Using R44 And A PowerBook To Bust Illegal Seawalls 365
Sylvestre writes "Ken Adelman, founder of TGV and Network Alchemy, is using a digital camera, helicopter, and a Power Book to take a high resolution photograph every 500 feet down the California coast. The goal? Busting people putting up illegal sea walls. The catch so far? One golf course covered the beach with boulders. Also of note: the website has 44 gigs of photos so far, runs on solar power, and is Microsoft Free. Best use of technology I've seen all month!"
Why the need of seawall? (Score:2, Interesting)
Easy. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Easy. (Score:2)
the property owners didnt pay for the privilage to destroy nature did they?
Why not build islands off the coast (Score:2, Informative)
Better habitat for wildlife, more places for people to live, less erosion of the actual coast, etc.
Of course, it won't be so good for the surfers and the folks who paid lots of money to live right on the edge, but for the rest of us (animals & plants included) it would be very nice to have lots of places to live on the coastal shelf.
It's not just my crazy idea: Dutch planners eye a new frontier: the raging North Sea [s-t.com]
"A square yard of land reclaimed from the North Sea costs about 260 guilders, or about $130. The same size patch of mainland can cost more than triple that."
Re:Why not build islands off the coast (Score:5, Funny)
Why illegal? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why illegal? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why illegal? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why illegal? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Why illegal? (Score:2)
Re:Why illegal? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Why illegal? (Score:3, Insightful)
I agree, environmental protection is -- or should be -- a property-rights issue. In your example, the damaged party would be able to seek remedy before the law against the person who caused the destruction of his property.
Re:Why illegal? (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, this is crap. The beach is the most dynamic enviroment the earth has to offer, and one of the most vital to organism reproducing. I could care less about your 400,000$ beachfront house that is going to be rubble the next time a hurricane/el nino/mudslide comes around anyways. Repeat after me - never build that close to a beach.
Bah, sorry for the rant it has been a long day. I took a oceanography class last semester from a really good professor who drilled into us how dumb beachfront building really is.
Re:Why illegal? (Score:2)
It is identified as: N37 26.03 W122 26.84 Image 6133 Mon Sep 30 16:05:57 2002
Re:Why illegal? (Score:3, Funny)
Building on the Beach (Score:4, Interesting)
What gets me about this is how old (and obvious) this advice really is.
Whatever one's religious beliefs, it's generally agreed that Jesus know how to make a point. In Matthew 7:24-27, he tells a story about a foolish builder who builds his house on sand. His audience would have laughed about that.
Two thousand years later, people with degrees in architecture and engineering build houses (and even gigantic hotels) out on the beach, and then try to get the government to spend tax money on beach replenishment when the ocean comes to take away their buildings.
People who put up seawalls should have to pay to remove them, and people who build on sand shouldn't get one penny of my tax money for beach replenishment. Building on sand is so obviously stupid that anyone who does it doesn't deserve any help from anybody.
Re:Why illegal? (Score:2, Informative)
You say never build that close to a beach. The thing is, cliffs and foreshores move over time. It may happen gradually, or there may be a huge slip that moves the coast inwards by many yards overnight. So when you say "don't build that close to a beach", how not close is not close enough ? Where I live the same discussion is going on. The council discourages building seawalls. Trouble is, theres only one line of houses, then the public road. What happens when the houses are gone and the road comes under threat ? In some parts of the UK the land is disappearing at the rate of up to 5 metres per year.
Sure, developers who want to create huge unnatural structures that play havoc with the natural wave and current patterns should get a hard time. But its a bit too simplistic to just say "never build near the sea".
Re:Why illegal? (Score:2)
Re:Why illegal? (Score:5, Insightful)
The no-seawall stuff isn't just for the little froggies, although destroying a public resource (the ecosystem) for private gain is generally a no-no. Other reasons include
Re:Why illegal? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm sure you're right about why sea walls are illegal, but if the legislation is limited to points along the coast, then your specific example is incorrect. Destruction of the habitat of shorebirds or the nesting sties of seaturtles would be a better example.
