Latest news with #Beachcombers

Yahoo
09-02-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Round Lake Beach grand ‘reopening' party is June 9
If you go What: Round Lake Reopening Party When: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, June 9 (lifeguards on duty until 7 p.m.) Where: Round Lake beach Hours will be: 1-4 p.m. Monday to Thursday and 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday through Sunday More: Beth Witt, aquatics and fitness coordinator said, 'There will be T-shirt tie dying from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The first 150 kids will receive a free shirt, and kids are also welcome to bring their own.' Mayor Phil Young is set to serve root beer floats, and Bob and the Beachcombers will provide entertainment from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. All families may enter to win a $250 'bucket of summer fun;' participants must be present to 952-949-8447. By Sarah Schewe What had been one of Eden Prairie's most popular beaches has been off limits to swimmers for about three years. But Round Lake beach will be reopening for swimming on Saturday, June 9. After closing early for several summers, Eden Prairie ended swimming following the 2003 season so the city could address water quality concerns, exotic weed species and an imbalanced fish population. Reopening was put off while the city mounted a comprehensive clean-up and remediation program led by Steve McComas, 'the Lake Detective.' McComas has worked on lakes throughout the state and has been implementing strategies to improve water quality at Round Lake. According to McComas, 'Every city with lakes is dealing with this right now.' No residents had become sick from using the lake, but there were health and lake quality concerns, including fecal contamination from geese, algal blooms and exotic weed species. Leslie Stovring, environmental coordinator for the city, noted that usage of the lake had been dropping. Stovring said the city has spent $17,000 on Round Lake this year and $25,000 on improving water quality last year. The city's efforts have made the lake safe, but, Stovring said, 'If you're expecting clear blue water with a sandy bottom, [Round Lake is] not going to be the one to go to. It's a lake, not a pool.' Sue Weyrauch, an Eden Prairie resident, remembers enjoying Round Lake with her nephews before its closure, but also said, 'I just don't know if they've found a permanent solution … If the geese end up being a problem again, I'm not sure how many times they should try and reopen; at some point maybe it's better off as a geese habitat.' Geese are not the only contributor to fecal coliform levels. Round Lake has the least surface area of the 12 lakes measured in Eden Prairie's Riley Purgatory Bluff Creek Watershed District, and is 10th in terms of volume. The mean depth of the lake is just 11 feet. The shallowness in addition to other factors, including human diapers, contributed to the high bacterial counts that led to the closing. Unlike fecal coliform, algal bloom poses no health threats, but as Steve McComas explained, 'When the algae is too thick it's not a pleasant swimming experience.' The excessive algal bloom had likely contributed to the decline in Round Lake's use. Algal bloom is caused by high phosphorous levels in lakes, often the result of fertilizer from surrounding lawns that leaches into the lake. To reduce the algal bloom, the city is upgrading and adding to its storm water ponds, and installing barley straw to naturally repress phosphorus. McComas hopes there will be an overall 50 percent reduction before the water drains into Round Lake. To keep Round Lake usable, park users should be mindful of their actions: by picking up pet droppings, pet owners help prevent feces from washing into the lake; park users should not feed geese to avoid attracting birds to the area; trash can also be a meal for birds, so picking up litter is important; finally, parents should make sure children using diapers are appropriately outfitted with swim diapers to keep feces from contaminating the lake. As Stovring said, 'Round Lake is an important feature in our city, so we definitely want to do what we can to keep it clean.' Sarah Schewe is an intern with the .


The Guardian
27-01-2025
- General
- The Guardian
A wholesome escape from the housing crisis: the Facebook group dedicated to retro Australian homes
There is one thing that unites the members of my favourite Facebook group: a shared hatred for white paint. In the comments, people moan about mid-century homes being visited by 'the white fairy'. Some discuss whether it's possible to undo the horrors previous owners have wrought. One shares the link to a home for sale, noting the 'incredible vandalism' of a whitewash renovation. 'I got three photos in and had to stop,' one of 80 incensed replies reads. These are my people, and together we are the members of Retro Houses for Sale Australia. The group is what it says on the tin: a place to share links to homes from the 50s, 60s and 70s (or earlier!) now on the market. Together, we coo over immaculately preserved Beachcombers and mourn the disastrously renovated interiors drained of colour and their soul. I don't know how I came to be in this group, only that it now occupies a large percentage of my scrolling time and brain space. I take great voyeuristic pleasure in getting to peer inside old homes and, importantly, pass judgment on them with a group of strangers. For every delightful pastel bathroom or feat of wood panelling, there is an utter freak show. My current favourites include a converted church in Werribee that looks haunted and a series of dilapidated dwellings set across five acres in Tyaak, Victoria that previously served as a cult commune – or, as the listing delicately phrases it, 'a church-based community' with 'a rich legacy'. Obviously, though, my obsession scratches a deeper itch than just gawking. It's no secret that Australia's housing market is a hostile place – but inside the confines of this Facebook group, a gal can dream. I text links to standout properties to my group chat with the caption 'I could fix her', or send them to my partner to bags which north-facing room on the floor plan would be my future office. I skip straight past the listings in moneyed Sydney suburbs – I don't come here to torture myself with that which is undoubtedly out of reach, but to fantasise about the life that could be mine if I left the city behind and bought a fixer-upper in the sticks. Could I live in Kyogle, NSW, population 2,751? What about Mount Barker, South Australia? Most of all I dream about Tasmania – a state home to a great many retro wonders, most affordably priced, and many close to the beach. It's a pity about the water temperature. It's a fascination that is running on borrowed time. In the real world, Australia's retro homes continue to dwindle in number, as people with more money than taste knock them down to build something newer, cheaper and uglier. I see it happening in real time every day, as I walk past site after construction site in the beachside Sydney suburb where I live, and despair at the history being jack hammered away. Online, though, I can escape into a fantasy realm of art deco curves and stained glass, trading heart-reacts with like minds and silently hoping against hope that, someday, one of these houses will be mine. If, like me, your two favourite words are 'deceased estate', you're welcome to come join us. Let us know when your own retro home goes on the market, should you be lucky enough to own one. Just don't paint it white.