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News about Rollover Pass. #4190809 11/26/09 03:40 PM
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Jim_Campbell Offline OP
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From chron.com

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/6739893.html

"GALVESTON — Overcast skies, drizzling wind and a brisk breeze did little to faze Ronnie Hickey and Auda Derby as they dangled their fishing lines into the roiling current of Rollover Pass, a 200-foot-wide channel cut through the narrowest point in the Bolivar Peninsula.

Like many anglers, they are saddened but resigned to the impending demise of Rollover Pass, a peninsula landmark for 54 years and one of the premier fishing spots on the Texas Gulf Coast.

The Texas General Land Office says Rollover Pass is speeding beach erosion on the peninsula. The GLO is seeking a permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to close it. The GLO will begin filling it in as soon as the permit is granted, Land Office spokesman Jim Suydam said. “It's causing massive rates of erosion,” Suydam said.

Hickey, 56, and Derby, 55, drove from Greenville to spend a week at their favorite fishing spot. Clad in rain gear, they sat in folding chairs on the concrete retaining wall that lines the pass and leaned their poles against the metal railing.

“I think it's a bad deal closing it down,” said Hickey.

Anglers drive long distances and sometimes camp for weeks to fish for grouper, red fish, flounder, shark and other fish.

Suydam says the GLO plans to build a fishing pier to replace Rollover Pass, which was the economic mainstay of the tiny Gilchrist community.

“If they don't put that pier out there, they will destroy this area,” said Warren Adams, a board member of the Gilchrist Association formed by community residents. The association opposed closing the pass but now is resigned to the inevitability.

Before Hurricane Ike, a trailer park and two bait shops thrived on business from anglers who parked their camp trailers near the pass.
Trouble from Ike

When Hurricane Ike struck Sept. 13, 2008, it scoured away nearly the entire Gilchrist community, leaving only Adams' yellow house standing.

A number of houses have been rebuilt since Ike, and Adams said a new housing project is planned nearby.

Before the channel was dug, Rollover Pass was a natural washover that was occasionally breached by storms. There are reports of small boats being able to cross the peninsula at Rollover Pass during high tide. The Handbook of Texas says the pass got its name from smugglers rolling barrels of contraband across the narrowest part of the peninsula.

The Gulf Coast Rod Reel and Gun Club eventually gained ownership of the property and entered into an agreement to dig the pass with the predecessor agency that eventually became Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. Rollover Pass was completed in 1955 and immediately became a fishing destination for anglers.

But erosion problems emerged during construction that foretold Rollover's eventual end. Ray Newby, GLO geologist, said original plans called for the pass to be 80 feet wide and 8 feet deep. But the swift tidal currents quickly eroded the fresh cut to 500 feet and scoured it 30 feet deep, forcing the construction of a concrete retaining wall, Newby said.
‘Sad for this area'

A series of reports over the years found that the pass contributed to erosion of Peninsula beaches. Newby said sand that would normally be carried west to the beaches is sucked through the pass and dumped into the Intracoastal Waterway. Suydam said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is spending about $1 million a year to dredge sand.

Hickey and Derby don't believe the pass is causing any more erosion than would normally occur, but they are more concerned with fishing. Making the most of what might be one of their last trips to Rollover Pass, they teamed to bring in a 413⁄8-inch red bull. They also caught a 3½-foot shark.

Reflecting on the closure, Derby said, “It's really going to be sad for this area.”

harvey.rice@chron.com"

Re: News about Rollover Pass. [Re: Jim_Campbell] #4190815 11/26/09 03:41 PM
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Hopefully the new pier will be a real nice one, with lights and baitshop/store, and open 24/7.

Re: News about Rollover Pass. [Re: Jim_Campbell] #4191060 11/26/09 04:55 PM
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Sad they are closing it down. Rollover Pass is a legendary fishing spot a lot of people from all over the country go to. Especially during the flounder run. Like the saying during the flounder run, "Head em' off at the pass."

But like all good things, they eventually come to an end.

I remember seeing the satellite images of Rollover Pass before and after Ike and it really caused a lot of erosion from he storm when you compared the two satellite images side by side.

Re: News about Rollover Pass. [Re: AJ Perez] #4202559 12/01/09 06:09 AM
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Several of our family friends own land directly west of Rollover, and while in the past I thought their arguement for closing the past did not pass muster, I know in my gut this is the best thing for the long term. I'm a little concerned about the affect on salinity levels in the bay, does anyone have any information on how this will change fishing on the Galveston bay complex?


17'AmisonCraft, 85hp Suzuki, Handmade from Cypress wood in Apalachicola, FL, but we fish Sabine/West Cove/Calcasieu



Re: News about Rollover Pass. [Re: Beaumont] #4203185 12/01/09 03:37 PM
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I heard that one viable alternative was building jetties. Seems jetties would solve both problems. What do they do if a hurricane opens the pass after they have closed it??

Re: News about Rollover Pass. [Re: FoldCatOne] #4203674 12/01/09 06:22 PM
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LRS Offline
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I'm with you FCO.
I know there is erosion.
But we have jetties up and down the entire gulf coast for that reason.
They should have built a jetty at the mouth of Rollover Pass a long time ago.
I have not seen a relevant reason that has been offered by the GLO that building a jetty would not be effective or feasible.
If they did, I missed it.
I think someone with a political agenda smells dollar signs.
I keep hearing they want to turn that area into a gambling casino. Maybe it's that, maybe it's something else.
I would project that Trinity Bay, and it's ecosystem, will be devastated.
There ain't gonna be no fishing pier.
If anyone thinks there is big money to be made with a gambling casino, they have not seen the clouds of mosquitoes that come out at night.
And turning east bay into a brackish back water swamp will only compound the mosquito problem.

I would guess that filling in Rollover Pass will only be temporary. Wind and wave erosion will have it opened up again within 2 years, unless they use concrete.
This might be avoided however, if they will build a jetty at the same time they fill in the Pass.

I'm probably wrong about everything I have said. I'm not a scientist or a politician.
I'm sure Patterson knows what he's doing.



Re: News about Rollover Pass. [Re: LRS] #4205895 12/02/09 05:10 AM
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eksda Offline
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well contact your elected officials and put the buzz in their ears. as far as casinos go galveston will get one before rollover pass ever will . there are more people in galveston plus gambling was in galveston long before anyplace else. albeit illegal gambling but it was there. there are going to be 2 piers built and i have it on good authority they are building them

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