US Gulf Coast Travel

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US Gulf Coast Travel

Tourism/travel news, updates & discussions about Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas & Mexico. Please add your own thoughts, questions & observations!

Location: Gulf Coast, USA & Mexico
Members: 74
Latest Activity: Jul 4, 2020

Gulf Coast Travel Info & Resources

Sources for Updates on Gulf Coast Tourism Destinations

(For Updates, See News Feed and Comment Wall Below)

Gulfwide
www.CNN.com/2010/US/06/25/gulf.oil.disaster/index.html?hpt=T1
www.DeepwaterHorizonResponse.com; Twitter @oil_spill_2010
www.Discoveramerica.com/ca/gulf-travel-update.html
www.NewOrleans.com/News/Oil-Spill
www.Orbitz.com/Blog/Category/Travel-News/Gulf-Oil-Spill
www.SouthCoastUSA.com



Alabama
www.AL.com/News/Gulf-Oil-Spill
www.AlabamaCoast.org
www.TheBeachFacts.com; http://www.Facebook.com/GulfShoresOrangeBeach; Twitter @AlabamaBeaches
http://BruceAtTheBeach.info

Florida
www.Destin-FWB.com, www.Facebook.com/FloridasEmeraldCoast
www.PNJ.com/Section/News10
www.VisitPensacola.com, http://CuriousAboutOurCoast.com, www.Facebook.com/VisitPensacola; Twitter @VisitPensacola.com
www.VisitPanamaCityBeach.com, www.Facebook.com/VisitPanamaCityBeach, Twitter @PCBeach

Louisiana
www.AmericasWetland.com
www.CajunCoast.com, Twitter @cajuncoast
www.ExperienceJefferson.com
www.Grand-Isle.com
www.HoumaTravel.com
www.nola.com/news/gulf-oil-spill/
http://OilSpill.LouisianaTravel.com, Twitter @LouisianaTravel
www.WLF.Louisiana.gov/OilSpill; Twitter @LDWF

Mississippi
www.GulfCoast.org, www.Facebook.com/MSGulfCoastCVB; Twitter @MSGulfCoastCVB
www.MSWestCoast.org, www.Facebook.com/group.php?gid=76349735748; Twitter @mswestcoast
www.OceanSpringsChamber.com
http://www.SunHerald.com/OilSpill

Texas
www.Galveston.com, www.Facebook.com/Galveston; Twitter http://Twitter.com/galvinfo, http://Twitter.com/galvestonisland, http://Twitter.com/galvestoncom
http://GalvestonDailyNews.com
www.PortAransas.org, www.Facebook.com/PortAransasTexas
www.Facebook.com/sopadre (South Padre Island)
www.Facebook.com/pages/South-Padre-Island-Emergency-Management/107578779278020
http://Twitter.com/TexasAlert
www.Facebook.com/pages/TexasCoast/110394948985728

Mexico
http://Portal.Veracruz.gob.mx/portal/page?_pageid=313,4407397&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL, www.Facebook.com/VeracruzTurismo, http://Twitter.com/veracruzturismo

Discussion Forum

Hurricane Harvey spawns 'catastrophic' flooding in southeastern Texas

Set to last 4-5 days, but fatalities fortunately so far minimal.…Continue

Started by Tripatini Aug 27, 2017.

WHY SHOULD I SPEND MY VACATION $$$ ON A GULF COAST BEACH VACATION? 2 Replies

OK, what I'm going to say might make me sound like a jerk, but here goes:Last night I was having a heated discussion with my girlfriend , whose sister was planning to spend a week on the Florida…Continue

Tags: Gulf Coast vacation, vacation, BP oil spill

Started by John Kipper. Last reply by Scott Jones Sep 2, 2010.

The Fla Panhandle

I recently visited the FL Panhandle. I was impressed with how everyone kept things going despite the misperceptions on how the oil spill has affected nearby areas. Everything is alive and well from…Continue

Tags: YOLO, Boarding, beach, alys, panhandle

Started by Robert J. Nebel Jul 21, 2010.

Road Trip to Apalachicola

I'd like to drive over to Apalachicola from Miami in a few days. It seems to me that the oil spill is not affecting this area (my heart goes out to all the areas affected now or in the future). Can…Continue

Started by Prose & Co Jun 16, 2010.

Comment Wall

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Comment by Tripatini on June 24, 2010 at 10:55am
An excerpt from Associated Press this morning re Alabama:

"Scattered tar balls and blobs of weathered crude were again washing up on the sand from Orange Beach to Gulf Shores on Wednesday. The oil stained the tide and left the sand streaked brown up to the tide line in many spots along the strand.

Cleanup operations were cranked up along much of the coastline, with gloved workers wearing fluorescent green vests outnumbering swimsuit-clad beach visitors in most areas.

