Quick Update: Seasonal Sand Erosion at Calheta Beach
The artificial sand infrastructure at the southwestern enclave of Calheta routinely requires intensive coastal management. Following an aggressive sequence of southwestern Atlantic swells during late March, visitors planning to utilize the resort beach this week must adjust their expectations.
A significant volume of the imported golden Moroccan sand—originally deposited sequentially inside the two concrete breakwater lagoons—has violently shifted. The heavy kinetic energy from the deep ocean floor physically dredged thousands of tons of sediment, depositing a massive submerged sandbox directly into the central, deeper navigational channel.
Consequently, the physical dry beach perimeter on the western lagoon is currently functioning at exactly 60% of its normal high-summer area. Furthermore, the underlying foundational sharp basalt rocks have become fully exposed near the primary water entry points. Entering the typically safe, shallow water now dictates the absolute use of protective aqua shoes to prevent harsh barefoot lacerations.
The municipal authorities have formally scheduled heavy dredging equipment to manually redistribute the sand back onto the shoreline. The local port authority confirms the heavy machinery will actively operate starting exactly next Monday.
Until the restoration operation concludes, the space density for towels will be immensely constrained during weekend peaks. Watch the localized conditions directly, or entirely reroute your afternoon itinerary to the entirely natural volcanic pools further north, easily verified via the [Seixal Beach feed](/webcam/seixal-beach). Stay prepared for these rapid geological shifts.