i was there when it happened, did not swim in it, no odor, i was on the beach at 7 a.m. the next morning, all gone, soon come
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i was there when it happened, did not swim in it, no odor, i was on the beach at 7 a.m. the next morning, all gone, soon come
Kylake,
If you are truly interested, please contact the professionals at the links I posted.
Rob
A simple google search provides several articles on this Ras, so not sure why you are amazed.
Here is an incredibly boring read:
http://coastecology.org/wp-content/u...oral-Reefs.pdf
And an older newspaper article:
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...llution--again
If you read this and had no knowledge that the treatment plant was upgraded why would you think different. The power of the internet to influence one's thinking is remarkable.
When I saw the tannic water in early December it had a reddish hue to it. Maybe this is how Bloody Bay got it's name and it had nothing to do with whaling.
Workers at the wastewater treatment plant in Negril are the people that informed me that Montego Bay employees sample the plant weekly.
Also, consider this story. The wastewater treatment plant I work at is about a mile from the source of the stream we discharge into. We actually double the flow of the stream where we discharge. During high flows when our plant actually overflows we take fecal coliform readings above and below our outfall. Normally we are not allowed to put any chlorine into the stream, but during high flow events we are allowed and chlorinate the daylights out of our overflow. Fecal samples taken upstream of our plant often range in the 5000 to 8000 count. Mind you, this is only run off from roads and yards with in a mile of the plant. Because we chlorinate so heavily during these times, our downstream fecal counts are always lower than upstream. So runoff anywhere in the world will cause high fecal counts. That is why the Jersey shore will occasionally close beaches, not from the wastewater treatment plants but from run off from the streets.
When I checked the outfall of the Negril plant, my estimate would be that it was less than 1\20 of the river flow.
Regards,
Bob
There you go with facts again :-)
I would like to pipe in here, I have been coming to Negril since 1989. In 2007 I began coming about 3-4 times a year. I never saw this brown water at any time until 2 -3 years ago when it happened 2 or 3 times each week I was there every visit. My observation therefore is it would seem brown water floating into the beach area has nothing to do with heavy rain.
natural ocean tides can also cause river water to flow into the sea.
Sorry, it was me
Wow. We're getting re-runs! Didn't we have a major thread on this a few weeks back? Same story. Same rumours!
M&G - that is because it is the exact same thread - it was brought back up from March 1st... almost 30 days ago was the last post in this thread...