Outer Banks Link Love: 1.20.12 – Lots o’ Local News

Outer Banks Link Love

Outer Banks Link Love

Here’s this weeks love for all of the links I couldn’t get to. A bunch of local OBX news to pass on.

Enjoy the link love…

  • Congrats to local Outer Banks surfer, Kim Diggs for landing a full-page spread in the new Surfing magazine. Always great to see an OBX local hit the big time.
  • New Outer Banks bridge one step closer to being a reality. The final environmental impact study was just released for the Mid-Currituck bridge. What do you think, does the OBX need another bridge?
  • The Bodie Island Lighthouse restoration is back on! After almost a year in hiatus, the additional funding for the project has been approved, and work should start at the Lighthouse by late February. Hopefully we’ll be climbing to the top come fall!
  • The Coast Guard earned their pay this week, and hauled in a sailor from a sinking sailboat off of Hatteras.
  • There’s no doubt Lowe’s is on the OBX. And now that they are here, they are bringing 125 jobs with them.
  • Looks like NatGeo is going to do a feature on the Outer Banks. We have to wait until June to see it, but pretty cool.
  • Are you aware that the Outer Banks has some fantastic golf courses? And you can setup an OBX golf package so you can play them all! Sweet.
  • Check out this awesome story about a horse trainer working with the Outer Banks wild horses. The wild horse whisperer?!
  • Got any OBX Civil War artifacts? The Outer Banks History Center is on the hunt for OBX Civil War memorabilia for an upcoming exhibit.
  • Any country music fans out there? How about Randy Thompson fans? Seems that good ol’ boy Randy enjoyed New Year’s on the Outer Banks. Love OBX celebrity sightings!
  • We’ve been sharing a lot of Outer Banks Everyday Magic stories recently, and here’s a great OBX story that wasn’t so magical…then again, maybe an adventure that turns into a lifelong family story is magical.
  • I’m not sure if the OBX needs saving, but just in case, here’s your chance to save the Outer Banks.

Outer Banks: Mother Nature Closing Oregon Inlet?

Mother Nature Closing Oregon Inlet? - 4.1.11

Mother Nature Closing Oregon Inlet? - 4.1.11

The Virginia Pilot recently reported the U.S Coast Guard’s intention to close the Oregon inlet channel connecting the Outer Banks Sound to the Atlantic Ocean. With water depths dropping to substantially low levels of 9 feet from the typical range of 30 to 40 feet, Coast Guard officials are worried about the safety of current conditions and the alternate routes some boaters are taking.

Mother Nature is filling the inlet with sand faster than the Army Corps of Engineers can clear in its daily dredging of the inlet. An effort was made two years ago with over $12 million in stimulus dollars appointed to dredge the inlet but was later destroyed by a storm.

With federal funding at only $1 million compared to the usual $4 million, a projected $10 million as an estimate to complete the job fully, and nature’s inclination to draw sand into Oregon Inlet, officials and taxpayers are less than eager to throw more money at the problem.

A long-term, lasting solution is clearly needed. But, in the meantime, shaving a few million dollars from the dredging work is likely to do more damage to the local OBX economy than it is to help ease the federal deficit.

According to a 2006 study by Dare County, the boating and fishing industries generate more than $682 million a year in revenues and support close to 10,000 jobs.

Given the economic detriment of allowing the inlet to close, Outer Banks residents and vacationers hope Congress and the Obama Administration fund the project until a more permanent fix is found.

We sent one of our roving reporters to Oregon Inlet the other day, and the below video helps demonstrate the issue. If you are familiar with Oregon Inlet, you will recognize the familiar scene of a fishing boat heading home from a trip to the Atlantic and approaching the Bonner Bridge. But rather than the usual straight shot through the channel, the pictures demonstrate that due to the sand filling in and the lack of consistent dredging recently, boats are now required to make an awkward approach to the bridge where they must turn south before swinging north close to the bride and hugging the bridge before turning west at the last minute to make their way under the bridge. This is a relatively complex approach that is adding danger to a usual easy cruise through the Inlet.