Heavy equipment and portable shelters dotted the beaches. Officials said the oil returned Tuesday after a few days’ respite for the Alabama shore."
Comment by Vincent Russo on June 24, 2010 at 9:30am
Radio says 65% of weddings cancelled in Pensacola!!!!!!!! Weddings are big part of economy. this is going to hurt our whole State.
Comment by EnLinea Media on June 24, 2010 at 8:41am
Announced late yesterday: "The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has opened more than 8,000 square miles of previously closed offshore fishing area in the Gulf of Mexico, because the agency has not observed oil in the area. The most significant opening is an area due south of Mississippi which was closed Monday, June 21.

Additionally, some smaller areas were opened off the Louisiana and central Florida coasts. These areas were initially closed as a precaution because oil was projected to be within those areas over the next few days. However, the review of satellite imagery, radar and aerial data indicated that oil had not moved into these areas.

The closed area now represents 78,597 square miles, which is approximately 32.5 percent of Gulf of Mexico federal waters. This leaves more than two-thirds of Gulf federal waters available for fishing."
Comment by EnLinea Media on June 23, 2010 at 2:29pm
The Pensacola News Journal is now reporting tar balls and clumps as well as mats of oil on and in the waters off the county's beaches today:

"Heavy oil tar balls, mats and mousse showed up on Escambia County beaches this morning...

At 11:40 a.m. it was reported that visitors to the beach noticed an overpowering chemical smell in the air. Beachgoers would begin their walk to the shoreline only to be hit by the powerful odor and would turn around and begin walking back.

The beach was mostly deserted, save for a few fishermen catching and releasing fish off the Pensacola Beach Gulf Fishing Pier.

The state's online incident reports show multiple sightings of oil, including a beached dolphin covered in oil...

'This is one of the worst things I’ve ever seen; this is totally devastating,” said Gary de Shazo, pointing at a 10-foot-long wave of oil approaching the white sands of Casino Beach. “I never imagined it would be like this.'”

Comment by EnLinea Media on June 23, 2010 at 1:37pm
The Islander newspaper in Baldwin County, Alabama, reports that Jimmy Buffett will be giving a free concert on July 1:

"It will be in the form of a free, but ticketed concert at the Gulf Shores Public Beach on July 1. Country Music Television will beam it live across the country into 90 million homes.

Tickets were made available June 23 at 10 a.m. For details go to www.CMT.com, Ticketmaster.com and all Ticketmaster outlets. There is a four-ticket limit and tickets are required for entry. Organizers expect to accommodate up to 35,000 people at the event."
Comment by Brad Wells on June 22, 2010 at 11:54am
I went to a meeting about the spill held by a law firm that included scientists from University of Miami and University of South Florida. Here's a few takeaways from their lectures:

Essentially, given the extremely dynamic environment in which the oil is being leaked, there is no way of predicting where oil will travel with ANY certainty past 72 hours. Even within 72 hours, it is extremely difficult to forecast with any real accuracy. They showed models that included only some of the variables, and even those have a very, very low predictability. It echoed the sentiments of Coast Guard Search and Rescue talking about search fields for missing persons. The field grows exponentially with time. Currents, wind, and properties of the tracked objects can all change the situation drastically, as well. It's a needle in a haystack with the needles and hay being blown around the ocean.

The Gulf, and all it's life is severely threatened. Entire year classes of pelagics will likely be wiped out. For already-threatened species such as Blue Fin Tuna, it may be their swan song.

Political and regulatory changes will occur as a result of this spill, no doubt. However, we should be focusing on how to fix the problem- not who/how to blame.

Entire ecosystems are being decimated, along with the livelihood of the people who depend on them.

Please hold your local politicians accountable and continue to push the story in to the headlines.
Comment by David Paul Appell on June 22, 2010 at 11:02am
From today's Miami Herald:

"Florida Keys Dodging Threat From Oil Spill

Forecasters say the state's delicate chain of islands is in no imminent threat from the oil gusher.

The risk of oil from the Deepwater Horizon blowout reaching the Florida Keys and South Florida anytime soon is now so remote that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has suspended its trajectory maps for the area, effectively downgrading the region to low risk...

...And thanks in part to changes in currents, the oil still spewing from the well site does not have a clear path to the Keys, said Billy Causey, the southeast regional director of NOAA's National Marine Sanctuary Program."

This could always change, of course, but for the time being...
Comment by Dave Acton on June 20, 2010 at 11:12pm
Of course Haley Barbour says everything's fine... Republicans have a long and distinguished history of burying their heads in the sand to defend their industry sponsors. The beaches in Mississippi may be fine for now, but what's going on in the Gulf is ECOCIDE, and it's the fault of Haley's party for deregulating every industry in sight and letting Big Oil call the shots. You reap what you sow, Guhvnuh.
Comment by José Balido on June 20, 2010 at 9:04pm
Comment by Kate Moeller on June 18, 2010 at 10:10am
Peter Greenberg will be broadcasting live from Alabama this weekend to discuss the oil spill and its effect on tourism on the Gulf Coast. http://www.petergreenberg.com/2010/06/17/radio-guests-gulf-shores-a...
 

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