Re:Why illegal? (Score:4, Funny)
Frogs (slightly OT, but still about "environment") (Score:2, Informative)
They should have used an effective and inexpensive method, like building a tunnel for the frogs [roadsideamerica.com]...
(I have GOT to get back to California to get a picture of an advertisement billboard they've got out there, before they wake up and take it down. In keeping with the "frog" theme, they have a giant fluorescent frog posing on a series of billboards with the text of the advertisement. One of them says Davis is "Green and Safe and Nuclear Free"....with a GIANT GLOWING FROG standing next to the words. Too funny...)
Re:Why illegal? (Score:3, Interesting)
At the cost of vast ecosystem destruction and large increases in resource consumption. Every envirogeek I know feels that if people are going to pollute, they should do it in cities, where at least the damage is contained.
And note that Japan, noted for its cleanness, is very dense. They learned how to be clean because of the density. Perhaps we could learn from that.
So, what's your solution in this case, where mass transit is a no go?
Mass transit is a no-go because people made decisions that caused it to end up that way. The question is whether to notice the problem and move to correct it or to continue to use government money to subsidize more bad decisions. There is no easy solution, but some solutions pay off in the long term as well as the short.
Personally, I make sure to live near where I work, and I moved to an urban center that invests in public transport. These days I don't even own a car; I just check them out [citycarshare.org] when I need them. Compared to the typical commuter, I save a lot of time and money, and consume far less [airhead.org] of our shared environmental resources than most.
In the long term, we need to charge people properly for the use of shared resources. Road pricing, pollution taxes, and carbon taxes would help the problem a lot. If you give people something for free, they'll just run it into the ground. Thus, your 20 minute wait in traffic and your asthma deaths. The full change we need will take decades, of course, but that's no excuse for not starting now.
Re:Why illegal? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why illegal? (Score:5, Interesting)
Many states have banned seawalls altogether. Washington is one example. In California, seawall construction is limited by the Coastal Act (passed in 1976) but not banned, and there are major loopholes, including language to protect "existing structures" which can be creatively interpreted to include a structure that did not exist yesterday but exists today. More and more of California's coastline is being buried under seawalls, including "temporary" "emergency" piles of rock that are never removed because the Commission doesn't have a police force to patrol the beaches. What little monitoring there is, is done entirely by volunteers, and kudos to them if they've gotten access to a helicopter to keep our beaches from vanishing!
Re:Why illegal? (Score:2)
Sometimes you just got to accept that some shorelines erode, and banning all seawalls will reduce the overall erosion rate and protect the shoreline (in terms of clean sand, healthy ecosystem.) Yes, you must accept the shore will erode at a slow rate, but that is just nature at work... the only way to halt it is to build a seamless concrete fortification down the entire coast, which rather defeats the purpose.
it it just me? (Score:2, Interesting)
"at least he's not using a 747!"
Maybe he should look into an ultralight.
Maybe you should look into some facts (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps you ought to look into fuel consumption for a R44 before you go spouting off.
If you were to look at the R44 Spec Sheet [robinsonheli.com] you'll see that the standard fuel capacity is 30.6 US gal. with a max range of 400 miles.
A little simple math shows us that 400/30.6 is equal to what kids? That's right, 13.07 mpg. Now, let's take a look at the gas economy on your SUV..... hmm... Comparible, is it?
Re:Maybe you should look into some facts (Score:2)
Damn.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Damn.. (Score:2)
Yes.
Terraserver? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Terraserver? (Score:2, Insightful)
MicrosoftFree.com's hearts in the right place.... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you talk the talk, please walk the walk
Re:MicrosoftFree.com's hearts in the right place.. (Score:4, Funny)
No Microsoft products were used in creating this web site.
My first thought when I read this was the disclaimer
No animals were harmed in the making of this film that always appears at the bottom of movie credits.
Re:MicrosoftFree.com's hearts in the right place.. (Score:2)
Re:Where ? (Score:5, Interesting)
and I quote:
<meta name="GENERATOR" content="Microsoft FrontPage 4.0"> <meta name="ProgId" content="FrontPage.Editor.Document">
Oooookay.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Err. Why does that sound like one of the Cosby kids trying to conince their dad that he should buy them a computer? I mean, who cares if it has 44 gigs of photos? None of us are going to download that many. Who cares if it runs on solar power? We're not paying for it. And who cares if it's MS free? We wouldn't know the difference if they were using MS for anything.
