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On Feb 26, 10:37*am, Frogwatch wrote:
On Feb 26, 12:44*am, TopBassDog wrote: On Feb 25, 1:30*am, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message .. . On Wed, 24 Feb 2010 19:10:44 -0800, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message . .. On Wed, 24 Feb 2010 19:57:36 -0500, Gene wrote: On Wed, 24 Feb 2010 19:27:54 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 24 Feb 2010 19:06:55 -0500, Gene wrote: On Tue, 23 Feb 2010 05:17:10 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: OK, so when do they get a "Manatee Crossing Zone?" http://www.nationalparkstraveler.com...-national-park... Wow, speed zones through a national park.... what a novel idea! I bet they even have those in Colorado Nation Parks. I bet it isn't 5 MPH It probably should be.... What sort of idiot would go blasting through an area, knowing that they would likely hit wildlife (or anything else)? Even by car, every day/night I go slow .... really slow .... through areas I reasonably suspect are populated by deer, wild turkey, bear, buzzard, etc. With the boat, I don't want to hit a whale, manatee, sand bar, submarine (yep, that "amber flashing light" *does* mean something) or anything else...... slow the hell down..... .... quit whining and pull back on the throttle..... Bear in mind we are talking about around a thousand square miles of water in the estuary system in these 3 counties, not just a little strip on the way to the Gulf. There are people who have to idle up to 5 miles to get out. That tacks 2 hours onto your boat ride by the time you get home. Such is the cost of enjoying nature... slow down, smell the seaweed instead of the engine. I am really not the guy you people are hollaring at, we go pretty slow most of the time but I also understand people who want to get offshore to fish do not want to be chugging across the bay for 2 hours. It should be pointed out, this came about after they bought their house, assuming they had "gulf access" which they paid an extra $200,000 for. The ironic thing is nobody has even proven these zones are saving anything. It is just a feel good thing. If the water is less than 3 feet deep, you won't have any manatee there, at least none with their ass under water, yet vast areas like that are still manatee zones. As I said a while ago, these are politically selected, not scientifically selected. I wouldn't be the one yelling, but I see your point. I think it's probably a combo between science and "unnatural" selection. As with most things, it's an imperfect system. I would think that most people would err on the side of caution and take it easy, but there are also those who drink and drive in the rain no less. Someone trashed it out here tonight. Fortunately, no one was seriously injured. Now, he gets a hospital stay and maybe some jail time. -- Nom=de=Plume Your live-in, D'Plume? Was once snorkelling in a spring and a manatee came up and obviously wanted to be scratched. *We tried to stay away from it but it kept coming up to us. Here is a reference to the high pitched noisemaker to repel manatees. Maybe if boats had these the speed limits in manatee zones could be lifted. |
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