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2) Audrey Hope, Allison Wiese
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Time Out says
It’s around 5:30 p.m. Their hands rip into the beach, moving from dry sand, to damp sand, until they are crouched flinging wet sand out of the hole on their hands and knees. Roughly 10-feet-deep and 10-feet-wide, the hole has taken a little over an hour to carve out, sweat dripping from their brow. The pile of sand around the edges of the hole begins to collapse. Sand’s crumbling, shifting nature contributes to the hazards of cave-ins. First only a few grains, then clumps and then the entire mound.
She dug the hole on a campground area of the beach, about 10 to 15 feet from the water line.
About 30 people, including their friends and bystanders, frantically dug with their hands, buckets and other improvised tools to expose their head. The head was freed in about five minutes, just as firefighters arrived at the scene, Smith said.
http://audrey-hope.com/
http://allisonwiese.com/
http://spf15exhibitions.tumblr.com
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