
Send in the sand: Stockton beach once again crippled by devastating erosion
As the small peninsula community waits for the next step in the NSW government's long-running quest for mass sand nourishment, once again City of Newcastle has been forced to undertake temporary works to make the beach safe.
Recent storms have severely eroded the beach again. At high tide, there is literally no beach left.
So much sand has been washed away, swimmers report it's left rocks and concrete exposed below the waterline.
Steep drop-offs have forced City of Newcastle to bring heavy machinery in on low tide this week to recontour the beach to slow further sand loss.
Fisherman Gary Evans has been coming to Stockton since he was a boy.
The 57-year-old said it was hard to find a good patch of sand these days and described the state of the beach as "really sad".
"It used to take ages to walk to the waterline, but now you're lucky to find any sand if the tide is up," he said.
"We all know that Stockton's problems are caused by the harbour breakwaters trapping the sand at Nobbys, it's not like the problems faced at other beaches. This one is different, and the damage is not going to stop."
A council spokesman said sand scraping to recontour the beach was done up to five times yearly.
"This involves scraping sand from the lower part of the beach and depositing it close to land to support and accelerate the natural processes of sand accumulation, to increase dune resilience ahead of mass sand nourishment," he said.
"The current campaign lasts just two days ... more than 600 cubic metres of sand was moved on average per day."
The Newcastle Herald reported in March that public assets at the northern end of the beach are under "immediate threat" due to the impact of relentless coastal erosion, according to a new report.
The warning, contained in the draft Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan, proposed a medium to long-term plan to manage ongoing sand movement between Little Beach and the Port Stephens local government boundary.
The report's authors note that the extended plan is crucial for the long-term future of the Stockton community, which remains under constant threat from the devastating impacts of erosion.
"Coastal erosion at Stockton has proceeded beyond an acceptable natural sandy buffer, and the remaining buffer does not provide an adequate level of coastal protection or beach amenity," the report says.
"A probabilistic coastal erosion and recession hazard assessment, using the targeted findings of the Stockton Beach Sand Movement Study, concluded that the Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan area is currently at high to extreme risk, with public assets under immediate threat, requiring urgent protection, and private assets anticipated to be under threat over the longer term."
Immediate efforts are focused on sand renourishment at the southern end of Stockton.
The state government committed $21 million towards the work during the 2023 election campaign.
Mr Evans said he was hopeful the election commitment would turn into actual dollars to get sand back on the beach in a NSW first mass sand renourishment program.
"It's the state government infrastructure causing the problem," he said. "We would really like to see this offshore dredging program we have all heard so much about actually provide a long-term solution."
City of Newcastle has spent $16.5 million combating relentless erosion at Stockton over the past decade. Many of the measures have been temporary or in response to storm damage.
The council's spokesman said a further $21.41 million of future costs were budgeted under the draft Stockton coastal management plan.
"City of Newcastle is of course keenly awaiting next week's State Budget to learn if the promised $21 million will be announced to ensure the seamless delivery and maintenance of mass sand nourishment at Stockton in the longer term," said.
IF you ask the locals, Stockton beach is living on borrowed time.
As the small peninsula community waits for the next step in the NSW government's long-running quest for mass sand nourishment, once again City of Newcastle has been forced to undertake temporary works to make the beach safe.
Recent storms have severely eroded the beach again. At high tide, there is literally no beach left.
So much sand has been washed away, swimmers report it's left rocks and concrete exposed below the waterline.
Steep drop-offs have forced City of Newcastle to bring heavy machinery in on low tide this week to recontour the beach to slow further sand loss.
Fisherman Gary Evans has been coming to Stockton since he was a boy.
The 57-year-old said it was hard to find a good patch of sand these days and described the state of the beach as "really sad".
"It used to take ages to walk to the waterline, but now you're lucky to find any sand if the tide is up," he said.
"We all know that Stockton's problems are caused by the harbour breakwaters trapping the sand at Nobbys, it's not like the problems faced at other beaches. This one is different, and the damage is not going to stop."
A council spokesman said sand scraping to recontour the beach was done up to five times yearly.
"This involves scraping sand from the lower part of the beach and depositing it close to land to support and accelerate the natural processes of sand accumulation, to increase dune resilience ahead of mass sand nourishment," he said.
"The current campaign lasts just two days ... more than 600 cubic metres of sand was moved on average per day."
The Newcastle Herald reported in March that public assets at the northern end of the beach are under "immediate threat" due to the impact of relentless coastal erosion, according to a new report.
The warning, contained in the draft Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan, proposed a medium to long-term plan to manage ongoing sand movement between Little Beach and the Port Stephens local government boundary.
The report's authors note that the extended plan is crucial for the long-term future of the Stockton community, which remains under constant threat from the devastating impacts of erosion.
"Coastal erosion at Stockton has proceeded beyond an acceptable natural sandy buffer, and the remaining buffer does not provide an adequate level of coastal protection or beach amenity," the report says.
