Edit: One thing of note is that the waves are back to breaking out where they normally do and not right on shore as they have been doing since hurricane Enrique.
Below is how it looks this morning, rocks where sand was last night. No big deal it changes all the time. There have been times where the beach was totally rocks at sunset and totally sand (literally no rocks) the next morning and vice versa from just a high tide (not a storm). Its like a hundred tractors came in and worked all night to move all the sand, and that is about what it would take to make that change. The ocean is very powerful.
Also as I mentioned I am not alone in the pondering of what the #### is going on, how it happens. Sand is a valuable commodity, there are places in the world where they steal sand from each other and places where man made changes have eliminated the sand completely.
https://www.propublica.org/article/how-famous-surfers-and-wealthy-homeowners-are-endangering-hawaiis-beaches
I would love it if someone really got interested in what is happening with sand in the Bay of Tenacatita. They could start making visual notations and probably get some satellite data, it just could be a study that leaders could use to very possibly save our beach one day.
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