Buoy cam South Lake Tahoe City Homewood

Buoy cam South Lake Tahoe City Homewood
Buoy cam South Lake Tahoe City Homewood

Buoy cam; “This webcam is the first of its kind in the Great Lakes and is capable of transmitting high-resolution images and video clips over the Internet on a regular basis,” said Ed Verhamme, project engineer of LimnoTech, an Ann Arbor environmental engineering.

The camera is experimental. The images will be used by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forecasters to verify current conditions and to estimate visibility on the water.

The buoy was first put in the water last year two miles off Tunnel Park. It sends back wind speed and direction, air temperature, relative humidity, pressure, wave height and period and surface water temperature. The program was started by the Holland Board of Public Works, Holland Area Convention and Visitors Bureau, Louis Padnos Iron and Metal and LimnoTech. Supporters also included the Holland Area Sailing Council, Holland Steelheaders, the Community Foundation of the Holland-Zeeland Area, Anchorage Marina and the Surfrider Foundation of Lake Michigan.

A $100,000 grant from the Great Lakes Observing System is funding a large part of the purchase, deployment, maintenance and retrieval of the buoy for the next three years, though supporters are needed for the camera.

“We’re trying to see if it’s useful and bring it back next year,” Verhamme said.

The buoy was put in Lake Michigan on May 22 with the help from NOAA’s Great Lakes Environmental Research Lab in Muskegon. It’s halfway between the Grand Haven and Holland areas, two of the busiest boating and beach communities on the Great Lakes, Verhamme said.

High-tech buoy in South Lake Tahoe City Homewood provides real-time data and images

Buoy cam South Lake Tahoe City Homewood
Buoy cam South Lake Tahoe City Homewood

 A new weather and wave monitoring buoy in South Lake Tahoe city Homewood is able to provide real-time data and measurements in an effort to increase boating and swimming safety in the area.

Deployed around South Lake Tahoe City Homewood, the buoy can distribute improved wind and wave observations in addition to measuring wind speed, wind direction, air temperature, relative humidity, solar radiation, water temperature and wave height among other variables.

in South Lake Tahoe City Homewood buoy fills a big vacant of miles gap in a chain of similar buoys from Ludington to Michigan City, Ind., deployed within the past few years. It was purchased with a $50,000 grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association, while contributions from local organizations will cover annual deployment and retrieval expenses, according to a news release from the city of South Lake Tahoe City Homewood.

Given South Lake Tahoe City Homewood strong connection to Lake people are excited for the addition of this station to the regional buoy network. The goal of South Lake Tahoe city Homewood is to provide area boaters, swimmers, and water safety professionals with up-to-date lake conditions. Conditions on the big lake can change fast and we want everyone to be prepared when venturing out on the water.