"A probabilistic coastal erosion and recession hazard assessment, using the targeted findings of the Stockton Beach Sand Movement Study, concluded that the Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan area is currently at high to extreme risk, with public assets under immediate threat, requiring urgent protection, and private assets anticipated to be under threat over the longer term."
Immediate efforts are focused on sand renourishment at the southern end of Stockton.
The state government committed $21 million towards the work during the 2023 election campaign.
Mr Evans said he was hopeful the election commitment would turn into actual dollars to get sand back on the beach in a NSW first mass sand renourishment program.
"It's the state government infrastructure causing the problem," he said. "We would really like to see this offshore dredging program we have all heard so much about actually provide a long-term solution."
City of Newcastle has spent $16.5 million combating relentless erosion at Stockton over the past decade. Many of the measures have been temporary or in response to storm damage.
The council's spokesman said a further $21.41 million of future costs were budgeted under the draft Stockton coastal management plan.
"City of Newcastle is of course keenly awaiting next week's State Budget to learn if the promised $21 million will be announced to ensure the seamless delivery and maintenance of mass sand nourishment at Stockton in the longer term," said.
IF you ask the locals, Stockton beach is living on borrowed time.
As the small peninsula community waits for the next step in the NSW government's long-running quest for mass sand nourishment, once again City of Newcastle has been forced to undertake temporary works to make the beach safe.
Recent storms have severely eroded the beach again. At high tide, there is literally no beach left.
So much sand has been washed away, swimmers report it's left rocks and concrete exposed below the waterline.
Steep drop-offs have forced City of Newcastle to bring heavy machinery in on low tide this week to recontour the beach to slow further sand loss.
Fisherman Gary Evans has been coming to Stockton since he was a boy.
The 57-year-old said it was hard to find a good patch of sand these days and described the state of the beach as "really sad".
"It used to take ages to walk to the waterline, but now you're lucky to find any sand if the tide is up," he said.
"We all know that Stockton's problems are caused by the harbour breakwaters trapping the sand at Nobbys, it's not like the problems faced at other beaches. This one is different, and the damage is not going to stop."
A council spokesman said sand scraping to recontour the beach was done up to five times yearly.
"This involves scraping sand from the lower part of the beach and depositing it close to land to support and accelerate the natural processes of sand accumulation, to increase dune resilience ahead of mass sand nourishment," he said.
"The current campaign lasts just two days ... more than 600 cubic metres of sand was moved on average per day."
The Newcastle Herald reported in March that public assets at the northern end of the beach are under "immediate threat" due to the impact of relentless coastal erosion, according to a new report.
The warning, contained in the draft Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan, proposed a medium to long-term plan to manage ongoing sand movement between Little Beach and the Port Stephens local government boundary.
The report's authors note that the extended plan is crucial for the long-term future of the Stockton community, which remains under constant threat from the devastating impacts of erosion.
"Coastal erosion at Stockton has proceeded beyond an acceptable natural sandy buffer, and the remaining buffer does not provide an adequate level of coastal protection or beach amenity," the report says.
"A probabilistic coastal erosion and recession hazard assessment, using the targeted findings of the Stockton Beach Sand Movement Study, concluded that the Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan area is currently at high to extreme risk, with public assets under immediate threat, requiring urgent protection, and private assets anticipated to be under threat over the longer term."
Immediate efforts are focused on sand renourishment at the southern end of Stockton.
The state government committed $21 million towards the work during the 2023 election campaign.
Mr Evans said he was hopeful the election commitment would turn into actual dollars to get sand back on the beach in a NSW first mass sand renourishment program.
"It's the state government infrastructure causing the problem," he said. "We would really like to see this offshore dredging program we have all heard so much about actually provide a long-term solution."
City of Newcastle has spent $16.5 million combating relentless erosion at Stockton over the past decade. Many of the measures have been temporary or in response to storm damage.
The council's spokesman said a further $21.41 million of future costs were budgeted under the draft Stockton coastal management plan.
"City of Newcastle is of course keenly awaiting next week's State Budget to learn if the promised $21 million will be announced to ensure the seamless delivery and maintenance of mass sand nourishment at Stockton in the longer term," said.
IF you ask the locals, Stockton beach is living on borrowed time.
As the small peninsula community waits for the next step in the NSW government's long-running quest for mass sand nourishment, once again City of Newcastle has been forced to undertake temporary works to make the beach safe.
Recent storms have severely eroded the beach again. At high tide, there is literally no beach left.
So much sand has been washed away, swimmers report it's left rocks and concrete exposed below the waterline.
Steep drop-offs have forced City of Newcastle to bring heavy machinery in on low tide this week to recontour the beach to slow further sand loss.
Fisherman Gary Evans has been coming to Stockton since he was a boy.
The 57-year-old said it was hard to find a good patch of sand these days and described the state of the beach as "really sad".
"It used to take ages to walk to the waterline, but now you're lucky to find any sand if the tide is up," he said.
