Grand Isle, Louisiana, May 23
A semipalmated sandpiper pitter patters down the beach, feeding from sand laced with sticky red puddles of oil. The bird has red smeared across its flanks and face. Nearby, a flock of sanderlings pecks for worms and mollusks. The sand they鈥檙e feeding from is riddled with globs of oil and at least five of them are smothered in the stuff. Near the water鈥檚 edge, the beach is red. And out in the Gulf, wave after wave crests red, unloading a new supply of crude with every crash.
This is , a barrier island retreat that on typical May weekends is bustling with beachgoers. The nearby town of Grand Isle is a summery community of daiquiri bars, seafood restaurants and beachside homes colored sherbet and baby blue. But today a pall has been cast upon the town, after weeks of waiting for oil and hoping it would stay offshore, it has arrived, the first oil to hit a populated part of the coast. Other than a pair of CNN reporters, a French film crew and the sheriff, the beach is empty, except of course for the birds, many of them migrants on their way to the Arctic. Those with oil may never make it.
鈥淚t is distressing,鈥 says Tamara Augustine, the park鈥檚 manager, who lives in a yellow cabin in the dunes. 鈥淚 see it happening and I鈥檓 watching minute by minute and that鈥檚 all I can do, just watch.鈥
The National Guard arrived today with a fleet of trucks and a grand and undeveloped idea. They want to build some sort of barrier along the shore, a new oil-stopping technique. They鈥檒l get started tomorrow, but nobody is quite sure what they鈥檙e up to, and after dropping off their equipment they are nowhere to be seen. 鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 tell me much鈥 says Tamara. 鈥淭hey seemed to be in a rush.鈥
They are also late. The oil began washing ashore on Grand Isle early Friday morning, and it hasn鈥檛 stopped since. As the sun sets choppers rifle across the sky and boom bounces about like boiling spaghettii. Oddly, marine life carries on as if nothing is new; mullet jump from the water and snowy egrets survey the beach from a breakwater. A single dolphin swims by, its fin slicing through red waves of oil.
At a seafood restaurant in town, a table of CBS reporters tell oil spill war stories and a couple of 爆料公社 workers eat crab. Rhea Pelotto, the restaurant manager, excitedly brings over a book about the Exxon Valdez oil spill and opens to a page with a picture of a smiling woman in a yellow smock. 鈥淵ou see this woman,鈥 says Rhea. 鈥淪he was just washing the clothes of the workers who were cleaning up the oil and got some sort of respiratory ailment, now she is suffering!鈥
The thought of her own beach now smothered in oil brings tears to Rhea's eyes. 鈥淚 just can鈥檛 wrap my mind around it,鈥 she says. 鈥淣obody can.鈥