Thank you for that report.FYI
No-swimming advisory lifted for Phil Foster Park and Sandoway Beach
A no-swimming advisory has been lifted for Phil Foster Park and Sandoway in Delray Beach.www.wptv.com
I am curious if the samples were taken during incoming or outgoing tide. The water quality there varies quite a bit. I did some emergency diving on a grounded boat just north of there about 6 months ago & ended up with an eye infection. That was during outgoing tide. I also did some emergency diving on a boat a mile south of there about a year ago, during outgoing tide & my entire body itched badly for several hours.
The outgoing water in that area is pretty much always visibly murky. It contains a lot of runoff from places like the cane fields out west. There is also effluent from live aboard boats in the area. I was on board a large yacht the other day when the owner called to get a pump out at a local marina & was told that the facilities were unavailable. I'm guessing that in that kind of environment, a lot of boats are going to use the only option they have available when their holding tanks get full.
Since Phil Foster is right by Lake Worth Inlet, the incoming tide washes clean sea water through the area & provides a very different set of conditions.
There are many reasons why most people only dive that spot around high tide. Improved visibility is the one most often discussed, but it is just one of the reasons why high tide is the best time.
Similarly, incoming tide is normally the best time to hit the Singer Island beaches that are just north of the inlet. During outgoing tide, they get the wash out from the inlet, as the prevailing north currents do their dirty work. You can often see a stark color difference a few hundred yards off the beach on outgoing tide.
Edit,
I now notice that the bad samples were taken 2/1/22. On that day, neither high tide at BHB was during daylight hours. I'm going to guess that the sample was probably taken at a time that was not near high tide.