The high tide line along Delray's beach is visible in the early morning hours of Nov. 10. View is from the Casaurina Street beach entrance in Delray Beach. Photo provided by Louise Lafond
Water was receding, but still covered streets on the west side of Briny Breezes Nov. 10. Photo provided by Ruth Leming
Abigail Anderson FaceTimed her partner in New York to show off the wild waves in Gulf Stream on Nov. 10. Rachel S. O’Hara/The Coastal Star
Waves crashed against the rocks and on the beach in Gulf Stream on Nov. 10. Rachel S. O’Hara/The Coastal Star
Max Chiorean, of Boynton Beach, walked across the exposed rocks on Gulf Stream Beach with his surfboard on Nov. 10. Rachel S. O’Hara/The Coastal Star
North end of the seawall during high tide Nov. 10 at the Delray Beach Marina where Claudia Willis was standing in 1 foot of water. High tide was at 11 a.m. “I have never seen (the water) this high,” said Willis who has lived in the neighborhood for decades. Photo provided by Claudia Willis
Waves continue to cover Lantana's Beach and smash against the sea wall during sunrise on Nov. 10. Photo provided by Paula Romeo
Waves crash against a railing at the Imperial House in South Palm Beach on Nov. 10. Photo provided by Bonnie Fischer
A lifeguard stand on Delray Beach settles on a tilt caused by erosion to the dune on Nov. 10.
The city's well planted dune helped keep the ocean from going over the dune and onto A1A. Photo provided by Kari Shipley
The city's well planted dune helped keep the ocean from going over the dune and onto A1A. Photo provided by Kari Shipley
A different angle shows yellow caution tape designating the tower as closed. There’s a two-foot drop to the beach, said Chris Heffernan, a resident and a beach walker. He took the photo on Nov. 10. and said The tower’s position was fine on Nov. 9, meaning that the beach erosion had occurred overnight. Photo provided by Chris Heffernan
The entrance to the Eau Palm Beach garage and Lantana city parking lot remained flooded on Nov. 10. Photo provided by Bonnie Fischer
Visitors photograph a partially collapsed set of stairs to the beach at the Lantana Beach seawall on Nov. 10. Photo provided by Bonnie Fischer
Sea Oats help to bind the sand and slow erosion at a dune crossover in Ocean Ridge. On Nov. 10, other crossovers without plantings, had lost steps and supports. Photo provided by Denise LeBlanc
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