SKIPSEA SANDS - Erosion of the East Yorkshire Coastline (2023)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 ก.ย. 2023
- Parts of East Yorkshire lose metres of coastline every year as coastal erosion becomes a constant battle to stop.
Entire villages in our region could fall into the sea if we do not act now to stop climate change.
In some areas of the Holderness coast a staggering four metres of land is being lost each year.
Take a trip along the coast at Skipsea, Aldbrough and Ulrome and you will be able to witness the desolation first-hand.
There are now roads that lead to nowhere which is leaving houses teetering on the brink.
The earliest images were taken in 2011 - เพลง
I haven’t been to Skipsea for over 27 years and I’m thinking about taking the cameras and drones to see how much it’s change ,and by looking at your drone footage I might be in for a real shock, The road I used to cycle down from Skipsea sands has now gone along with the static vans overlooking the beach which I seen on other videos.,,
Many thanks for your comments and memories. I would of loved to have taken some footage 27 years ago to compare. Still a very nice beach and never seems to get that busy with folk.
Nature can be relentless. .
Thanks for sharing
Yes, nature always takes back. Many thanks mate
Wow! Thats something else. That coastline. Those cliffs ... Great video ❤
Thanks mate> Glad you liked it.
What an elegant and wonderful flight! And the sound was also good. Thank you for sharing such a beautiful view, my friend!
So glad you liked the video. Your comment is much appreciated
Nice flying and filming Mickey. You've captured it really well. Well done amazing
Many thanks. Much appreciated. There is a few gimbal jitters but it was quite windy.
Thanks for your sharing 👌
Great Work
Many thanks. Much appreciated comment
Good video. I like going back to this place now and again to see what has changed.
Thanks Peter. Yes, It's very interesting to see erosion progressing.
Nice introduction to history and wonderful smooth flight along this most beautiful coastline. 🤘👌 The erosion does not leave much room for the houses anymore, though.
Many thanks for your comment. So glad you liked the video. When I film it next year, I will do a comparison.
@@rsmickeymooproductions4877 Great idea. It will be very interesting to see.
Woooo great images 👏👏
Many thanks. Much appreciated
Hiya. Interesting video and excellent footage. 👍It really is incredible how much of an issue coastal erosion is and scarily not much can be done about it. Thanks again and Cheers. SAA
Glad you enjoyed it. Many thanks for your support. Mickey
Great colors bud love it !
Many thanks. Much appreciated
Wow. I really would be moving from there😮 excellent footage 👌 👏
Yes, it's beautiful but the sea view could be closer than you thought .
Very interesting perspective, I love it!
Glad you enjoyed it! Many thanks
Lovely quality footage Mooster!! Great colour.🎉
Glad you enjoyed it. Thankyou
Lovely footage MickeyMoo just unfortunate so much coastline is disappearing 👏👏👍
Thanks Jim. Yes, It's nature working in it's own way.
Bravo pour ces images somptueuses👍
Many thanks. Much appreciated
Excellent views 👍
Many thanks friend
A very informative video Mickey. I knew that the east coast below The Wash is renowned for coastal erosion, but I hadn't realised that the erosion was equally as bad in East Yorkshire. It would be interesting to film again in a few years to see the difference.
Many thanks Kevin. The most populated areas get sea defences but areas of farmland and leisure parks seem to be left to the sea. I think I will film a few more locations as a project
Very nice video of it mate great bit of flying mate just come back from there getting bad now there Don 🤠🇬🇧👍👍👍👍👍🤞
Many thanks Don. Yes, nothing to stop the sea taking the lot.
So beautiful, like.
Many thanks👍
Nice video and sound👍
Many thanks Iain
As always a great video ,but such a sad topic..like the use of the photos too..👍
Many thanks John. Much appreciated. Hoping to do a few more of these for historic purposes
Great video Mickeymoo 🙂
Thanks Ian
Brilliant work mate great information defo be interesting to see the difference maybe even next year
Thanks Johnny. Glad you like the video. Hoping to do a few more locations before the winter sets in as well
@@rsmickeymooproductions4877 yep same here fingers crossed
Great storytelling
Many thanks. Much appreciated
Its amazing to see how the power of the sea can shape the coast line, its also heartbreaking for the people that live so close and have lost the land, house's, to see it as it is today hits hard so really well done Mickey 👏👏👍.
Many thanks Steve for your kind comment. The power of the sea is so evident. Here you can see the scars it leaves behind.
On people as well as the land Mickey 😞
@@Steve53 One cannot imagine the heartbreak of your property just slipping into the sea.
