Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Village Flowers, Pt. 1

We took a stroll and checked out some flowers around the neighborhood.

Hideaway Village, in the Buzzards Bay part of Bourne.


This website takes me from Swansea to Quincy and from Wellfleet to Brockton, but sometimes we just Stay Local.

Not only did we stay in the village for this article, and not only have we not left our own street yet, but we haven't gotten 20 feet from my house, and the next few pictures also are in that range.

Windy Hill Road has a flower war going on. It's a friendly war, as the neighbors help each other out with water and advice. It's like one of those blocks where one guy goes nuts with the Christmas lights, a neighbor follows suit, and a third neighbor lights up just for the spirit of it. Shoot, even that hack stoner journalist got out and planted a Coleus or three.


Getting the OY in our ROY G. BIV flower color spectrum.


"An idealist is one who, upon noticing that roses smell better than cabbage, assumes that they also make better soup." H.L. Mencken


Still on Windy Hill Road, btw..

We used him in a previous article, but we'll use him again because he friggin' rules.


I'm not 100% sure that we still aren't on Windy Hill Road... or some variation of it.



I think that this is technically on Windy Hill Road, even though it isn't on a road.


We went off our street for this one, bringing a 4077th touch to Bourne.


We actually strolled the whole neighborhood. If there was some big geek in your yard last week with a camera, c'est moi..

The first time that I ever saluted a flowerpot.


We have more pics, but that's why this article has a "Part. 1" in the title.



Monday, July 30, 2018

New Bedford Beach Day



We took us a stroll down to West Beach in New Bedford the other day.


You probably don't think "New Bedford" and "beach day" together very often, but Beige has some natural beauty to her.


If you get the beach to yourself, even better...


The hurricane barrier and abandoned mill add a nice touch.


It's always nice to see someone out clamming.

OK, almost always nice...

If life forces you to sleep outside, you may as well do it at the beach.


Thing #2



West Beach is well patrolled.



Monkeying around the aforementioned abandoned brick factory.


Good people spacing...

If you plant one of these in beach sand, it grows a lifeguard.

See?

Free suntan lotion, courtesy of the City Of New Bedford.






Sunday, July 29, 2018

How Cape Cod Deals With Her Sharks


Sharks have always been around Massachusetts. We have had fatal shark attacks in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, and we are due for another one soon.

A bounty on seals, which decimated their numbers locally, was lifted in the 1980s. Seals gradually returned to Cape Cod in great numbers. All good so far...

But where the seals go, the sharks follow. It is simple Ocean Algebra. Seals live on Cape Cod, sharks eat seals, so therefore...

Not only do we get sharks, but we get the really big scary ones, the Great White Sharks.

We will burn a little time today discussing what Cape Cod is doing to protect her beachgoers.

She doesn't look that threatening, but a lifeguard is someone who spends her day watching the water. If a prominent dorsal fin is spotted or reported to her, she has the authority to order people out of the water. Short of a Chevy Chase-style Land Shark, you are safe once your feet are on dry ground.

I can see the lifeguard game undergoing radical change now that sharks are on their threat list. It may now be impossible to sit on a stand in a Hasselhoffian manner. Instead, it could easily become a game of tags, drones, fish-finders and fast-responding boats.

If someone was injured by a shark and still in the water, I would have great trepidation about having a teenager swim out to perform the rescue. I would be concerned for both the swimmer and the lifeguard.

No, the lifeguard being a state champion swimmer or the daughter of two Navy SEALS wouldn't matter much... she may swim like a fish, but not like OUR fish, as Quint once said. She would be Option B on the shark's Luncheon Specials menu.



If you have her offshore in a boat, she suddenly becomes much more effective. I would guess that she would be more effective in all aspects of lifeguarding. While there is a needle in a haystack feel to looking for a shark with a fish finder, it would probably be worth the investment. I feel the same way about drones.

