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Paddle for Parkinsons

Issue 542

The voice of The Island since 1996

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The Island Moon

September 4, 2014 Around The Island By Dale Rankin

editor@islandmoon.com Tampico and Veracruz took the brunt of Tropical Storm Dolly on Wednesday but Island beaches got their share of surge tides – pushing water and Sargassum weed to the base of the seawall and the dune line. The storm only produced thirty mileper-hour winds but did bring 5-10 inches of rain which we could have used.

Thirty mile-per-hour winds barely qualify as a windy day around here. We don’t even bring the plants inside cling · Directions until somewhere north of 60 mph. We Islanders can pitch a tent in a 30 mph blow. The 2014 Hurricane Season looks like it will pass us by this year but a rain-dropping tropical storm like Dolly would have been a welcome visitor.

Weekly

Paddle for Parkinson’s Plows Through Weather 191 Paddlers Race Through the Canals By Brent Rourk Persistent lightning and the ominous sounds of rolling thunder accompanied the early morning hours last Saturday. Mist and gentle rain moistened the streets of this sandbar. Paddle for Parkinson’s was scheduled for Saturday morning at 9:00 A.M. and a few heavy overtures of thunder had many prospective paddlers wondering if the event would still be held. Fortunately, the weather simmered and kayakers and paddlers slowly started showing up at the boat launch adjacent to Don and Sandy Billish Park.

By Dale Rankin

Projects continued on A11

Work at Port Aransas Airport Takes Off Longer runway, more hangers, retail space Wetlands

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A little weather challenge didn’t deter Islanders from turning out in numbers for Paddle for Parkinson’s last weekend. The canals filled up under cloudy skies; after all if you’re in a kayak or on a Stand Up Paddle Board what’s a little rain? Everyone had fun for a good cause. Congratulations to Mona and the people who put it on. As a sidenote, our friend and fellow Islander Robbie Felder who won his division in the SUP competition pioneered a new type of training for the event which was very effective. Ask him about it if you see him.

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Also this week, word came from the Texas Department of Transportation that a project to widen SH 361 on the Southside of Port Aransas schedule for this fall will be put off until early next year. It was originally slated for a start time prior to Spring Break 2014 but complications arose, all should be fine as long as it is ready for Spring Break 2015.

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Island Moorings

Work at Mustang Airport will include an expanded runway, new hangers and retail space.

By Dale Rankin Of all the things that are unique about Port Aransas there is one that is often overlooked. There are less than half a dozen airports on barrier islands in the United States and Mustang Beach Airport is one of them.

That uniqueness is one of the reasons that Texas Department of Transportation issued a 90/10 grant to the City of Port Aransas – the state pays 90% with a city match of 10% - for airport improvements that began this week. When work funded by the $5 million grant is finished in the next few years the 250-acre site on the southside of Port Aransas will be a transformed place. It will include an additional 675 feet of runway – the current runway is 3465 feet, 26 acres of retail and commercial development fronting State Highway 361, a taxiway running parallel to the existing runway, enough hanger space to “accommodate all comers,” and several additional safety features including lighting, new asphalt, fencing, and landscaping. “When everything is finished it will be something very special,” said Port Aransas Mayor Keith McMullin. “This project is a winwin for everyone involved.”

Candidate Airport continued on A5 Endorsement Evenings on the Marine Science Graduate Students Island Dive Flower Garden Banks September 18th and 25th

Why is a Sand Bar Forming in Packery Channel? Richard L. Watson, Ph.D. Coastal Geologist The mouth of Packery Channel often has breaking waves in the entrance near the seaward end of the jetties. A recent article in the Island Moon newspaper stated that Diedre Williams of the Conrad Blucher Institute for Surveying and Science at TAMUCC described the bar formation as “unusual.” She postulated that the rapid bar formation at the present time and in 2011 may be due to heavy influxes of Sargassum weed in those years and sand blowing into the channel from the beach. I don't believe this to be true. We will see that current flowing into the pass greatly exceeds outflow. The primary source of sand to the entrance is the longshore sediment

Packery continued on A5

Say It Ain’t So Judge Judy! Experts say south county windfarm could wipe out television reception on The Island

