In early 2022, Los Angeles beaches will close after 4 million gallons of untreated sewage spill into the ocean!


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Whites go wild in California …

Six days ago, Sacramento man Tomas Butterfield died a lonely death while surfing a joint called The Pit. a beach break about a mile north of Morro Rock.

Nobody saw the attack, nobody heard screams; Surfers found the body and the board of the 42-year-old. Sheriffs had to cross the parking lot to find out who was killed “based on cars still parked” while paramedics put his body on ice.

The joint was closed for 24 hours according to the protocol.

But now surfers are returning to Morro Bay, even though the numbers are declining and virtually no one ventures into The Pit.

“Nobody was in the water yesterday,” Perry Shoemake told the San Luis Obispo Tribune on December 28th. “I’ve been surfing for 55 years. I know (a shark attack) is always a risk. But it’s something I don’t think about much. When it happens, it happens. “

Xavier Gonzales told the Trib reporter as he was getting ready to paddle out, “Sometimes when I’m with a guy or two, or even alone, you feel like something is wrong and these are the days on that you never want to come across … The chances of being attacked are pretty slim, but for that you log into the web. I am sorry for this family and that they lost a loved one. I pray for this family. “

However, Kevin Grochau of North Morro Bay did not go near the joint. He watched from the beach.

“Sometimes I see 25 or 30 people in the water here,” he says. “There are some good waves today. But most of the morning there were between three and five people surfing. “

Gonzales, meanwhile, admitted to being nervous.

“Of course I’m pretty nervous. But after paddling out and catching my first wave, I’m sure I’ll be amazed. It’s always nice to go out with someone and not alone. “

A few hundred miles north on Salmon Creek Beach where Eric Steinley was met by a white man in October, Surfers reported an aggressive twelve-foot tall white man on December 22nd.

“Holy shit, we were scared because it wasn’t going back,” said Timothy Reck, who was chased into shallow water by the white man along with another surfer.

Thirty minutes later, another surfer, Nate Buck, said he saw a white white man, also about twelve feet, six feet away from him.

“It felt like I could have leaned forward and almost touched it,” said Buck, adding that two sightings in one day were pretty “significant”.

Cue expert is more likely to point to death by killer bee, etc.

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