The lifeguard would also be safer, like Morely. To be fair, I am not sure if lifeguards are even supposed to engage in a situation where someone has been attacked by a shark.

You'd probably still need to have lifeguards on the beach but it seems that you would definitely need to have some in boats.

This will cost money, but if they're filling the beach every day at $20 a carload, they have money.

Helping people be aware is important. Cape Cod gets a lot of tourists. Many of them are from inland Massachusetts, and are aware of the shark problem Cape Cod has.

Others are from different states, where a lobsterman seeing a shark off of Wellfleet doesn't make the evening news. They may have no idea what is out there, lurking just offshore.

There isn't much one can do once a shark attacks, but being aware of the situation can help one avoid such a scenario.

I took these flag shots at Nauset Beach. Sharks hang around there. Right under the flag is a handy poster explaining the shark presence and offering a few handy tips on how to not be some leviathan's snack.

You can't kill an attacking shark with knowledge, but you can avoid him, and that is probably a more realistic end goal.


Beyond sharing out knowledge, our remaining options are few. We have that guy who tags sharks, whiche gives us warning on some sharks. Non-tagged sharks would be stealth until they decided to show themselves.

Cape Cod has the wrong sort of beach for netting. Long, straight beaches are difficult for netting, and that's before we factor in our frequently rough seas. 

Beyond that, it is brutality. Like Dr. Hooper said, we have to kill the shark or cut off his food supply. Those are culls, of either sharks or seals or both. We would be public enemy number one to a lot of people, especially when Shark Week is ongoing.

In the end, our options seem to be limited to superpowering the lifeguards and being mindful of the sea.




Friday, July 27, 2018

Patriots Training Camp Open To Public

We headed out to Foxboro to catch opening day of the New England Patriots training camp.


It was a hot day, but we had a fan. We were fans with fans, once you break it down.

Gillette Stadium hosted... although they practice on a high school-looking field behind the stadium.


Champagne Tom and friends

Practices are open to the public and free, Saturday and Sunday, 9:15 AM. Check the schedule here.


Celebrities were everywhere, including Pat Patriot.

Can't forget the car insurance salamander...

...and of course my man here...

Even the lawn rules.




They only ran two plays (a few dozen times, remember that this is a Belichick team) while we were shooting.

Tom ran about half of the plays.

It was pretty much a try-not-getting-injured walk through, but a ton of fun.






Archives: Massachusetts Shark Cull?


Barnstable County Commissioner Ron Beaty has put a "shark hazard mitigation strategy" on the table after a series of shark interactions on the Outer Cape. 

These how-do-you-do's between sharks and humans ran the gamut from "A Fisherman Saw One" to "One Ate A Seal 20 Yards Off Of A Busy Beach" to "One Attacked A Surfboard With A Surfer Still On It."

This plan is soaked in controversy, and will require Ally Raisman levels of Moral Gymnastics.

Cape Cod, as we often mention here, has her pros and cons. As is often the case in life, the good comes with the bad at times. You can adopt an entirely beachnik lifestyle if you wish, but you're going to lose years of your life stuck in traffic. You will have the best view of the sunrise in Massachusetts, but you may also end up in the tummy of a Volvo-sized apex predator.

Can't win 'em all, right?

Wychmere

Becoming the lunch of some greater being is a bad thing to be thinking about, and doing so will definitely dampen your enjoyment of Cape Cod's many fine beaches. The best defense is to go with the numbers. Chew on this, if you will...

-Sharks have killed three people in Massachusetts since the Other Man arrived in 1620. The last one was in the 1930s.

- None of these attacks were on Cape Cod. Only one (Mattapoisett) happened near the shore, and the Scituate and Swampscott/Boston fatalities happened rather far offshore. You are more likely to have your boat attacked and be devoured than you are to suffer a Samuel L. styledirect snatching from the shallow water.

- Cape Cod has only had 3 attacks in her recent history, and one of them was weak enough that the victim was originally thought to have tangled with a bluefish or a particularly capable lobster. Another of these attacks harmed only a surfboard.