I wouldn't normally make a point of it, but the way they presented those last bits of detail suggests to me they were trying really really hard to make sure Slashdot posts this story.
I dunno, maybe I missed the point and each of those details was uber-important to understanding what this guy is doing. Sure.
Re:Oooookay.. (Score:3, Funny)
Are you new to Slashdot? The submitted used mystical incantations to make sure his story got accepted. "Solar power," "44 gigs of photos," and "Microsoft Free" (note the miscapitalization) do the trick every time.
Re:Oooookay.. (Score:2)
Incidentally, about TGV (Score:3, Informative)
TGV was really goddamned cool. They were purchased by Cisco a few years ago and it all went to hell. They used to have catered lunches every Friday (I attended several of them) and every time I went it was from somewhere else that was good.
Anyway I didn't know the place myself well enough to actually know who was responsible for any of the cool shit, but TGV used to make network software for VAXen. I logged into a pub ftp that used their ftpd once, it was a joy because it made it look like Unix.
In any case TGV made the fastest TCP stack for Windows 3.1. It didn't make much of a difference when it came to doing PPP or SLIP over a modem because modems were max 28.8k in those days and they were real modems with buffered FIFOs and whatnot. But if you were using 10mbps ethernet or better then the TGV stack was dramatically faster than trumpet's. They also made a fast TCP stack for Windows 95 etc, but Cisco didn't do anything with it and by the time they were ready to do anything with TGV they had crushed the place's spirit, failed to open reqs for needed personnel, etc. Some of the engineers went to Cisco, and some of them went elsewhere. I'm not sure if the Santa Cruz office is still there or not. The person who was the director of the site at the time I quit from that office (As a Cisco employee) was a plant from Cisco, and not technical at all at that point. (She supposedly wrote some code at some point, IIRC.)
TGV is the birthplace of the Mainframe Mouse. It was made of ~0.75" acrylic, and contained a normal-scale mouse attached to a bowling ball. You sat on it and gripped the handlebars... well you get the idea.
TGV used to be the groovy kind of place that needed a soldering iron even though they were a software developer. Hold your hat over your heart when you remember the last time you saw a shop like that last.
Only a week old. (Score:3, Funny)
Although it is only a week old, the site already has received more than 5,000 hits.
Was the article accepted to be put on slashdot just to up those number of hits a bit more??
which would take up about 99 CD-ROMS' worth of computer memory
Hmm, I hope they don't send the archives using 99 CD's worth... we all know what an environmentally friendly company AOL is with their set of coasters. ;)
I'd love to see the "panoramic" from THOSE shots (Score:5, Interesting)
burden of proof (Score:4, Insightful)
If I have photos proving you did something illegal, then the burden of proof is still on me as the accuser. Its just I already have proof.
Re:burden of proof (Score:2)
Inaccurate comparison. It should read:
"If I have photos indicating that you have done something that could be illegal under certain circumstances, I have no proof of illegal activity."
my house! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:my house! (Score:2)
Re:my house! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:my house! (Score:2)
Meanwhile... (Score:4, Funny)
Don't make me laugh (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Don't make me laugh (Score:2)
Why not just use a digital camcorder? (Score:5, Insightful)
I wonder if there isn't some other motive here, requiring high-res images.
(Like getting free publicity on Slashdot for using exclusively non-MS technology for a cool task, perhaps.....? Naaaaahhhh....)
Re:Why not just use a digital camcorder? (Score:4, Informative)
I wonder if there isn't some other motive here, requiring high-res images.
Bingo. An NTSC mini-DV camera gives you 720x480 resolution. Not only that, but you'd be amazed at how hard it is to make out detail in a still image from a video signal. And a 29.97 frames/sec video feed doesn't give you much of a benefit - maybe if you were flying overhead in a SR-71. In a helicopter, 1 frame/sec would be overkill. You'd be much better at 1 frame/sec with 30x the resolution.
Sunnyvale (Score:2, Funny)
Slayer help us, there must be something vampiric going one. Watch it, you'll be the next to be sacrified !!!
