I remember the day down at the Outer Banks (North Carolina) that the dredging tugs arrived to start the beach renewal project that had been planned the past few years for all the OBX. Prior to the project beginning in Kitty Hawk where our beach rental sat on the shoreline, we could enjoy high tide with the waves actually going under our house. We learned (from the next door neighbor who grew up in her house from a little girl and was now in her 50s) that when the current shoreline houses were built in the 50s and 60s, the ocean was easily 1/2 to 1/3 mile away. All the houses closest to the 50s shoreline were now long gone, foundations now hidden by the encroachment of the ocean.
It was the final year we rented the house because it was being listed for sale the following year. I never went back to see the replenishment in person. Google Earth shows a massive beach in front of the house now. No more surf under the house to lull one to sleep.
Our two collies resting on the deck of our OBX rental during low tide in late September 2016. High tide the waves were washing up under the deck. The replenished beach has been pushed out well beyond the cresting swell in this photo.
View attachment 170186
The picture below is mine from October 2016 after a hurricane whose name I've long forgotten (looked it up - it was Matthew). This bit of eroded beach was about 1/2 mile south from our rental. The ocean took out the shoreline north/south NC 12 route, swallowing massive pieces of pavement. It took months to put the road back, and I think it brought home the need to speed up the beach replenishment program poste haste, which began in earnest the following year.
View attachment 170187
This pics below are posted on Google of NC12 in the same spot as mine (notice the pedestrian crossing sign and the closest house), but from the view of the ocean. Shows how serious the ocean was in claiming further inland.
View attachment 170188
And a year later the program was begun to save the OBX by returning sand to the beach and shoving the ocean back far away from land. In this picture I noted with a red arrow where our rental sat. The beach nourishment had yet to reach the house.
View attachment 170189
As of reports dated January 2022, the project had exceeded 1 billion dollars. The 2023 sum needed was $100 million, and Dare County was out of funds and the state and federal governments were holding tight to their purse strings and glaring at the county begging for funds. Apparently the county did get some funds but had to grovel with concessions to get the cash.
And the ocean continues to steadily and relentlessly chew away at the brand new, very expensive sand beach.
I really miss our old rental, now under private ownership and withdrawn from the rental market. It was a fun house and presented us with lots of wonderful old memories, especially of ocean waves advancing and retreating in a lovely peaceful rhythm in the darkness under our house at night.