"We all know that Stockton's problems are caused by the harbour breakwaters trapping the sand at Nobbys, it's not like the problems faced at other beaches. This one is different, and the damage is not going to stop."
A council spokesman said sand scraping to recontour the beach was done up to five times yearly.
"This involves scraping sand from the lower part of the beach and depositing it close to land to support and accelerate the natural processes of sand accumulation, to increase dune resilience ahead of mass sand nourishment," he said.
"The current campaign lasts just two days ... more than 600 cubic metres of sand was moved on average per day."
The Newcastle Herald reported in March that public assets at the northern end of the beach are under "immediate threat" due to the impact of relentless coastal erosion, according to a new report.
The warning, contained in the draft Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan, proposed a medium to long-term plan to manage ongoing sand movement between Little Beach and the Port Stephens local government boundary.
The report's authors note that the extended plan is crucial for the long-term future of the Stockton community, which remains under constant threat from the devastating impacts of erosion.
"Coastal erosion at Stockton has proceeded beyond an acceptable natural sandy buffer, and the remaining buffer does not provide an adequate level of coastal protection or beach amenity," the report says.
"A probabilistic coastal erosion and recession hazard assessment, using the targeted findings of the Stockton Beach Sand Movement Study, concluded that the Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan area is currently at high to extreme risk, with public assets under immediate threat, requiring urgent protection, and private assets anticipated to be under threat over the longer term."
Immediate efforts are focused on sand renourishment at the southern end of Stockton.
The state government committed $21 million towards the work during the 2023 election campaign.
Mr Evans said he was hopeful the election commitment would turn into actual dollars to get sand back on the beach in a NSW first mass sand renourishment program.
"It's the state government infrastructure causing the problem," he said. "We would really like to see this offshore dredging program we have all heard so much about actually provide a long-term solution."
City of Newcastle has spent $16.5 million combating relentless erosion at Stockton over the past decade. Many of the measures have been temporary or in response to storm damage.
The council's spokesman said a further $21.41 million of future costs were budgeted under the draft Stockton coastal management plan.
"City of Newcastle is of course keenly awaiting next week's State Budget to learn if the promised $21 million will be announced to ensure the seamless delivery and maintenance of mass sand nourishment at Stockton in the longer term," said.
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The Advertiser
7 days ago
- The Advertiser
'It's pretty grim': Port Stephens oyster farm devastated by acid
A Port Stephens oyster farmer says he has lost close to half a million dollars after historic flooding tanked water quality in the area, devastating his stock. Oyster farmers, he says, are facing increasingly bleak trading circumstances after QX disease wiped out the local industry in 2022, and now the long shadow of severe weather is tearing a new hole in the business. "In the 15 years that I have been here, I have never seen anything this bad," Andrew Phillips, a fifth-generation oyster farmer, told the Newcastle Herald this week. Mr Phillips believes a flush of acid sulphate, stirred up by historic flooding and "bathing" the stretch of water where he farms around the Myall River, is the culprit for his best stock becoming riddled with holes and bleached almost white. He says a closed 'shortcut' near Jimmys beach that once allowed a glut of salt water to flow in and out of the Myall River from the mouth of Port Stephens Bay has meant that what would once have been a naturally correcting issue has stalled his business and destroyed his product. Mr Phillips said he is now facing either sitting out a season as he waits to recover, foregoing a wage, or buying in oysters to try to stay afloat. "It's starting to get pretty grim," he said. "You have to ask yourself at some point, is this viable?" Mr Phillips grew up farming oysters on the Georges River in the Hawkesbury, and said he came to Port Stephens as a "last stand" hoping to carry on the family legacy. But now, he says, he and others are facing a "perfect storm" of poor conditions that is bringing the industry to its knees. "I'm the last of my kind," he said. "It's starting to weigh on me now. I didn't want to let this go, but if the money isn't coming in, what am I doing here?" Acid sulphate contamination tends to occur when dry floodplain soils are washed into estuaries, increasing the acidity of the water and causing oyster shells to disintegrate and the flesh to discolour. "Oysters are meant to be black and vibrant," Mr Phillips said. "These have been just belted." "Most have holes through the back of them, and are completely white." The Environmental Protection Agency said water quality naturally suffered after severe weather events, and the extended severe weather that pummelled the Hunter in recent months had undoubtedly traumatised the systems of estuaries where fishers like Mr Phillips make their living. Mr Phillips' ordeal comes as images surface in local fishing circles of fish with large ulcers across their bodies. The state's Department of Primary Industries urged fishers to report incidents through Fishers Watch on 1800 043 536. A Port Stephens oyster farmer says he has lost close to half a million dollars after historic flooding tanked water quality in the area, devastating his stock. Oyster farmers, he says, are facing increasingly bleak trading circumstances after QX disease wiped out the local industry in 2022, and now the long shadow of severe weather is tearing a new hole in the business. "In the 15 years that I have been here, I have never seen anything this bad," Andrew Phillips, a fifth-generation oyster farmer, told the Newcastle Herald this week. Mr Phillips believes a flush of acid sulphate, stirred up by historic flooding and "bathing" the stretch of water where he farms around the Myall River, is the culprit for his best stock becoming riddled with holes and bleached almost white. He says a closed 'shortcut' near Jimmys beach that once allowed a glut of salt water to flow in and out of the Myall River from the mouth of Port Stephens Bay has meant that what would once have been a naturally correcting issue has stalled his business and destroyed his product. Mr Phillips