Pretty low-tech (Score:3, Insightful)
This is like a Barney Rubble story of aerial photography.
What good does this really do? (Score:2, Flamebait)
These people shouldn't be hailed as heros, they haven't really done anything other then invade the privacy of land owners.
Re:What good does this really do? (Score:3, Informative)
Huh? (Score:2, Flamebait)
Also read the article closely about the land developer ho put bolders on the beach, it says he just needed a permit, he may or may not get one, but more then likely he will and the bolders will stay, just more tax dollars I guess. Go envionmentalist, help the goverment collect more tax dollars.
If your house was next to a park, and the lake in the park flooded every year wouldn't you want some protection? Or what if you lived on the beach and your land was washing into the sea? Shouldn't you be allowed to put up some sort of seawall?
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
In a word, no. If you paid millions of dollars for land you know is eroding, you are dumb. That does not give you the right to vandalize public property.
No. If you build your house in a flood plane, you do not have the right to build a wall that diverts water into a nearby park, just because it is public property, and not owned by a billionare. In fact, you usually can't even build such a wall on your own land, much less on the park.
One thing America needs to learn badly is that just because you paid millions of dollars for something doesn't give you any special rights.
You don't get it..... (Score:2)
Re:What good does this really do? (Score:2)
In Cali, the coast belongs to all of us. Ergo, they're protecting all of us.
These people shouldn't be hailed as heros, they haven't really done anything other then invade the privacy of land owners.
Taking pictures of a city from the air is not an invasion of privacy in this country. And suggesting that taking pictures of public land is somehow an invasion of privacy is just bizarre.
Re:What good does this really do? (Score:2)
What you're missing is that a coastal landowner does not own the beach, so if he damages the beach, he is damaging someone else's property.
Seawall? (Score:4, Funny)
"Seawall? I know what a firewall is, but what the hell is a seawall? Maybe it's sometype of load balancer..."
Yeah, I'm stupid.
Golf?! (Score:2, Interesting)
hmmmm (Score:3, Funny)
I like the idea of converting to solar power especially in Ontario.
The size of solar array that I would need is only about four times larger than my property in downtown Toronto.
However, if I stack the panels four high I believe I can fit them all in.
Also of note (Score:3, Funny)
add to that:
"...and is SLASHDOTTED to hell and back."
This was actually Useful! (Score:2)
It's been bugging me since I got back from vacation this summer.
Using this site, I was able to match [californiacoastline.org] it in a few minutes!
Now I just need to figure out the name of that park...
WTF?? (Score:4, Insightful)
Go visit some place where industrial development has existed without enviromental concerns. Like China, the ex-U.S.S.R, or East Germany. Is that what you want to live in? I don't think so.
If you want to piss in your bathtub, go ahead, but if I catch you pissing in _our_ bathtub.....
Re:WTF?? (Score:2)
Tim
Well.. (Score:2)
Time to use DVD-R blanks.
Slashdot EffECT (Score:2, Funny)
easy way to get around this.. (Score:2)
Should have a prize... (Score:2)
Why seawall bad? Basic physics (Score:5, Informative)
Seen a lot of comments here about why seawalls are bad and the only explanations given are legals ones. Not suprising given most people here are americans.
The reason is one of basic physics, the legal arguments have to take second place.Unless you think you can legislate against nature. Please ignore this if you think you have a right to destroy other people property and public property and the general environment to protect your own interests.
If there is a rock, a wall, a washed up spare tyre, anything that is a hard object on the beach, then when the water hits it during normal wave action, the wave will retreat back to sea at a higher speed because it's energy hasn't been absorbed. Normal beaches (with sand) absorb the wave impact. If the water is going faster, it removes sand as it returns to the ocean and thus erodes the beach, much faster than natural movements. Even a small hard object on a beach can show this, one season I saw the tire I mentioned above, a tractor tyre, chop a gully about 0.5m deep and about 6-7m wide, just from wave action on this one small object. A wall will destroy the beach.
Remember beaches ARE NOT FIXED in the earth, they rise, fall and move around on a seasonal basis. Beach nourishment is not to replace sand that is lost, but to re-build the natural shoke absorbing action of an already eroded one.
