponents to these shut downs is north carolina's surf fishermen.

[Edited on May 9, 2008 at 12:32 AM. Reason : ^s]

5/9/2008 12:32:01 AM

drunknloaded
Suspended
147487 Posts
user info
edit post

cant they just clone a bunch of the particular bird and leave the beach open?

5/9/2008 12:32:12 AM

myerlyn
All American
1319 Posts
user info
edit post

DNL really, Just give up

5/9/2008 12:54:44 AM

drunknloaded
Suspended
147487 Posts
user info
edit post

5/9/2008 12:56:17 AM

 Message Boards » The Lounge » Bird lays Egg in OBX...No beach for tourists Page [1]  
go to top | |
Admin Options : move topic | lock topic

© 2024 by The Wolf Web - All Rights Reserved.
The material located at this site is not endorsed, sponsored or provided by or on behalf of North Carolina State University.
Powered by CrazyWeb v2.39 - our disclaimer.