said he is now facing either sitting out a season as he waits to recover, foregoing a wage, or buying in oysters to try to stay afloat. "It's starting to get pretty grim," he said. "You have to ask yourself at some point, is this viable?" Mr Phillips grew up farming oysters on the Georges River in the Hawkesbury, and said he came to Port Stephens as a "last stand" hoping to carry on the family legacy. But now, he says, he and others are facing a "perfect storm" of poor conditions that is bringing the industry to its knees. "I'm the last of my kind," he said. "It's starting to weigh on me now. I didn't want to let this go, but if the money isn't coming in, what am I doing here?" Acid sulphate contamination tends to occur when dry floodplain soils are washed into estuaries, increasing the acidity of the water and causing oyster shells to disintegrate and the flesh to discolour. "Oysters are meant to be black and vibrant," Mr Phillips said. "These have been just belted." "Most have holes through the back of them, and are completely white." The Environmental Protection Agency said water quality naturally suffered after severe weather events, and the extended severe weather that pummelled the Hunter in recent months had undoubtedly traumatised the systems of estuaries where fishers like Mr Phillips make their living. Mr Phillips' ordeal comes as images surface in local fishing circles of fish with large ulcers across their bodies. The state's Department of Primary Industries urged fishers to report incidents through Fishers Watch on 1800 043 536. A Port Stephens oyster farmer says he has lost close to half a million dollars after historic flooding tanked water quality in the area, devastating his stock. Oyster farmers, he says, are facing increasingly bleak trading circumstances after QX disease wiped out the local industry in 2022, and now the long shadow of severe weather is tearing a new hole in the business. "In the 15 years that I have been here, I have never seen anything this bad," Andrew Phillips, a fifth-generation oyster farmer, told the Newcastle Herald this week. Mr Phillips believes a flush of acid sulphate, stirred up by historic flooding and "bathing" the stretch of water where he farms around the Myall River, is the culprit for his best stock becoming riddled with holes and bleached almost white. He says a closed 'shortcut' near Jimmys beach that once allowed a glut of salt water to flow in and out of the Myall River from the mouth of Port Stephens Bay has meant that what would once have been a naturally correcting issue has stalled his business and destroyed his product. Mr Phillips said he is now facing either sitting out a season as he waits to recover, foregoing a wage, or buying in oysters to try to stay afloat. "It's starting to get pretty grim," he said. "You have to ask yourself at some point, is this viable?" Mr Phillips grew up farming oysters on the Georges River in the Hawkesbury, and said he came to Port Stephens as a "last stand" hoping to carry on the family legacy. But now, he says, he and others are facing a "perfect storm" of poor conditions that is bringing the industry to its knees. "I'm the last of my kind," he said. "It's starting to weigh on me now. I didn't want to let this go, but if the money isn't coming in, what am I doing here?" Acid sulphate contamination tends to occur when dry floodplain soils are washed into estuaries, increasing the acidity of the water and causing oyster shells to disintegrate and the flesh to discolour. "Oysters are meant to be black and vibrant," Mr Phillips said. "These have been just belted." "Most have holes through the back of them, and are completely white." The Environmental Protection Agency said water quality naturally suffered after severe weather events, and the extended severe weather that pummelled the Hunter in recent months had undoubtedly traumatised the systems of estuaries where fishers like Mr Phillips make their living. Mr Phillips' ordeal comes as images surface in local fishing circles of fish with large ulcers across their bodies. The state's Department of Primary Industries urged fishers to report incidents through Fishers Watch on 1800 043 536. A Port Stephens oyster farmer says he has lost close to half a million dollars after historic flooding tanked water quality in the area, devastating his stock. Oyster farmers, he says, are facing increasingly bleak trading circumstances after QX disease wiped out the local industry in 2022, and now the long shadow of severe weather is tearing a new hole in the business. "In the 15 years that I have been here, I have never seen anything this bad," Andrew Phillips, a fifth-generation oyster farmer, told the Newcastle Herald this week. Mr Phillips believes a flush of acid sulphate, stirred up by historic flooding and "bathing" the stretch of water where he farms around the Myall River, is the culprit for his best stock becoming riddled with holes and bleached almost white. He says a closed 'shortcut' near Jimmys beach that once allowed a glut of salt water to flow in and out of the Myall River from the mouth of Port Stephens Bay has meant that what would once have been a naturally correcting issue has stalled his business and destroyed his product. Mr Phillips said he is now facing either sitting out a season as he waits to recover, foregoing a wage, or buying in oysters to try to stay afloat. "It's starting to get pretty grim," he said. "You have to ask yourself at some point, is this viable?" Mr Phillips grew up farming oysters on the Georges River in the Hawkesbury, and said he came to Port Stephens as a "last stand" hoping to carry on the family legacy. But now, he says, he and others are facing a "perfect storm" of poor conditions that is bringing the industry to its knees. "I'm the last of my kind," he said. "It's starting to weigh on me now. I didn't want to let this go, but if the money isn't coming in, what am I doing here?" Acid sulphate contamination tends to occur when dry floodplain soils are washed into estuaries, increasing the acidity of the water and causing oyster shells to disintegrate and the flesh to discolour. "Oysters are meant to be black and vibrant," Mr Phillips said. "These have been just belted." "Most have holes through the back of them, and are completely white." The Environmental Protection Agency said water quality naturally suffered after severe weather events, and the extended severe weather that pummelled the Hunter in recent months had undoubtedly traumatised the systems of estuaries where fishers like Mr Phillips make their living. Mr Phillips' ordeal comes as images surface in local fishing circles of fish with large ulcers across their bodies. The state's Department of Primary Industries urged fishers to report incidents through Fishers Watch on 1800 043 536.


