Report Details

Mile 211 has greatly changed since I first began walking it 8/16.  The mud and standing water are gone, and it is now a very people-friendly and inviting beach.  As a result, there are many more people on the beach than I have seen in the past.  There still is little or no dry sand, however, because of the water constantly seeping from the cliff about 1/3 of the way up from the beach.  I will try to add photos at a later date.

Conditions

Temperature: 48 F. Cloud Cover: Sunny. Wind Velocity: Moderate. Wind Direction: N. Tide Level: 4.5 feet.

Human Activities

Number of people: 29. Number of dogs: 7. Walking or running: 18. Playing in surf: 2. Fishing: 1. Other Activities: 1 child on bicycle. Many more people were on beach than I have seen before. Beach has greatly changed since I began walking it in August, 2016. It is gently sloping from cliff to ocean; mud and standing water have disappeared.

Concerns

Apparent violations: None except those previously reported..

Vehicles

Cars/trucks parking: 14.

Stranded Marine Mammals

I observed a seal lion carcass on March 6, the last time I walked the beach before the date of this report. I have observed three sea lion carcasses since I began walking mile 211 last August.

Dead Fish or Invertebrates

Not fish, but small finger-sized white/translucent dead marine animals.

Driftline Content

Small rocks, Seaweeds and seagrass, Shells, Animal casings (e.g., crab, shrimp molt), Wood pieces, Land-based debris (picnics, etc.). Many small plastic pieces, but not sure they qualify as "pellets". The oddest thing in the driftline is a picnic table with attached benches, partly buried in the sand and partially covered in gooseneck barnacles. I observed the same table (I believe) on March 6, but the table had moved 40 feet closer to cliffs by 3/19, still upright and partially buried in sand.

Natural Changes

Landslides/major boulder falls. Large field of small rocks and stones appeared since 3/06. Large sections of rock have appeared which were formerly covered by sand. Large boulder-sized rocks have fallen from cliffs in several places.

Share this post

All Mile 211 Reports

Showing 8 of 29 reports

Mile 211

Lost Creek Wayside north, Holiday Beach south

June 1, 2022

Erosion in the face of the embankment continues, including new large boulder falls.

Chad101

Mile 211

Lost Creek Wayside north, Holiday Beach south

September 21, 2021

Relatively large number of people (for mile 211) were enjoying the beach on a sunny, inviting day.

Chad101

Mile 211

Lost Creek Wayside north, Holiday Beach south

June 21, 2021

Fairly big crowd for mile 211 on a foggy June 21, most of the people as usual near the beach access at Lost Creek Wayside.

Chad101

Mile 211

Lost Creek Wayside north, Holiday Beach south

March 13, 2021

My last previous report was at the end of 2019, but the changes over the last year are typical of Mile 211, including rockslides or boulder falls, rockfields covering parts of the beach, and a new drainage pipe.

Chad101

Mile 211

Lost Creek Wayside north, Holiday Beach south

June 11, 2020

More than 10 previously unobserved drainage pipes in places with already existing pipes.

Chad101

decorative elemnt for a coastwatch report.

Mile 211

Lost Creek Wayside north, Holiday Beach south

January 9, 2020

I tried to pick up and carry back to trash collection area all plastic pieces I found larger than 1 square inch, but for every piece I picked up there were at least 100 smaller pieces, a great increase over the amount of plastic just a few years ago.

Chad101

Mile 211

Lost Creek Wayside north, Holiday Beach south

September 19, 2019

The contour of the beach has changed again so that there are numerous patches of standing water at the base of the embankment.

Chad101

Mile 211

Lost Creek Wayside north, Holiday Beach south

June 12, 2019

Most of the people were within 100 yards of the Lost Creek beach access.

Chad101