King Tides with a side of heavy wind and surf

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I can't tell the scale of that hole. The white water suggests it is big, but the nearby grass says it's not huge.
 
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I can't tell the scale of that hole. The white water suggests it is big, but the nearby grass says it's not huge.
To my eye when standing right above it?...say 60 feet by 50 feet and about 40 feet deep. It has two holes in the sides that lead out to the ocean. According to geologists, the side holes started as sea caves in the cliff face, then met as they were eroded deeper. At some point the roof of that weakened enough to collapse. It is called Devils Punchbowl. It is a small state park...of which Oregon has approximately 3 trillion along the coast :).
 
Interesting thread Burn. When I think of King tides, somehow I don't think of OR. Here, the king tides are destructive. Have you seen any deterioration of the shoreline as a result of these tides?
 
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Yes, some. More often what we see is damage to infrastructure built at the high tide line, rather than significant shoreline loss. That could be as simple as a wooden stairway to the beach, or as significant as a house foundation built on the sand dunes that are always going away and coming back over time. Tsunami bait, we call those poorly sited buildings :).
 
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