The Advertiser
21-06-2025
- The Advertiser
Pristine day heralds winter solstice and longest night of the year
There were - to use the journalist's favourite literary device - 'sealier' places to be than soaking up the sun just off Newcastle Ocean Baths on a near-perfect winter's day on Friday. It boasted a pristine sky, fair surfing conditions and clean sets off the Cowrie Hole. Awash in a warm and sunny 19 degrees, and just off the back of the Newcastle Ocean Baths, a bulky Australian fur seal luxuriated in the serenity as the surfers gave it a respectful berth. The fur seal - which, along with their long-nose cousins, frequent the Hunter - is a somewhat regular visitor to the ocean baths. Lifeguards on Friday morning, speaking of the big pup like an old friend, said it drops by usually around this time of year to check in. Its whiskers just crested the water line as is bobbed between the swell. Time seemed to slow down as residents and shutterbugs mingled to take it in. "This is a process called thermo-regulating," a spokesperson for Organisation for the Rescue and Research of Cetaceans in Australia told the Newcastle Herald in 2023, when another seal was spotted off the Nobbys breakwall similarly waving a flipper as it floated. "When they get too hot, it helps them cool down." Friday's sunshine was expected to gradually give way to cloudier conditions, with a chance of showers toward the middle of next week. Surf conditions are expected to remain fair through Sunday, with a swell just above two feet, at waist height. Southern swell spots were making the best of the conditions, surf forecasters said, with chest-high waves for the short boards, or the sheltered zones optimal for the longboards on the incoming tide. The southern hemisphere's winter solstice is on Saturday, June 21. It marks Australia's shortest day and longest night of the year based on sunlight hours. But the good news is that from then on Aussies will get an incremental increase in the amount of visible sunlight each day. There were - to use the journalist's favourite literary device - 'sealier' places to be than soaking up the sun just off Newcastle Ocean Baths on a near-perfect winter's day on Friday. It boasted a pristine sky, fair surfing conditions and clean sets off the Cowrie Hole. Awash in a warm and sunny 19 degrees, and just off the back of the Newcastle Ocean Baths, a bulky Australian fur seal luxuriated in the serenity as the surfers gave it a respectful berth. The fur seal - which, along with their long-nose cousins, frequent the Hunter - is a somewhat regular visitor to the ocean baths. Lifeguards on Friday morning, speaking of the big pup like an old friend, said it drops by usually around this time of year to check in. Its whiskers just crested the water line as is bobbed between the swell. Time seemed to slow down as residents and shutterbugs mingled to take it in. "This is a process called thermo-regulating," a spokesperson for Organisation for the Rescue and Research of Cetaceans in Australia told the Newcastle Herald in 2023, when another seal was spotted off the Nobbys breakwall similarly waving a flipper as it floated. "When they get too hot, it helps them cool down." Friday's sunshine was expected to gradually give way to cloudier conditions, with a chance of showers toward the middle of next week. Surf conditions are expected to remain fair through Sunday, with a swell just above two feet, at waist height. Southern swell spots were making the best of the conditions, surf forecasters said, with chest-high waves for the short boards, or the sheltered zones optimal for the longboards on the incoming tide. The southern hemisphere's winter solstice is on Saturday, June 21. It marks Australia's shortest day and longest night of the year based on sunlight hours. But the good news is that from then on Aussies will get an incremental increase in the amount of visible sunlight each day. There were - to use the journalist's favourite literary device - 'sealier' places to be than soaking up the sun just off Newcastle Ocean Baths on a near-perfect winter's day on Friday. It boasted a pristine sky, fair surfing conditions and clean sets off the Cowrie Hole. Awash in a warm and sunny 19 degrees, and just off the back of the Newcastle Ocean Baths, a bulky Australian fur seal luxuriated in the serenity as the surfers gave it a respectful berth. The fur seal - which, along with their long-nose cousins, frequent the Hunter - is a somewhat regular visitor to the ocean baths. Lifeguards on Friday morning, speaking of the big pup like an old friend, said it drops by usually around this time of year to check in. Its whiskers just crested the water line as is bobbed between the swell. Time seemed to slow down as residents and shutterbugs mingled to take it in. "This is a process called thermo-regulating," a spokesperson for Organisation for the Rescue and Research of Cetaceans in Australia told the Newcastle Herald in 2023, when another seal was spotted off the Nobbys breakwall similarly waving a flipper as it floated. "When they get too hot, it helps them cool down." Friday's sunshine was expected to gradually give way to cloudier conditions, with a chance of showers toward the middle of next week. Surf conditions are expected to remain fair through Sunday, with a swell just above two feet, at waist height. Southern swell spots were making the best of the conditions, surf forecasters said, with chest-high waves for the short boards, or the sheltered zones optimal for the longboards on the incoming tide. The southern hemisphere's winter solstice is on Saturday, June 21. It marks Australia's shortest day and longest night of the year based on sunlight hours. But the good news is that from then on Aussies will get an incremental increase in the amount of visible sunlight each day. There were - to use the journalist's favourite