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Old 12-19-2013, 12:38 PM
Bushwacker Bushwacker is offline
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Unfortunately I'm not sure we'll ever be able to close the big "fertilizer plant" (Lake O and the sugar cane and cattle farms that feed it) that dumps into the IR Lagoon! However the folks in Stuart around the St. Lucie river have been raising hell, so now that folks as far away as Daytona are complaining, maybe we can finally get enough state politicians to ignore the special interest $ and get serious about cleaning up the water flow to the Everglades. Then they can start dumping all that water to the south where it went originally! Fixing the leaky dike to allow higher water levels in Lake O will also help, but that's a huge project that has a loong way to go!
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Old 12-20-2013, 01:12 PM
NoBones NoBones is offline
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FYI,

The link on my opening post is being added to everyday by the
local paper!

You can click on the link and scroll down to the latest article..

Read on....
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Old 12-20-2013, 04:57 PM
Blue_Heron Blue_Heron is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NoBones View Post

You can click on the link and scroll down to the latest article..

Read on....
Too depressing.

We have some of the same going on up here, but we don't have Lake O to blame. Sea grass beds are dying off around Cedar Key, Horseshoe Beach, Steinhatchee, etc. The biologists are saying it's due to elevated nitrate levels in all the springs, Crystal River, and all along the Suwanee River. As Gillie's Sig says, "There's no such thing as normal anymore."
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Old 12-20-2013, 06:37 PM
DonV DonV is offline
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Old 12-20-2013, 06:39 PM
DonV DonV is offline
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Whoops...I went crazy!
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Old 12-21-2013, 08:24 PM
castalot castalot is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DonV View Post
1911 because 911 sometimes is too slow
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Old 12-22-2013, 01:15 PM
McGillicuddy McGillicuddy is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by castalot View Post
1911 because 911 sometimes is too slow
Another classic quip from castalot - that's a sweet sig, also...

Regarding the lagoon there is hope. Dynamic articles like that and a concerned public go a long way. Surfrider, BayKeeper, TU, DU, etc., exerting the right pressure can get things buzzing along.

San Diego Bay used to be a nightmare of heavy metals, urban runoff and assorted maladies. Even in this defense-driven navy town shipbuilders, repair yards and other gross polluters have cleaned up their acts.

Now we have sea turtles nesting in the flats at the bottom of the bay and pacific bonefish in the channels adjacent to the flats. 8-10# bonito are regular catches in season, and the diversity of species is very good. A couple of years ago I even caught a 35" Dorado (dolphinfish) at the terminal south of the 32 St Naval Base.

Ospreys are nesting all over the the area and 100 fish days (spotted bay bass catch n release) are once again possible. The fish are strong and healthy and pull like little freight trains.

Conservation is everybody's business. It doesn't have to be greenies vs contractors... One world, baby.
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