The beach, as it stands, is very impressive; it reminds me of Daytona. However; it is not equipped with the amenities of the strip mall, or anyway industrial scale, found in florida. On the weekend that I visited, these were the kind of crowdsâin that little space. There was no formally demarcated campsite; and I could see, how in a more preservative case, this could be an honor and a joy. As it stands, it meant there was not a place to camp in any capacity dispersed.
I visited on the weekend. If I were to try again, I would do so during business hours. Even so. That is a lot of people. Too many to maintain, hygienically, or otherwise, without remarkable facilities, and funding that is not clearly allocated to such measures. There was some construction going on, lots, and lots of vehicles, parked anywhere as per regulation, and more people per foot of water than I have ever seen; more than at massive industrial water parks (where enormous systems for the distribution of caustic chlorine are typical, and ideally replaceable, presently, working).
Unfortunately, this site represents an emergency for both public and environmental health.