literary device - 'sealier' places to be than soaking up the sun just off Newcastle Ocean Baths on a near-perfect winter's day on Friday. It boasted a pristine sky, fair surfing conditions and clean sets off the Cowrie Hole. Awash in a warm and sunny 19 degrees, and just off the back of the Newcastle Ocean Baths, a bulky Australian fur seal luxuriated in the serenity as the surfers gave it a respectful berth. The fur seal - which, along with their long-nose cousins, frequent the Hunter - is a somewhat regular visitor to the ocean baths. Lifeguards on Friday morning, speaking of the big pup like an old friend, said it drops by usually around this time of year to check in. Its whiskers just crested the water line as is bobbed between the swell. Time seemed to slow down as residents and shutterbugs mingled to take it in. "This is a process called thermo-regulating," a spokesperson for Organisation for the Rescue and Research of Cetaceans in Australia told the Newcastle Herald in 2023, when another seal was spotted off the Nobbys breakwall similarly waving a flipper as it floated. "When they get too hot, it helps them cool down." Friday's sunshine was expected to gradually give way to cloudier conditions, with a chance of showers toward the middle of next week. Surf conditions are expected to remain fair through Sunday, with a swell just above two feet, at waist height. Southern swell spots were making the best of the conditions, surf forecasters said, with chest-high waves for the short boards, or the sheltered zones optimal for the longboards on the incoming tide. The southern hemisphere's winter solstice is on Saturday, June 21. It marks Australia's shortest day and longest night of the year based on sunlight hours. But the good news is that from then on Aussies will get an incremental increase in the amount of visible sunlight each day.


The Advertiser
20-06-2025
- The Advertiser
Send in the sand: Stockton beach once again crippled by devastating erosion
IF you ask the locals, Stockton beach is living on borrowed time. As the small peninsula community waits for the next step in the NSW government's long-running quest for mass sand nourishment, once again City of Newcastle has been forced to undertake temporary works to make the beach safe. Recent storms have severely eroded the beach again. At high tide, there is literally no beach left. So much sand has been washed away, swimmers report it's left rocks and concrete exposed below the waterline. Steep drop-offs have forced City of Newcastle to bring heavy machinery in on low tide this week to recontour the beach to slow further sand loss. Fisherman Gary Evans has been coming to Stockton since he was a boy. The 57-year-old said it was hard to find a good patch of sand these days and described the state of the beach as "really sad". "It used to take ages to walk to the waterline, but now you're lucky to find any sand if the tide is up," he said. "We all know that Stockton's problems are caused by the harbour breakwaters trapping the sand at Nobbys, it's not like the problems faced at other beaches. This one is different, and the damage is not going to stop." A council spokesman said sand scraping to recontour the beach was done up to five times yearly. "This involves scraping sand from the lower part of the beach and depositing it close to land to support and accelerate the natural processes of sand accumulation, to increase dune resilience ahead of mass sand nourishment," he said. "The current campaign lasts just two days ... more than 600 cubic metres of sand was moved on average per day." The Newcastle Herald reported in March that public assets at the northern end of the beach are under "immediate threat" due to the impact of relentless coastal erosion, according to a new report. The warning, contained in the draft Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan, proposed a medium to long-term plan to manage ongoing sand movement between Little Beach and the Port Stephens local government boundary. The report's authors note that the extended plan is crucial for the long-term future of the Stockton community, which remains under constant threat from the devastating impacts of erosion. "Coastal erosion at Stockton has proceeded beyond an acceptable natural sandy buffer, and the remaining buffer does not provide an adequate level of coastal protection or beach amenity," the report says. "A probabilistic coastal erosion and recession hazard assessment, using the targeted findings of the Stockton Beach Sand Movement Study, concluded that the Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan area is currently at high to extreme risk, with public assets under immediate threat, requiring urgent protection, and private assets anticipated to be under threat over the longer term." Immediate efforts are focused on sand renourishment at the southern end of Stockton. The state government committed $21 million towards the work during the 2023 election campaign. Mr Evans said he was hopeful the election commitment would turn into actual dollars to get sand back on the beach in a NSW first mass sand renourishment program. "It's the state government infrastructure causing the problem," he said. "We would really like to see this offshore dredging program we have all heard so much about actually provide a long-term solution." City of Newcastle has spent $16.5 million combating relentless erosion at Stockton over the past decade. Many of the measures have been temporary or in response to storm damage. The council's spokesman said a further $21.41 million of future costs were budgeted under the draft Stockton coastal management plan. "City of Newcastle is of course keenly awaiting next week's State Budget to learn if the promised $21 million will be announced to ensure the seamless delivery and maintenance of mass sand nourishment at Stockton in