The ocean has a mind of its own

The heavy equipment just moved out of Waialae Beach Park a few days ago after spending several weeks clearing tons of sand blocking the mouth of Kapakahi Stream.

This was the view early this morning. Sand is already migrating back, already nearly blocking the stream. A few more high tides and it will be back nearly to where it was before all the recent effort.

I don’t know what the answer here is. If you have any clue about this, please chime in with a comment!

The mouth of Kapakahi Stream, which cuts through Waialae Beach Park.


Discover more from i L i n d

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

4 thoughts on “The ocean has a mind of its own

  1. Shirley Hasenyager

    If you find a solution, Kailua needs to know it. Our steam at Kailua Beach is constantly clogged and immediately fills in after it is cleaned out.

    Reply
  2. Andrew Cooper

    Why continue to fight the ocean? You are going to lose.

    If you look at a lot of natural stream entries you will see that a bar and a pool behind the beach are quite common on low lying beaches. Clever design of a weir or a barrier might encourage the sand to clear the entry, but that depends a lot on local wave patterns and currents. the best course is probably to simply accept that this will be the case and adapt the remainder of the area’s use to this reality.

    Reply
  3. Aaron

    What is the real goal? Is it to keep the stream mouth from becoming a stagnant pool? If so, perhaps a mechanical solution (an underground pipe and a pump?) would be more effective, less expensive and better for the environment than regular dredging.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Shirley Hasenyager Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.