Manatee feces closes FL beach.....

I bet beach goers would have dreamed of having a few cigar boats chase the pack of manatees off shore........




10:00 a.m. EDT, October 9, 2009


VERO BEACH - Humiston Park Beach reopened after a couple of hours of feces scooping.

The culprit wasn't four-legged, but instead has flippers, Indian River County officials said.

Manatees are responsible for what may have been a mile-long stretch of excrement that piled up along the beach. Late Thursday afternoon, more manatee mess was spotted at Tracking Station Beach Park, officials said.

"I've never seen anything like it, and I've lived along beaches all my life," said Bill Becker, who goes to Humiston several times a week. "It was disgusting, but mystifying. It looked like Great Dane poop all along the beach."

Becker and other beachgoers discovered the hundreds of piles along Humiston early Wednesday evening. He speculated the source was other types of animals or possibly a septic tank spill, he said.

Officials with the county's Environmental Health Department said they eliminated human waste as the substance when they arrived at Humiston.

"We did a feel and smell test, and based on the description we gave to Florida Fish and Wildlife, they told us it was manatee droppings," environmental health specialist Charles Vogt said. "I've never followed a manatee closely enough to know otherwise."

Lifeguards closed the beach Thursday morning while county officials investigated the scene and city workers buried the waste several feet into the beach, Vogt said

"I was impressed at how quickly the city responded Thursday," Becker said.

Vogt said manatees, which are currently migrating alongside the ocean, are capable of eating 100 pounds of sea grass in a day.

It's rare, however, for their droppings to wash up on shore. Vogt said the wind, which has picked up in recent weeks, may have stirred up the contents of the ocean bottom.
 
"We did a feel and smell test, and based on the description we gave to Florida Fish and Wildlife, they told us it was manatee droppings," environmental health specialist Charles Vogt said. "I've never followed a manatee closely enough to know otherwise."


Where the hell do you sign up for that job ???:rofl::rofl::leaving:
 
"We did a feel and smell test, and based on the description we gave to Florida Fish and Wildlife, they told us it was manatee droppings,"

EEWWWWW!!!!!!
 
Nice. This is perfect. Thanks SMC! :mad:

100# per day per animal. Lovely. It must be grand swimming near places where they congregate.

Not to mention, 100# per day no problem...But heaven forbid I tear up a few pounds worth with a prop, I face $10,000 fines. They should fine the SMC for every ounce of sea grass their precious little creatures destroy.
 
just wait..they will start closing beaches.. In san diego years ago they built a special sheltered cove for swimming by little kids etc... the seals invaded it..seals are protecred...they closed the beach to people and surrounding beaches because there are so many seals, the seal sh!t has pushed the water in to an unsafe contaminated state...
 
I hope the SMC people were out there bathing in it like it was champagne and they had won the lottery.
 
This is a picture of one feeding merrily away at Sebatian Inlet a few years ago. Sebastian is just north of Vero Beach,
 

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