Your reporter, Ted Cushman, was at Cape Cod's Atlantic shore
last Sunday expecting to see the predicted 20-foot breakers
battering the beach in a major coastal erosion event.
Fortunately, however, the only thing being battered at Chatham,
Mass., on the Cape's vulnerable elbow, was the beer-battered
fish and chips. Light winds, warm sun, and a sparkling sea drew
hundreds to view the beach, even though the water was closed to
swimming because of strong rip currents. However, the worst
problem in evidence was a scarcity of parking.
The story was not so happy on the coast of Maine, however.
At Acadia National Park, the Atlantic Ocean provided a reminder
of its power and unpredictability: a 7-year-old child drowned
when five sightseeing beach-goers were surprised by a sudden
breaker and were washed into the surf, reports the Boston Globe
("
Girl swept away in surf dies," by Emma Stickgold and David
Abel).
But as Bill's force diminished and the storm passed into far
northern waters, there was little if any property damage to
survey. In the Cape Cod towns of Chatham and Orleans, however,
feathers are still a little ruffled from a brouhaha that broke
out after an earlier summer storm in June, when heavy surf and
high tides destroyed several old "camp" houses along the
Chatham beach. Truro, Mass., contractor Mike Winkler, called in
on an emergency basis to demolish and remove the damaged
structures, was chagrined in July to find his crane stranded on
the beach — not by sand or water, but by the refusal
of neighboring Orleans to allow Winkler's machine to traverse
the beach back to the mainland, reports the Cape Cod Times
("
$800,000 crane stranded on Orleans beach," by Susan
Milton). When Winkler missed a July 1 deadline to complete the
deal, Orleans selectmen refused to extend their permit for him
to cross the beach back, because of the risk to nesting
endangered piping plovers and their eggs.
Winkler finally got the go-ahead to move the crane on July
22
("
Crane coming off North Beach," by Susan Milton), but only
after spending thousands of dollars deploying a different
machine to do the work of the idled rig on another scheduled
job. Winkler kept the situation in perspective, however,
telling the Cape Cod Times, "At least we're safe and
sound."