tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6197942725902776726.post5067897103577803385..comments2024-03-19T02:19:59.665-07:00Comments on Centerpointe Communicator: West end wackinessCenterpointe Moderatorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10895145672338559659noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6197942725902776726.post-60994454717750118972011-07-09T05:48:46.582-07:002011-07-09T05:48:46.582-07:00We assume everyone who lives along the Gulf Coast ...We assume everyone who lives along the Gulf Coast has the same knowledge and appreciation for the ways nature rebuilds and repairs after a major storm. No so. The following is an excerpt from a Letter to the Editor in the Galveston paper on June 29:<br /><br />"My wife and I came down and spent the day in Galveston for the weekend. It had been a couple of months since we had been there. We wanted to see the pleasure pier now that the Flagship has been removed.<br /><br />It was kind of sad to see. We were glad to see a couple of the new restaurants have reopened with new buildings, but what sticks in my mind is how nasty the beach was — all the seaweed everyplace and the huge hills and mounds of sand and seaweed piled up every part of the beach, even in front of the San Luis Hotel, which is normally the cleanest part of the beach. But that is a whole other story. There has to be a better way to clean the beaches. Surely, there is some kind of agricultural tool or implement that can pick up the weed and leave the sand...<br /><br />Chuck [redacted]<br />La Porte"Morgan_Campbellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01391845362945256189noreply@blogger.com