Sheesh, let’s talk about #tides and sand transport on beaches. Here are two photos taken 22 hours apart, yesterday and today, from the same spot, where Frenchman’s Creek and Pilarcitos Creek meet up to bust through to #HalfMoonBay.
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Kathleen Jones 🚲 🐋 🖌️⚾️ (kleen@sfba.social)'s status on Sunday, 26-May-2024 22:34:11 JST Kathleen Jones 🚲 🐋 🖌️⚾️ -
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Kathleen Jones 🚲 🐋 🖌️⚾️ (kleen@sfba.social)'s status on Sunday, 26-May-2024 22:34:06 JST Kathleen Jones 🚲 🐋 🖌️⚾️ @haayman This was just normal tidal action. That the creeks are running out through the dunes is due to our winter weather, which is when we get rain.
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Arjen Haayman (haayman@todon.nl)'s status on Sunday, 26-May-2024 22:34:10 JST Arjen Haayman @Kleen so this happens every day or was this after a storm?
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Kathleen Jones 🚲 🐋 🖌️⚾️ (kleen@sfba.social)'s status on Sunday, 26-May-2024 22:34:15 JST Kathleen Jones 🚲 🐋 🖌️⚾️ @IanDSmith A beach is different every day. Just amazing.
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Ian Smith (iandsmith@mas.to)'s status on Sunday, 26-May-2024 22:34:16 JST Ian Smith @Kleen I used to live in a coastal town with a pretty flat sand and shingle beach. The beach shape often changed a bit with tides, and the high water line was moved 30 feet inland by one storm
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