Update: The Virginian Pilot is now reporting that the Coast Guard plans to ban large vessels from Oregon Inlet. There are mixed reviews on this issue but it seems that Mother Nature isn’t backing down and now we have to ask…. Where do we go from here?

Update: WRAL reports that Governor Bev Purdue will order the Coast Guard to close Oregon Inlet declaring it impassable for large fishing vessels.

Update 4/18: WRAL reports that a larger dredge is moving into the area to make sure Oregon Inlet remains open to commercial fishing vessels.

Update 4/20: The Virginia Pilot is reporting that unless a new funding source is confirmed, the dredging at Oregon Inlet will stop in early June. “The $4 million budget for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to dredge the channel this fiscal year will be exhausted within the first week of June…When that money is gone, there is no plan to maintain the waterway for the rest of the fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30.”

Hopefully Federal and/or State funding is secured before early June.

Could Oil from the Gulf Spill Reach the Outer Banks?

Gulf Stream Current

Gulf Stream Current

The Gulf oil spill is a devastating disaster, and the threat of damage from the oil is spreading everyday.  The possibility of the oil spill in the gulf hitching a ride on the Gulf Stream and arriving along the North Carolina coast is being discussed,  but the likelihood of such an event is still an unknown.  However, the Coast Guard has trained for these types of scenarios and is ready to act if needed.

In most cases, oil moving up the Atlantic Coast would stay well offshore, but the Coast Guard isn’t taking any chances.  The Coast Guard is currently taking all the necessary measures to plan for the possibility of the oil turning towards the coast.  Every three years, the coast guard practices for the event of a full-scale oil spill.  Two years ago a diesel fuel spill was simulated from a barge in the Cape Fear River.  In the 1980s, an oil spill washed up on the shores of Dare County.  Oil that washed up on shore came from an unknown source, but ended up covering four miles of beach.

Dare County emergency management coordinator N.H. “Sandy” Sanderson is not overly anxious about gulf oil.  In a recent interview with the Bellingham Herald, Sandy mentioned that “This spill is going to get so much attention, and there are so many trip wires in place, that there will be plenty of time to coordinate the response.”

In the same article, a representative for a company that handles oil cleanup in North Carolina mentioned that they “don’t really have a lot of faith that (Gulf oil) will come ashore here, but if it did we would have full capability to respond to it.”

Cleanup crews use an array of boats, skimmers, soak-up gear and other equipment, including more than two miles of booms to contain oil.  Computer software that simulates the force of tides and wind helps predict where an oil plume will go, giving responders an edge.

Update: Here’s a post from 6.4.10 with an FAQ from the Outer Banks Visitor’s Bureau about the potential for oil to hit the Outer Banks from the Gulf spill; at this point, the OBX beaches are clean.

Stuck Boat Rescued Along the Outer Banks

The news surfaced this morning that a 77 foot fishing vessel Sheila Rene was rescued from being stuck on a Sandbar.  The vessel was rescued yesterday afternoon by the Coast Guard.  The boat ran aground on a sandbar Friday evening and the passengers/crew were rescued Saturday morning.  It is also being reported that the vessel will be returned to the docks of Wanchese this afternoon! A big thanks to the Coast guard for the amazing rescue!

Coast Guard Comes to the Rescue on the Outer Banks

  Three crew members of a small sailboat, Noah’s Ark II, were stranded in their craft just south of Nags Head, NC on Sunday afternoon.  The crew called 911 when the sailboat’s propeller malfunctioned and the boat was stuck in rough, choppy seas in Oregon Inlet on the Outer Banks.  The Oregon Inlet Coast Guard crew members could see the sailboat, but the craft was stuck in an area that was too shallow to access with the Coast Guard’s lifeboat.  Instead, a helicopter from the Coast Guard Air Station in Elizabeth City was called in to hoist the sailboat’s crew to safety.  The crew was deposited safely at the nearby Coast Guard station.