The Beach belongs to everyone

We want Long Island to be a place where this, and the next generation can surf, windsurf, sail, swim, sunbathe, fish, kayak or just soak in Long Island's Natural Beauty.

Long Island is losing its waterfront and wet lands to private homes at an alarming pace. Beach Access is disappearing right along with it. In addition, many NYS laws concerning Beach Access are archaic at best.

It is not LIBAG's intent to take away any existing rights of NYS Beach users. Only to add to them.

We are fortunate, to be working with the Long Island Regional State Parks Commission towards solutions that would allow all beach user groups equal access to all NYS Parks Beaches, with out excluding or taking away any access rights from any user groups.

The Long Island Beach Access Group is most commonly known for its four core programs;

1- The Beach Access program whose research and advocacy programs support the maintenance and expansion of access to those remote beach locations on Long Island for all users.

2- Also, our Beach Preservation program works to sponsor, participate and encourage those activities that ensure the healthy maintenance of our beaches and barrier islands, such as beach grass plantings.

3- Our Beach Clean-up program works to sponsor, participate and encourage continual beach clean-ups in conjunction with the America Littoral Society. This includes the adoption of Gilgo Beach.

4- But also, Long Island Beach Access Group is known for our Beach Actions program which seeks to encourage and reward proper behavior when enjoying the beaches. This includes following the official rules and regulations of each of the beaches and areas that provide access to those beaches, promoting the “Carry in, Carry out more” philosophy, and in a more informal fashion, instructing people on safe enjoyment of our natural resources.


Remember: it is not LIBAG's intent to take away any existing rights of NYS Beach users. Only to add to them.

LIBAG is honored to work with New York State Park officials, as we continue to connect the Parks to the People.


We look forward to our continued work with New York State officials in order to implement solutions that encourage more diverse use of NYS’s Beaches.


CONTACT US email me libaginfo@gmail.com


Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Once the sport of Kings



Once the sport of Kings
Lieutenant James King was made First Lieutenant of the HMS Discovery and was given the task of completing the narrative portion of Captain James Cook's journals, after Cook's death in 1779. Before the ships Discovery and Resolution returned to England, Lt. King devoted two full pages to a description of surfboard riding, as practiced by the locals at Kealakekua Bay on the Kona coast of the Big Island. His following entry is the earliest written account of surfing:

"But a diversion the most common is upon the Water, where there is a very great Sea, and surf breaking on the Shore. The Men sometimes 20 or 30 go without the Swell of the Surf and lay themselves flat upon an oval piece of plan about their Size and breadth, they keep their legs close on top of it, & their Arms are us'd to guide the plank, thye wait the time of the greatest Swell that sets on Shore, & altogether push forward with their Arms to keep on its top, it sends them in with a most astonishing Velocity, & the great art is to guide the plan so as always to keep it in a proper direction on the top of the Swell, & as it alters its direct. If the Swell drives him close to the rocks before he is overtaken by its break, he is much prais'd.

On first seeing this very dangerous diversion I did not conceive it possible but that some of them must be dashed to mummy against the sharp rocks, but jus before they reach the shore, if they are very near, they quit their plank, & dive under till the Surf is broke, when the piece of plank is sent many yards by the force of the Surf from the beach. The greatest number are generally overtaken by the break of the swell, the force of which they avoid, diving and swimming under the water out of its impulse. By such like excercises, these men may be said to be almost amphibious. The Women could swim off to the Ship and continue half a day in the Water, and afterwards return. The above diversion is only intended as an amusement, not a tryal of skill, and in a gentle swell that sets on must I conceive be very pleasant, at least they seem to feel a great pleasure in the motion which this Exercise gives."

~ Lieutenant James King, HMS Discovery logbook entry on board-surfing in Hawaii, 1779

What Lieutenant James King, of the HMS Discovery didn't understand is that surfing was done by Kings, and those of high spiritual [or religious] ranking. Those who surf; in all it's forms have a very close understanding, and a very deep respect for "Mother Ocean". While Surfing has been around for thousands of years, it has only been in the last few hundred years or so, that anyone may surf one of natures greatest creations simply for enjoyment.

And yet as Watermen; Surfers, Fishermen, Windsurfers, Kayaker, etc...it is our close relationship with the sea that makes us natural caretakers of her and her shoreline.



 

                           A lone surfer at sunset.


Some Surfers must walk a mile and a half, each way, while "alleged fishermen" drive their campers to the beach.
The truth as you can see, is that no one is actually fishing. They are just enjoying a day at the beach with their families. LIBAG believes everyone should be able to enjoy this privilege.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Ruling Favors Surfers, but Ban Stands

Ruling Favors Surfers, but Ban Stands
NYTimes

June 1, 2008
Oceanside
Ruling Favors Surfers, but Ban Stands
By ISHAI GOLDSTEIN

MONTAUK

THEY called themselves the Montauk Eight: a group of surfers charged with illegal swimming last August at Montauk Point State Park. The beach, which surfers call the North Bar and surfcasters call the North Side, has been off-limits to surfers for decades, while surfcasters — fishermen who cast from shore or shallow water — have had sole access to it.

Last month in an East Hampton courthouse, Town Justice Catherine A. Cahill acquitted the eight surfers, saying the law cited did not apply to surfing. But despite her decision, Montauk Point State Park will continue to prohibit surfing.

“The bottom line is that we are still enforcing the regulation on surfing and looking into what the appropriate summons would be,” said George Gorman, deputy director for the Long Island region of the State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation.

Since 2000, surfers have argued for more access to Montauk’s beaches, while surfcasters, led by the Montauk Surfcasters Association, have fought to keep the areas to themselves.

