Charlene Mauro, director of the Navarre Beach Marine Science Station, said the answer is simple: it has to do with winds and currents.
a grim parting gift from the tropical cyclone that devastated the Florida Panhandle last week.
“There are thousands and thousands of them,” he said, noting that they were present pretty much from the Turner House all the way to Opal Beach.Hurricane Sally shocks Pensacola area with surprising strength, heavy wind and floods “You have this big surge of water coming inland from several miles out, and then washing back out with everything it touches,” he said. “It’s like a big toilet bowl, pretty much. We were the only beach flying double red flags because of the water quality. We wouldn’t want our families swimming in that.”Charlene Mauro, director of the Navarre Beach Marine Science Station, said the answer is much more simple: it has to do with winds and currents.
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