Sydney residents please visit http://www.realsurf.com/nowall/ and please think about supporting this cause, we know what private interests have f**ked up in the states through ignorance and greed, lets not let it happen at home.
phil
Solar powered web site? (Score:3, Funny)
Solar powered web site? No wonder I can't get any response ... it's night time.
Re:What (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What (Score:2)
Here's a better picture, and if you click on it you will get this HUGE picture that I won't link to directly for fear of slashdotting.
http://www.californiacoastline.org/cgi-bin/imag
Seems to me they wanted to put some boulders there to keep their golf course from washing away into the sea, maybe. But it doesn't look nice, so let's get all liberal and tell them they can't keep their golf course above water.
Tim
Clicky Link (Score:2)
Sorry I forgot to put A tags in the first one.
Tim
Re:What (Score:2)
Because the beach is public property. You can't go into a city park and dump a big fugly pile of boulders there, either.
Re:What (Score:3, Interesting)
Now here's a golf course acting in a manner that happens to deny public usage of that beach.
As for "protecting the golf course from erosion", I'd say that building a golf course in that location, in such a manner that "erosion control" necessitated the ruination of a beach, was a pretty dumb business decision.
Re:What (Score:2)
As for having a problem with dumping the rocks on what is considered public land and denying public usage, I would bet that, practically, no one in the public even wants to use that beach. They may not even be able to get to it without swimming in from a ship or trespassing on private land. So morally I still see little problem with dumping rocks on the beach, but you do seem to have a legal argument that is sensible.
Whether or not it was smart to build a course there seems irrelevant.
Tim
Re:What (Score:2)
Re:What (Score:2)
Especially when the golf course owner's cure is to cause massive destruction to public property and the private property of others.
Perhaps you should learn something about the topic you're speaking to. Then you'd look like less of a complete moron.
Re:What (Score:2)
Re:What (Score:2)
If it were their beach and theirs alone, you might have a point. It's a public beach.
Moreover, even if it were private, their creation of a seawall changes erosion patterns in the area, harming the property of other people. Your right to do as you please on your property ends when it harms your neighbors.
Re:What (Score:2)
Tim
Re:What (Score:2)
There ought to be a law against people who say, "there ought to be a law!"
Re:What (Score:3, Insightful)
Doh! I get it! It's okay to be a vigilante for lefty causes! For instance, Eco-terrorism is okay!
This terrorizes you? You feel terror while visiting this website? Timid little guy, aren't you.
Re:What (Score:2)
Uh, no.
Re:What (Score:2)
You must be talking about his ad hominem reply. Or possibly your ad hominem reply. Or maybe both.
Re:What (Score:2)
Maybe one day you'll get a neighbor who dumps his sewer waste into his backyward. No problem its his, he can do whatever he wants with it. But its too bad when that run off gets into your basement, eh?
tough shit I guess...
Re:What (Score:2)
But if the runoff gets into my basement, he's putting sewer waste in my backyard, which I would have a problem with.
Tim
They they'd have a permit on file (Score:3, Insightful)
1: Identify act
2: Confirm act is illegal
3: Publicice act as illegal.
One does not skip step 2, unless one wants to get slapped with a nasty slander / libel suit. (IANAL,BIWIWO)
Re:They they'd have a permit on file (Score:2)
Also, this could be used to showcase the prevelence of such seawalls for the purposes of crafting new legislation, if you believe they are being detrimental to marine life and/or other beachfront property owners.
This hardly has anything to do with privacy. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:This hardly has anything to do with privacy. (Score:2)
This is always true, essentially. The only enforceable laws in a free society are the ones that the people want to obey anyway.
Re:I hate people like this (Score:2)
The Sierra Club was already filing a court case about the golf course, and they used this guy's database of imagery as irrefutable proof as to what the golf course was doing so that they wouldn't have to fly their own helicopter out there
Re:Brilliant use of tech (Score:5, Interesting)
This is wrong twice over:
Re:"from the what's-wrong-with-seawalls dept." (Score:2)
Except Nachman, he's a double-beef burrito supreme.