Coastal erosion happens because of water running off the land weakening the sandy cliffs, which then collapse. All the sea does is wash away the resulting debris.
The sea doesn't cause the erosion.
❤ Oh wow this has just brought back so many memories as my grandma used to live in one of the small bungalows/shalet type properties along the sea front near the chippy. I am now wondering how long before they are in the sea 😊 They are getting quite close to the edge now looking at that video
Yes, we have relatives that had a chalet at Withernsea Golden Sands and the whole thing went into the sea. Since then they put in sea defences that now protects the B road. If only they had done this 2 years before. Great comment Trevor.
@@rsmickeymooproductions4877 Funnily enough a lot of my family live in Withernsea as well lol
Woow that erosion is huge . 😱😭
Yes, it's only a matter of time before them gardens will be in the sea and then the houses. The caravans will probably be moved before then. I might make this a project of further filming and documenting.
Lots of those houses look like they can be relocated. They need to start relocating today!!!
Yes, some are very close to the coastline. Many thanks for your comment
That is just sad thinking of the ones that are or soon will be directly impacted. I am sure it could feel like a slow death to watch as it eats away closer. Impactful video.
Many thanks for your kind comment. Much appreciated. Yes, it must be disconcerting watching the tide getting closer and closer
A photo definitely tells so many things 😢
Yes Tony. This video is more a local interest to the folk that live nearby, but I'm sure others suffer the same fate around the country
Beautiful video, although it shows a worrisome phenomenon... But well done!
Many thanks for you kind comment. Worrying times for coastal folk.
It's all slowly going into the ocean were all doomed, Well not in my lifetime anyway lol, Nice little flight pal well done.
Many thanks for your comment. Much appreciated. Yes, nature has a habit of claiming back.
When you have the worst holiday ever in that place ,you would be glad to hear it has fallen into the sea.
Sorry to hear that Michael. Was it the resort you stopped at or the surrounding area?
Yeah, that looks scary if you have a home there.
Yes, there are folk still living there. I will probably do another video next year to do a comparison
Id suggest steel sheet lining the parts in danger of being lost.. sheet driving methods .. barricaded with layers of sea barrier rocks.. theres a simple enough solution.
Hi Rick. Many thanks for your comment. Some methods are working. Withensea imported massive Scandinavian granite rocks by ship. Very expensive though
@@rsmickeymooproductions4877 crowd funding might work.. gotta be better than sending money for an unworthy cause.. over time. Possibly quite quickly.. a group of locals could get this up n running... time waits for no man .. I sincerely hope the help you require comes to you.
😢
Un futuro negro…👏👏👏🤘😘
Sí, efectivamente. Muchas gracias por comentar.
Millions of tons of aggregate dredging.
Many thanks for your comment
A sobering site Mickey....
I agree, this is nature taking back.
Impressionnant ces falaises qui disparaissent
Many thanks
Where to start with that opening gambit? 🙄
I've taught eleven year olds (from East Yorkshire) who could pick it apart.
You could act now to prevent climate change all you like but even before the great climate grift started, that boulder clay was being washed away by the sea. Sorry to burst your climate alarmist bubble, mate, but boulder clay and eustatic sea-level rise have been doing their thing long since before anyone decided they couid make a fast buck by telling everyone we're all gonna die unless we buy a heat pump.
Your footage is great but it's just a natural geomorphological process you're seeing. Magic yourself back 10000 years and the same thing was happening, just further east. If 10000 years ago the odd human who found themselves wandering around had decided that over the next 10000 years they wouldn't overpopulate the planet and certainly wouldn't have an nasty industrial revolution, the process would have continued and the coast would still be where it is today.
There's so much info about this that there really is no need to be parroting the "because of climate change" narrative.
There's no "acting to stop climate change". The climate changes. It always has changed, it always will change. But there are plenty of very very wealthy people who are taking advantage of people who cannot think for themselves. In 1985 when I started at senior school, we were taught that we were heading into another ice-age. By the time I left in 1992, it was all global warming. That was enough for me to pursue it in academia for nearly a decade where I had my eyes opened to the great con...
Call me what you like, I've heard it all before. But go and read a few books about how the East Coast was formed and coastal processes and then come back and edit the bit about stopping climate change. You wouldn't go to Iceland and see the destruction of whole towns by lava flows and state "we've got to stop volcanoes erupting". It's just process. Physical processes. And we're just in the way. Once you get that squared-away you'll see the climate-alarmism for exactly what it is: social control through fear.
Much of what you say I agree with. Erosion is a natural process. I merely photograph, video and record the coastline. I guess it's a hobby and may be of interest in years to come. Many thanks for your valued comment