the longer term," said. IF you ask the locals, Stockton beach is living on borrowed time. As the small peninsula community waits for the next step in the NSW government's long-running quest for mass sand nourishment, once again City of Newcastle has been forced to undertake temporary works to make the beach safe. Recent storms have severely eroded the beach again. At high tide, there is literally no beach left. So much sand has been washed away, swimmers report it's left rocks and concrete exposed below the waterline. Steep drop-offs have forced City of Newcastle to bring heavy machinery in on low tide this week to recontour the beach to slow further sand loss. Fisherman Gary Evans has been coming to Stockton since he was a boy. The 57-year-old said it was hard to find a good patch of sand these days and described the state of the beach as "really sad". "It used to take ages to walk to the waterline, but now you're lucky to find any sand if the tide is up," he said. "We all know that Stockton's problems are caused by the harbour breakwaters trapping the sand at Nobbys, it's not like the problems faced at other beaches. This one is different, and the damage is not going to stop." A council spokesman said sand scraping to recontour the beach was done up to five times yearly. "This involves scraping sand from the lower part of the beach and depositing it close to land to support and accelerate the natural processes of sand accumulation, to increase dune resilience ahead of mass sand nourishment," he said. "The current campaign lasts just two days ... more than 600 cubic metres of sand was moved on average per day." The Newcastle Herald reported in March that public assets at the northern end of the beach are under "immediate threat" due to the impact of relentless coastal erosion, according to a new report. The warning, contained in the draft Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan, proposed a medium to long-term plan to manage ongoing sand movement between Little Beach and the Port Stephens local government boundary. The report's authors note that the extended plan is crucial for the long-term future of the Stockton community, which remains under constant threat from the devastating impacts of erosion. "Coastal erosion at Stockton has proceeded beyond an acceptable natural sandy buffer, and the remaining buffer does not provide an adequate level of coastal protection or beach amenity," the report says. "A probabilistic coastal erosion and recession hazard assessment, using the targeted findings of the Stockton Beach Sand Movement Study, concluded that the Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan area is currently at high to extreme risk, with public assets under immediate threat, requiring urgent protection, and private assets anticipated to be under threat over the longer term." Immediate efforts are focused on sand renourishment at the southern end of Stockton. The state government committed $21 million towards the work during the 2023 election campaign. Mr Evans said he was hopeful the election commitment would turn into actual dollars to get sand back on the beach in a NSW first mass sand renourishment program. "It's the state government infrastructure causing the problem," he said. "We would really like to see this offshore dredging program we have all heard so much about actually provide a long-term solution." City of Newcastle has spent $16.5 million combating relentless erosion at Stockton over the past decade. Many of the measures have been temporary or in response to storm damage. The council's spokesman said a further $21.41 million of future costs were budgeted under the draft Stockton coastal management plan. "City of Newcastle is of course keenly awaiting next week's State Budget to learn if the promised $21 million will be announced to ensure the seamless delivery and maintenance of mass sand nourishment at Stockton in the longer term," said. IF you ask the locals, Stockton beach is living on borrowed time. As the small peninsula community waits for the next step in the NSW government's long-running quest for mass sand nourishment, once again City of Newcastle has been forced to undertake temporary works to make the beach safe. Recent storms have severely eroded the beach again. At high tide, there is literally no beach left. So much sand has been washed away, swimmers report it's left rocks and concrete exposed below the waterline. Steep drop-offs have forced City of Newcastle to bring heavy machinery in on low tide this week to recontour the beach to slow further sand loss. Fisherman Gary Evans has been coming to Stockton since he was a boy. The 57-year-old said it was hard to find a good patch of sand these days and described the state of the beach as "really sad". "It used to take ages to walk to the waterline, but now you're lucky to find any sand if the tide is up," he said. "We all know that Stockton's problems are caused by the harbour breakwaters trapping the sand at Nobbys, it's not like the problems faced at other beaches. This one is different, and the damage is not going to stop." A council spokesman said sand scraping to recontour the beach was done up to five times yearly. "This involves scraping sand from the lower part of the beach and depositing it close to land to support and accelerate the natural processes of sand accumulation, to increase dune resilience ahead of mass sand nourishment," he said. "The current campaign lasts just two days ... more than 600 cubic metres of sand was moved on average per day." The Newcastle Herald reported in March that public assets at the northern end of the beach are under "immediate threat" due to the impact of relentless coastal erosion, according to a new report. The warning, contained in the draft Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan, proposed a medium to long-term plan to manage