Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Matanzas Bay is a saltwater bay in St. Johns County, Florida; the entrance to the bay from the South Atlantic is via St. Augustine inlet. Technically this stretch of water running along the city's waterfront is part of the Matanzas River, though it is regularly referred to as a bay or harbor.
Buehler's Fresh Foods will be operating the restaurant, leasing it from the Muskingum Watershed Conservancy District (MWCD), which owns the marina, located on U.S. 250 in Harrison County.
On April 25, 1918, the Sebastian Inlet Association was created at a meeting held in Sebastian. Although it was a privately funded entity, its creation, and Roy's perpetual lobbying, must have been good enough for the War Department because only 2 days later it finally granted a permit to dig the Sebastian Inlet.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Sebastian Inlet State Park is a Florida state park located 10 miles south of Melbourne Beach and 6 miles north of Vero Beach in Florida. The park lies on both sides of the Sebastian Inlet, which forms the boundary between Brevard and Indian River counties. The land for the park was acquired by the state of Florida in 1971.
US 1 then travels north to central Sebastian, where it intersects with CR 512 (Sebastian Boulevard), providing access to Fellsmere and I-95. It then enters Roseland , intersecting CR 505 a half mile (0.80 km) south of US 1's crossing of the St. Sebastian River , where it leaves Indian River County and enters Brevard County and Central Florida.
The Sebastian Fishing Museum is located in Sebastian Inlet State Park at the Sebastian Inlet State Recreation Area, 9700 South Highway A1A, Melbourne Beach, Florida, although it is physically located on Orchid Island, Indian River County side of the park. It houses historical exhibits of the local fishing industry and its influence on the area.
Dredging took place from 2006 through 2009, costing $18 million and removing 2,000,000 cubic feet (57,000 m 3) of muck from the bottom of the St. Sebastian River.The muck consisted of silt, clay, sand, shell and organic material, which consumed oxygen and threatened the life of aquatic species.