Snot Weed at Glory Holes

> 10 years ago
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Bender
Bender
WA
2236 posts
WA, 2236 posts
1 Nov 2013 9:52pm


my local is now basically unsailable ina SW'er

We

l

Windxtasy
Windxtasy
WA
4019 posts
WA, 4019 posts
1 Nov 2013 11:27pm
Disappointing. Has that happened before?
Bender
Bender
WA
2236 posts
WA, 2236 posts
2 Nov 2013 8:14am
Not on this grand scale
Windxtasy
Windxtasy
WA
4019 posts
WA, 4019 posts
2 Nov 2013 8:47am
So what is the usual scenario? Does it die off after a few hot days?
Bender
Bender
WA
2236 posts
WA, 2236 posts
2 Nov 2013 8:54am
Hopefully with the low tides in November it will die off and get washed to the shoreline. It will be a stinkfest
Mark _australia
Mark _australia
WA
23651 posts
WA, 23651 posts
2 Nov 2013 10:14am
Somebody needs to accidentally spill a lot of diesel around it.....
red
red
VIC
741 posts
red red
VIC, 741 posts
2 Nov 2013 2:03pm
Hey Bender ... we used to get the same thing here on lake connewarre (an estuary lake) but we found that you could create your own little luderitz!..Jacques and I spent a couple of runs just glugging through the snot on a nice broad course and that created a footpath sized channel through it... amazingly flat water (in fact too flat!) but a hell of a lot of fun!
Windxtasy
Windxtasy
WA
4019 posts
WA, 4019 posts
2 Nov 2013 12:08pm
red said..

Hey Bender ... we used to get the same thing here on lake connewarre (an estuary lake) but we found that you could create your own little luderitz!..Jacques and I spent a couple of runs just glugging through the snot on a nice broad course and that created a footpath sized channel through it... amazingly flat water (in fact too flat!) but a hell of a lot of fun!


That idea has potential... of course the Leschenault estuary is usually pretty flat in that area anyway
snides8
snides8
WA
1731 posts
WA, 1731 posts
2 Nov 2013 1:07pm
Someone should blow ithe place up!
That should help ;)
decrepit
decrepit
WA
12873 posts
WA, 12873 posts
2 Nov 2013 11:55pm
Are explosives a weed fertiliser????

Looks like a magic run in a westerly now though
ratz
ratz
WA
481 posts
WA, 481 posts
3 Nov 2013 9:54am
its still ok up in kiters corner ben, though not as flat..
Mark _australia
Mark _australia
WA
23651 posts
WA, 23651 posts
3 Nov 2013 5:33pm
I am still pondering what overseas people must be thinking when they see the title.
May end up with less euro's this year
yoyo
yoyo
WA
1646 posts
WA, 1646 posts
15 Nov 2013 1:17pm


Gardeners 'at fault' for algal bloom
HAYLEY GODDARD, South Western Times November 15, 2013, 11:37 am

The hideous build-up of yellow algae in the Leschenault Estuary could be the fault of residents in the region, according to ECU natural sciences associate professor Dr Mark Lund.

Dr Lund speculates the run-off from farmers along the Collie River might not be the major cause of the algal bloom in the waterway.

He said the blame could sit with residents not paying enough attention to their gardening habits.

"Unfortunately it doesn"t take much for a bloom to occur if the conditions are right," Dr Lund said.

Dr Lund said it was hard to pinpoint the cause of the bloom, but attributed it to a number of nutrient sources, such as farming, the golf course and development along the Brunswick and Collie rivers.

He said growth in Kingston, Treendale and Eaton and the associated gardens were likely to be at fault.

"What you put in the garden can enter the ground water in places near the river," Dr Lund said.

"Any fertiliser which is not absorbed could be washed into the drains.

"It could just be a small spike, but that is enough to start the bloom, which then supports itself."

Dr Lund said the problem could be solved if residents and farmers paid more attention to how they handled their properties.

According to the Department of Agriculture and Food WA website, there are several possible strategies to alleviate the issue, namely using low or slow-release phosphorus fertilisers.

Department of Water regional delivery and regulation executive director Paul Brown agreed that following the Leschenault Water Quality Improvement Plan was the best option to protect the estuary.
"The plan sets out a number of management actions to improve water quality, including reduced urban nutrient use, horticultural best-management practices, improved irrigation and fertiliser practices and improved effluent management of dairy sheds," Mr Brown said.


Bender
Bender
WA
2236 posts
WA, 2236 posts
15 Nov 2013 2:02pm
Only problem is the Dept of Waters "Management Plan" doesn't get rid of the weed there now!!

It's got worse


Thes pics were taken on Tuesday






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