...Slight derail, but what is the thing at 1:50 that seems to be spewing something into the water?...
Probably a dredge discharge pipe.
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...Slight derail, but what is the thing at 1:50 that seems to be spewing something into the water?...
It's the discharge pipe for the pump house on the north side of the north jetty of the inletProbably a dredge discharge pipe.
So, you've been on the boat and through this inlet how many times? I know of at least three boats that have been chewed up here. My search showed I was wrong and that there have been more. Its an incredibly dicey inlet.Actually, not approaching the first wave correctly and with sufficient power appears to be what initially turned this boat
It’s the outlet from the dredging boat. They are constantly dredging the inlets of sand and silt, almost a daily occurrence .Crazy stuff. Glad everyone is OK.
Slight derail, but what is the thing at 1:50 that seems to be spewing something into the water?
View attachment 550768
Never been through that inlet - but been through many others that are dicey... though I don’t know why that matters to my valid question as to what happened here? Barring mechanical issues, the video shows a situation that could have been avoided in my opinion.So, you've been on the boat and through this inlet how many times? I know of at least three boats that have been chewed up here. My search showed I was wrong and that there have been more. Its an incredibly dicey inlet.
Boynton is one of my fav places to dive, but that inlet gives me the heebedee jeebedees every time I go through it. Underestimate it's ferocity at your own peril, and possibly everyone else's' on the boat.
Probably a sand pumping pipe, moving sand from somewhere it builds up to a place where it disappears from. There are two similar operations near the border of New South Wales and Queensland where sand is taken away from the southern side of the entry to a waterway/river and deposited on the northern side. Also stops the waterway silting up.Crazy stuff. Glad everyone is OK.
Slight derail, but what is the thing at 1:50 that seems to be spewing something into the water?
View attachment 550768
The vast majority of your post sounded like valid complaints. This one item, however, may have been fully out of his control. The current in this area varies every day, as the gulf-stream moves in & out from shore. Our prevailing current is 2-3 knots north, but I have seen 6N and I have seen 2S. I have also seen zero, more than once. There is just no predicting it. Large areas can be at 3 knots on Tuesday & zero on Wednesday. Current is just a roll of the dice around here, unlike some other places where I have lived....What constituted a drift dive for Adam was hardly more current than what I get on the second half of a routine shore dive.....
There are a few "low points" in the area that get pumped out often. It's tidal and road runoff, not raw sewage.Probably a sand pumping pipe, moving sand from somewhere it builds up to a place where it disappears from. There are two similar operations near the border of New South Wales and Queensland where sand is taken away from the southern side of the entry to a waterway/river and deposited on the northern side. Also stops the waterway silting up.