Beginning with a trial period in 2004, the parks department granted surfers access to Camp Hero — a park on the south side of the Montauk Lighthouse — for the first time since the state gained jurisdiction over the area in 1984. In discussions last fall among surfers, surfcasters and the parks department, surfers proposed a trial period on the north side.

“The surfcasters said no to every proposal we made: time closures, interim policies and even surfing during the winter when bass season is closed was a resounding no,” said Eugene Alper, a seafood trader from East Hampton and chairman of the surfing advisory committee of the Surfrider Foundation’s Eastern Long Island chapter.

The surfcasters association and the parks department contend that the north side of the lighthouse is too dangerous for surfers to share with surfcasters.

“The surfers ride right through where we’re hooking fish,” said Paul Melnyk, a Montauk resident since 1972, as he sat outside Paulie’s Bait and Tackle in Montauk.

“You got the fishermen who say get off my rock and you got the surfers who say get off my wave,” said Gary Stephens, a Montauk landscaper and a resident of 42 years. “I don’t mind when the surfers are out far, but when they come in close on the north side, somebody could get snagged.” Behind him, in the window of the tackle shop, hung a dozen lures with treble hooks on each end.

Surfcasters consider Montauk in September and October to be the striped bass paradise. Migratory striped bass, or stripers, feed on shad, mullet and other baitfish trapped by the clay boulders that line the ocean floor surrounding the lighthouse.

While many surfcasters wade into the waters at night, daytime fishing in September and October attracts 300 to 500 surfcasters at a time, packed on the north side of the lighthouse. Errant casts often end up with someone having a treble hook caught in a finger. “I pull two hooks out a week,” said Jack Yee, 70, a surfcaster and self-proclaimed beach bum.

September and October are also prime hurricane season, and the ocean bottom that traps the fish can also produce the hollow, quick-curling waves that surfers covet. Surfers say the North Bar breaks infrequently, with about five days of quality surfing each year.

“The one day the surf is good out there, they can handle working around us,” Thomas Marmorowski, a commercial fisherman born and raised at Camp Hero, said of surfcasters.

That one day could be in March, when striper season is long over. But Willie Young, of Massapequa, the surfcasters association president, said surfcasters need the north side year round.

“Surfers forget what month it is,” he said. “They’re like kids who have not grown up. And what happens if the winter fish come back?”

Assemblyman Fred W. Thiele Jr., Republican of Sag Harbor, has met with both groups over the years concerning access to Montauk beaches. “There’s no reason we cannot come up with policy involving reasonable use by both groups,” he said.

That’s what John Papciak, a Montauk surfcaster and surfer since 1981, would like.

“In February, there’s not a surfcaster on the north side for miles, and there won’t be one for months,” he said. “It’s September and October when the problem takes on a life of its own. If people exercised common sense and judgment, there would be no issue whatsoever.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/01/nyregion/nyregionspecial2/01surfli.html?_r=1&scp=5&sq=surf&st=nyt&oref=slogin

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Signs






                                                                              
There are certain beaches where the NYS Park system needs to update it’s rules regarding who and what is allowed at the Beach.

LIBAG is fortunate to with New York State officials in order to implement solutions that encourage more diverse use of NYS’s Beaches.

When we were kids growing up in and around Long Island’s waters it sure seemed like it was an endless and wonderful resource. Now as adults we realize this is far from reality. LIBAG sees the difficult choices that must be dealt with on a day to day basis, balancing economic, environmental, concerns with the public’s usage, access, and safety.
We want to work with all user groups and lobbies to manage ocean beaches that can be enjoyed by all. We understand this may not be the easiest route to access…but it is certainly the fairest for all involved. LIBAG doesn’t want the Ocean for ourselves.
LIBAG wants Ocean Access for All. It is not LIBAG's intent to take away any existing rights of NYS Beach users. Only to add to them.

Every time we tread out on that fragile sand bar we refer to as a barrier island we are grateful for the vision of Robert Moses. Where as the rest of Long Island is losing its waterfront and wet lands to private homes at an alarming pace; We are most grateful to the NYS Parks System for a place where nature is allowed to take its course. A place where the next generation can surf, sail, swim, sunbathe, fish, kayak or just soak in Long Islands Natural Beauty. And we want to keep it that way.

LIBAG understands that the gut reaction of most environmentalists is: then why do you drive on the beach?

Well we all pollute to some extent. Nobody has the higher moral ground. Walking would absolutely be the best way to access these remote beaches. But not every one is capable of that walk. Access by boat is possible, but that usually involves a two stoke engine. Two stroke engines create about 1,000 times the pollution than an auto. By some estimates, they dump up to two thirds of their fuel unburned, directly in to the water.

So yes we do take our trucks out on the beach. Sometimes it is the only way you can take you wife, kids, and gear along with you. And we would like to remain married to our wives and kids, let them share in our experience. When we were in our 20’s and maybe even our 30’s we could hike several miles in the sand with our gear. Now in our 40’s,50’s & 60’s it’s just not as doable. Especially when you want to bring your family with you, as our fathers did with us. This is why we often end up surfing, windsurfing, or Kayaking at one of the State’s Town Beaches. They are more expensive and crowded; but in many cases they allow us greater access to the ocean the State of NY’s “public” Beaches.

LIBAG members 4X4 responsibly.  We air down our tires. Drive at least two car lengths up beach from either the ridge line or high tide mark. Pack everything in and out, including  human waste. That is just lower impact than a hard structure like a road, or building. The alternative is some rich guys private multi million dollar home. Given that choice; I’ll take limited beach vehicle access any day.

LIBAG is fortunate to work with New York State Park officials, as we continue to connect the Parks to the People.

We look forward to our continued work with New York State officials in order to implement solutions that encourage more diverse use of NYS’s Beaches.