Researchers and students of the Harte Research Institute (HRI) at Texas A&M By Brent Rourk University Corpus Imagery ©2014 DigitalGlobe, Texas General Land Ofce, Texas Orthoimagery Program, USDA Farm Service Agency, Map data ©2014 Google 500 ft Christi took a closeTwo things are true when it comes to up look at the Flower elections. If you don’t vote, then you Garden Banks National can’t complain, and if you are not 9/3/2014 1:33 PM Marine Sanctuary By Dale Rankin part of the solution then you are part during the annual coral Imagine if you will – afternoons of the problem. spawning event August without hair-pulling fights between Your chance to become part of the 15 through August 19. women who just found out they are solution is on September 18th and The mass coral spawn married to the same man, or without 25th at the Holiday Inn, The Island is triggered every year, dispute resolution and pearls of United Political Action Committee nine days after the first wisdom from American’s favorite (IUPAC) is holding two meet the full moon of August. HRI masters and jurist Judge Judy. candidate nights in the run up to the doctoral level students experienced That is the prospect for Island November 4th election. On Thursday, the amazing mass spawning event television viewers if a proposed September 18th candidates for Mayor and aided researchers in an attempt forest of 412-feet tall wind turbines and City Council from District 4 will to understand how corals, sponges, are built on a 30,000-acre site on offer a brief biography and then and even sea stars know when it Chapman Ranch in south Nueces answer common questions. is the right time to reproduce. The County, according to the head of The on Thursday, September 25th sanctuary, which lies approximately a local group of television stations City Council At-Large candidates 130 miles off the Texas coast, is a opposing the windfarm. will get their turn. Both Candidate Flower Garden continued on A2

Candidates continued on A15

Hello Dolly!

A little Island history

Editor’s note: This is an excerpt from the book Islands at the Edge of Time by Gunner Hansen who visited The Island in 1992 and met Gene French, who we all knew as Frenchy. Here is the first part of his story.

This important organization is our best way to make our united voice heard OTB. We’ll see you there. In the meantime say hello if you see us Around The Island.

The big emptiness. That is what I thought when I stood on Padre Island. I see the big emptiness. My feeling was one of exposure, like what had overwhelmed me the first time I drove onto the Outer Banks. It had been late in a winter day when I had crossed Oregon Inlet, dusk when I reached Cape Hatteras Light. The wind had been blowing hard, the seas roaring across Diamond Shoals, just offshore. The houses had been

By Gunnar Hansen

Dolly pushed a surge tide to the bottom of the seawall

Windfarm continued on A5

Island at the Edge of Time

The Island United Political Action Committee is holding two Meet the Candidate nights in September for people running in the Corpus Christ City Council races. Everybody get registered and go vote your interest when the IUPAC does its endorsements on those nights.

Full NFL Schedule Inside! Page A13

New Island Traffic Light, Water Exchange Bridge, Packery Channel Dredging Cost of restrooms along Packery set at $330,000 per stall

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Monday afternoon marked the last of the seasonal Island Diasporas as southbound traffic backed up as uplanders all headed home at the same time, causing a snake of traffic northward from the SPID/ Commodores intersection.

Island Projects

A new traffic light on Park Road 22/SPID at Aquarius near the foot of the JFK Causeway, an update Soon the launch was inundated with on the Park Road 22/SPID Water https://www.google.com/maps/preview?safe=off&ie=UTF-8&fb=1&gl=us&sll=27.8339158,-97... colorful kayaks, much like a nursery Exchange Bridge, and shoaling in brimming with blossoming flowers. Packery Channel highlighted the There was excitement in the air. first meeting of the Island Strategic Those who braved the gentle rain Action Committee in seven weeks were determined to have fun. Over at Tuesday night. Photo by Brent Rourk Paddle continued on A7

So long Tourist Season

The first sign of Autumn has arrived as the lifeguard stations are now off the beach and neatly parked behind the dunes. Next will be the Flying Birds followed closely by the twolegged Snow Birds as both migrate our way from the frozen north.

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empty, the island narrow and far out to sea – an uncomfortable feeling of vulnerability, of lack of shelter. The feeling was similar here; this place was open. Yet on the face of it, Padre was different. It was wider than the Outer Banks and relatively close to the mainland. And I was here in broad daylight, in good weather. The wind was hot and steady, an astringent ninety-five degrees blowing in off the ocean, small waves breaking, no great crashing from the offshore shoals. Even so, I was edgy. When I stood on a dune and looked out to sea or down the beach, I was in the middle of the big emptiness. There were no hills, no buildings,

History continued on A6


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