ongoing sand movement between Little Beach and the Port Stephens local government boundary. The report's authors note that the extended plan is crucial for the long-term future of the Stockton community, which remains under constant threat from the devastating impacts of erosion. "Coastal erosion at Stockton has proceeded beyond an acceptable natural sandy buffer, and the remaining buffer does not provide an adequate level of coastal protection or beach amenity," the report says. "A probabilistic coastal erosion and recession hazard assessment, using the targeted findings of the Stockton Beach Sand Movement Study, concluded that the Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan area is currently at high to extreme risk, with public assets under immediate threat, requiring urgent protection, and private assets anticipated to be under threat over the longer term." Immediate efforts are focused on sand renourishment at the southern end of Stockton. The state government committed $21 million towards the work during the 2023 election campaign. Mr Evans said he was hopeful the election commitment would turn into actual dollars to get sand back on the beach in a NSW first mass sand renourishment program. "It's the state government infrastructure causing the problem," he said. "We would really like to see this offshore dredging program we have all heard so much about actually provide a long-term solution." City of Newcastle has spent $16.5 million combating relentless erosion at Stockton over the past decade. Many of the measures have been temporary or in response to storm damage. The council's spokesman said a further $21.41 million of future costs were budgeted under the draft Stockton coastal management plan. "City of Newcastle is of course keenly awaiting next week's State Budget to learn if the promised $21 million will be announced to ensure the seamless delivery and maintenance of mass sand nourishment at Stockton in the longer term," said. IF you ask the locals, Stockton beach is living on borrowed time. As the small peninsula community waits for the next step in the NSW government's long-running quest for mass sand nourishment, once again City of Newcastle has been forced to undertake temporary works to make the beach safe. Recent storms have severely eroded the beach again. At high tide, there is literally no beach left. So much sand has been washed away, swimmers report it's left rocks and concrete exposed below the waterline. Steep drop-offs have forced City of Newcastle to bring heavy machinery in on low tide this week to recontour the beach to slow further sand loss. Fisherman Gary Evans has been coming to Stockton since he was a boy. The 57-year-old said it was hard to find a good patch of sand these days and described the state of the beach as "really sad". "It used to take ages to walk to the waterline, but now you're lucky to find any sand if the tide is up," he said. "We all know that Stockton's problems are caused by the harbour breakwaters trapping the sand at Nobbys, it's not like the problems faced at other beaches. This one is different, and the damage is not going to stop." A council spokesman said sand scraping to recontour the beach was done up to five times yearly. "This involves scraping sand from the lower part of the beach and depositing it close to land to support and accelerate the natural processes of sand accumulation, to increase dune resilience ahead of mass sand nourishment," he said. "The current campaign lasts just two days ... more than 600 cubic metres of sand was moved on average per day." The Newcastle Herald reported in March that public assets at the northern end of the beach are under "immediate threat" due to the impact of relentless coastal erosion, according to a new report. The warning, contained in the draft Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan, proposed a medium to long-term plan to manage ongoing sand movement between Little Beach and the Port Stephens local government boundary. The report's authors note that the extended plan is crucial for the long-term future of the Stockton community, which remains under constant threat from the devastating impacts of erosion. "Coastal erosion at Stockton has proceeded beyond an acceptable natural sandy buffer, and the remaining buffer does not provide an adequate level of coastal protection or beach amenity," the report says. "A probabilistic coastal erosion and recession hazard assessment, using the targeted findings of the Stockton Beach Sand Movement Study, concluded that the Extended Stockton Coastal Management Plan area is currently at high to extreme risk, with public assets under immediate threat, requiring urgent protection, and private assets anticipated to be under threat over the longer term." Immediate efforts are focused on sand renourishment at the southern end of Stockton. The state government committed $21 million towards the work during the 2023 election campaign. Mr Evans said he was hopeful the election commitment would turn into actual dollars to get sand back on the beach in a NSW first mass sand renourishment program. "It's the state government infrastructure causing the problem," he said. "We would really like to see this offshore dredging program we have all heard so much about actually provide a long-term solution." City of Newcastle has spent $16.5 million combating relentless erosion at Stockton over the past decade. Many of the measures have been temporary or in response to storm damage. The council's spokesman said a further $21.41 million of future costs were budgeted under the draft Stockton coastal management plan. "City of Newcastle is of course keenly awaiting next week's State Budget to learn if the promised $21 million will be announced to ensure the seamless delivery and maintenance of mass sand nourishment at Stockton in the longer term," said.