- Cape Cod's population goes up to 400,000 every summer, and 200,000 of that number are people who came for the direct purpose of swimming. Surfcasting is our national sport, if a Cape can have a national sport. We've had great periods of time where "fisherman" was the main job in town. We've never had anyone get sharked to death on Cape Cod, and nothing I read speaks of indigenous, Wampanoag/Algonquian shark attacks.

- If you count non-lethal attacks in Massachusetts, you get about a dozen. Some of these attacks were spurious, such as "a hammerhead bumped into my boat while I was reeling in a tuna."

- You are 132 times more likely to drown at a beach than to be killed by a shark. You are 75 times more likely to be killed by lightning. You are 290 times more likely to be killed by a boat. You are 45 times more likely to be killed by a riptide. You are 1.6 times more likely to be swallowed up by a sand sinkhole- which, to be fair, may be a worse way to go.

- If you're female, you're more likely to be killed by a Kennedy crashing a vehicle into a Martha's Vineyard body of water. No women have been killed by a shark in Massachusetts' recorded history. Two, to my knowledge, were in a kayak a shark sampled a few years back in Manomet.

- Depending on the year studied, you are more likely to be bitten by a lab rat, a blue jay, a ferret, a gerbil, a parrot, a skunk, a raccoon... Shoot, you are 100 times more likely to be bitten by a human than a shark.

- Most sharks, Great Whites included, feed on a single item, Our sharks like seals, which is why the arrival of the sharks closely followed the arrival of the seals. Humans, even chubby ones, aren't fatty enough (in other words, we're too crunchy) for a shark's tastes. We are most likely also not salty enough to be shark food. An attack on a human is almost always a shark mistaking the human for a seal or a squid.

- We'd need 394 fatal shark attacks this summer to average one a year since the Mayflower arrived.

Duxbury Beach

So, it isn't like this is a pressing issue or anything. Why the shark cull, then?

Cape Cod is a beach, a big long one with water on both sides of it. Beach life draws in the tourists. Cape Cod depends on those tourists for her economic well-being. If sharks start gobbling swimmers, no one will come here.

It's basically the arguments posed by Quint and Mayor Vaughn in Jaws. We're a summer town. We need summer dollars, or we'll be on the welfare all winter. If someone says "Barracuda," no one will care. If we turn up on CNN or YouTube in the form of a shark attack video, we may as well be Iowa for all the beach tourism we'll get afterwards.

Farewell and adieu, to you fair Spanish ladies...

Don't get me wrong. It's very sad and tragic when someone dies in a car wreck or if they get the Die Slow or whatever... but a slip-n-fall in the tub isn't going to scare away 200,000 tourists every summer, and a shark attack will.

Chatham Harbor

Will the Beaty plan work?

There's a lot to hate about it. For starters, it is incomplete. It won't kill every shark. You only need one shark to slip by, and we get all that Amity Island negativity. So, right off the bat, the plan blows like the mighty North wind.

Anyone who has shark-fished for sport or profit will tell you that sharks- and fish in general- can be finicky. They may have no interest at all in whatever bait is being offered. As they are sort of up here to eat seals, offering them mackerel would be akin to going to the Chinese restaurant looking for a pizza.

You could bait the hooks with seals, but seals- like Great White Sharks- are a protected species. You already have to deal with the tree huggers to kill Great White Sharks... imagine the reaction when you say "We also have to kill a protected species to bait the hooks to kill another protected species." Remember, they shut beaches down here when a Piping Plover lays eggs in a dune.

Seals, which I again point out are protected, exist in far greater numbers than sharks do here. They eat the same diet as sharks do... minus, of course, seal meat. A seal is more likely to end up hooked than a shark is if you bait the hook with mackerel or haddock or whatever. You might slaughter 500 seals for each Great White Shark you manage to snare. An Australian hook program, which we''ll get to soon enough, reported bycatch of whales, sea turtles and dolphins.

