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A chilly north wind but still beautiful on Mile 202, which I had virtually all to myself.  I previously walked 202 on 12/30/19 and wanted to view any changes after a weekend of storms and King Tides.  Sand appeared to have been deposited on the rolling dunes along the northern half of the mile, but I saw new erosion on the southern half (see photos).  There was a little more large driftwood but not appreciable.  One of the two sand dumps I had previously seen is sloughing off, and areas of the sheer southern sand bluffs have eroded.  I also saw erosion of the sand bank below one of the more vunerable houses on the bay side of the beach near the tip of Alsea Spit.  More pollution than before, mostly chunks of styrofoam and plastic bottles, probably marine-origin from the storms and which I collected and carried out.

Conditions

Temperature: 41 F. Cloud Cover: Partly Cloudy. Wind Velocity: Moderate. Wind Direction: NW. Tide Level: 8.0 feet.

Human Activities

Number of people: 1. Walking or running: 1.

Concerns

Disturbances: Shorebirds moving in response to humans/dogs

Notable Wildlife

A couple dozen gulls sitting on the beach at the tip of Alsea Spit, others flying. A Great Blue Heron flying over to land in the surf to fish. 6 or 8 small groups of I believe Western Snowy Plovers taking shelter against the sheer dunes in the southern part of 202, running away as I walked down the beach. Another group of a dozen or so flying up the beach. A harbor seal sticking its head up in the surf.

Beached Birds

Total dead birds: 4. 1 Cassin's Auklet 3 gulls (believe California Gull). Two of the gulls had been partially eaten by scavengers.

Driftline Content

Seaweeds and seagrass, Shells, Wood pieces, Styrofoam, Ocean-based debris (from fishing boats, ship trash, etc.). Scattered "wind-sailors." A dozen or so plastic bottles and some miscellaneous debris.

Natural Changes

Visible retreat of solid bluff. See Summary

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All Mile 202 Reports

Showing 8 of 60 reports

Mile 202

North Spit Alsea River

March 7, 2024

Mile 202 beach accesses and exits are now restricted because of erosion and sheering off of the sand cliffs along its northern portion, so I now need to plan for a receding tide if I want to walk the entire mile safely.

Jon French

Mile 202

North Spit Alsea River

January 28, 2024

After finding forty beached Cassin's Auklets on Jan.

Jon French

Mile 202

North Spit Alsea River

October 30, 2023

A beautifully calm, sunny day, maybe the last for awhile, with a fifteen mile view from Seal Rock to Cape Perpetua and hardly anyone on the beach except for two surf fishers and a couple valiantly trying to launch a kite with no wind.

Jon French

Mile 202

North Spit Alsea River

August 30, 2023

As I began yesterday's mile walk and monthly COASST beached bird survey, a light rain began to fall, the first in months.

Jon French

Mile 202

North Spit Alsea River

July 23, 2023

As I have done before, I combined today's walk with my monthly COASST survey for dead seabirds.

Jon French

Mile 202

North Spit Alsea River

May 16, 2023

The beach was fairly cool today after 99 degrees two days ago.

Jon French

Mile 202

North Spit Alsea River

March 14, 2023

This was my second monthly beached bird survey for COASST (Coastal Observation And Seabird Survey Team) which I combined with my mile walk.

Jon French

Mile 202

North Spit Alsea River

February 23, 2023

A dead certacean was reported to the Oregon Marine Mammal Stranding Network to be on the beach in Bayshore Oregon by Beach Entrance 67d.

JLcoasties