Speaking of seals, they are the favorite meal of the sharks. If you drive the sharks away, you have an unchecked seal population. They rut like sea bunnies, too. Cape Cod fishermen don't mind sharks, but they hate seals. With no sharks, the Cape Cod fisherman will suddenly become the seal's apex predator.

That said... when we had a seal bounty (up until the 1960s on Cape Cod), it drove off all of the seals, and no one even saw a non-Basking shark near the shore in these parts. Sharks weren't very prominent here before the bounty, so remember to balance all the numbers properly.

West Island, Fairhaven
We aren't the first people to consider hooking sharks, and we won't be the first ones to do it if it ever comes to that. Australia, South Africa and Brazil have all taken a crack at it, with South Africa having done so for 50 years.

Western Australia, after a series of attacks on surfers, enacted a shark cull. They used the same baited drumline approach Beaty is proposing. They did so from 2012 through 2016, when a new government discontinued the policy.

Queensland has been using drumlines since 1962, and has had one shark attack death since. They had 27 between 1919 and 1961. South Africa had 3 non-fatal shark attacks at controlled beaches, and

The Aussies anchored a floating barrel to the sea bed, and set a big baited hook in the middle. Fishermen would check the hooks, kill any large (3 meters and above) sharks and try to save any bycatch.

They paid X number of fishermen $610,000 (US) for 107 days of setting hooks and removing the catch. They spent an additional $20 million on mitigation and education measures.

During the first 3 weeks of the program, 65 sharks were caught. 75% of them were under 3 meters, and 20% of those were dead on the hook. The remainder were released with often grievous injury.

Media reaction was intense. The video of the shooting of a Tiger Shark unleashed a storm of protest. Rumors arose later that the drumline had also killed a dolphin, and the fishing boat in question had a large sea creature under a tarp.

Amid large protests, the program was not kept alive for 2017.

Orleans

Brazil has also enacted the drumline strategy. Here's the bycatch, in both numbers and percentage of survival:

Spotted eagle ray - 4 - 100%
Marine catfish - 244 - 75%
Blacknose shark - 26 - 12%
Marine turtles - 4 - 100%
Barred grunt - 3 - 67%
Sting rays - 14 - 93%
Goliath grouper - 13- 100%
Nurse shark - 130 - 99%
Moray eels - 11 - 19%
Snappers - 6 -67%
Devil rays - 6 - 50%
Brazilian sharpnose shark - 1 - 0%

During the same period 38 potentially aggressive sharks were also hooked, including tiger sharks (34) and bull sharks (4). The overall survival rate of potentially aggressive sharks was 70% (relocated and released).

Shark attacks went down by 97% after the drumlines were set, although shark attack numbers vary wildly year-to-year. Many critics cite that people will avoid shark-infested waters once they are made known to the public, and that's what drove the numbers down.

Hyannis Port

Beaty, one should know, appears to be somewhat out of his mind.

He is often mentioned as an example when people discuss voters just checking whatever name is next to the "R" or the "D" on a ballot. He has been referred to as a "lunatic" by another local pol. He has served time in a federal prison for threatening President Bush, which is unusual for a Republican.

There's a real chance that his proposal will be laughed out of court, as the lawyers say.

Will people still be laughing when some child gets Mack The Knifed in the surf, taking our tourist economy with him?

People's reactions tend to be ugly with shark attack deaths, especially if their economy can be destroyed by them. Judging by things like King Phillip's War, Massachusetts has an ethic of Abject Slaughter when confronted by a deadly threat, even if the threat is minimal. We've slaughtered seals before, to the extent of driving them away for decades. Sharks are like seals, in that they can annihilate an area of our economy, and they aren't like seals, in that they can devour human beings.

Cape Cod's mood could turn very sour if a shark attack happened. They would be ripe for a brutal plan like the one offered by Beaty. This column hopes that a less cruel solution can be worked out.

Thumpertown Beach