Weed and fruit scented tobacco drove on Thursday above the sea of sweaty spring breakers packed on the deck of Harpoon Harry’s in Panama City Beach, Florida, Thursday.
Tennessee Frat Boys lifted two bikini with people in their twenties on their shoulders, while a pink hair was waving a Coorslicht while a man on his hands and feet against a bass-heavy remix of Van Halen’s “Panama” waved.
A mustache Timothee Chalamet look-a-like’s eyes rolled back under his bucket hat over the dance floor while a bouncer closed the bathroom because of a ‘vomiting incident’.
“We had to take five knives today,” a bulletproof vest told the guard the mail, of seizing weapons from a group earlier in the afternoon prior to the performance of rapper G-Eazy.
This is the spring break along the Gulf of America, where the post can report that children smuggle cocaine, ecstasy and weed from other states, on the street, flashy fake IDs and Downing Miami vice-frozen cocktails in parts of Stanley Cup-Sized before they connect.
Southern teenage and university students – mainly from Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana, Missouri, Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee and South Carolina – flood “The 30A” as it is known, a term that describes the party scene between Destin and Panama Between them.
“It’s ‘Jersey Shore’ on Crack. Everyone is down to do something,” said Katie, 25, from Tampa, referring to the MTV reality show.
Casual sex and drugs
There is no shortage of shirtless, horny young men on the beaches and in the bars, most of whom seem to be intoxicated before the sun even goes under.
“If you come when Alabama is here, it’s great. Alabama girls are slutty. They are here to party. There are many people in Tennessee here-Midwest and southern people are a little less hook-upy. Georgia, they are pretty slutty,” said a 20-year-old party of Missouri by the Hookupultuur.
Upstairs in a Panama City Beach Bar, a 22-year-old senior studying Financing The Post told that the drug scene is unbridled and easily accessible.
‘Cocaine. Weed. Molly – Everywhere. [Spring breakers] Usually put it in their rooms. They take Molly and they go to the party. They will put cocaine in the bathroom. Weed, they are going to smoke on the balcony. We bring it. We just get it at home. You don’t want to trust that it will come out here, “the student, from Joplin, Missouri, told The Post.
“Cola. That’s all I do,” he added and noted that the drug cost $ 150 per gram for a small bag of “about 20 lines” – an increase in the mostly $ 70 that he pays at home.
“Some people know the spring break and they come here to sell drugs.” When asked if he is worried, it could be cut with ultra -red fentanyl, he added: “It depends on how [the drug dealer] appearance. If they may wear their Tennessee Frat shirt, but they have to go first. They die before I am. ”
Fake -ids, easy minor access
Two 20-year-old second-year students from East Tennessee State University told the post that they bought fake Georgia State IDs “because they use a black and white photo and it is easier to get away with.”
“I got my fake ID my junior year from the high school from a random man. It worked [in Panama City Beach] So far, “said one of the 20-year-old second-year students about gaining access to bars and noted that they never scanned her ID.
“Many people have counterfeits and people drink a minor.”
A guard at Harpoon Harry’s told The Post that the biggest problems with which they are confronted, apart from weapons, his tolerance – or rather a lack of – among the young partygoers.
“If you are really confused, we will give you a taxi.
‘You can see when they are on [cocaine]. They move a thousand miles per hour. Ecstasy is a big thing. Many children bring it, university children, “said a second guard.
While Florida’s panhandle embraces the parties, other large spring break destinations in the state such as Miami Beach have been beaten in recent years.
In Miami there are strict rules: closing parking garages, increasing rates for parking, to double the towing rates and to engage DUI and security control points, many brought in after two shootings fluctuated the community during a chaotic spring -stream undercame in 13%. The burden with a burden in 13%, led to in 13%, lectures in, lecture in, lecture, lectures,, in 13%. NBC Miami reported.
On Saturday evening, however, the post witnessed a university youth, was injured in Las Olas Beach in Fort Lauderdale. He was taken to the hospital after his eyes seemed to roll in his head. The Florida police too broke a “large, non-made spring Break collection ‘on the sunny Isles beach between Miami and Fort Lauderdale on March 21 after partygoers flowed to the beach party when it was promoted on Tiktok.
Parties on Snapchat
In Seaside, a luxury community along the 30A, civil servants have implemented an evening clock of 7 pm – an hour earlier from 8 pm – an hour earlier for non -guided minors of 18 years and under the supervision of parental supervision from March 1 to 25 April.
But that does not prevent children from storming house parties in the area where, they say, everything goes.
“I organize a branch of a branch. As long as you are good at seeing alcohol and drugs,” said a 16-year-old man who stays in a house in Seaside the post Wednesday evening.
A group of 12 second -year students and juniors from Oklahoma, who rented a house in Seaside for $ 2,500 for the week with the help of “Birthday and Christmas Money Saved”, The Post said.
They said they blindly walked into a house that they thought of a ‘Snap Map’, a function in Snapchat with which users can share their location with friends and see snaps from other users at the same location.
“There are Snapchat Group -Chats with 100s people who will be here [in Seaside and along 30A]. They share a link from Tiktok with the parties. You don’t know if they are normal. Sometimes they are weird, “Samantha told 16, who refused to give her last name, to The Post.
A spokesperson for the Sheriff of Walton County told that the post -parents often rent houses for their teenagers in the 30a area and owners of real estate often do not know who really stays at home.
“We recently had an arrest where this group was deported from a house because the person who rented the house was not 18 and somehow slid on Airbnb. We found a stolen gun and a lot of marijuana and we made an arrest,” they said about the group that came from Decatur, Georgia.
The Walton County community too Work together with IGBO, a new app Designed to have parents follow the location information and group messages of teenagers with their parents. The app shows a pin when someone’s child is within 50 meters from another child that the app has.
Local teenagers, such as Brooke Moran in Walton County, 18, a senior in high school, told the function that they are not a fan of the spring break and Seaside has been flooded with rich tourists who throw the beach away and acted.
“We don’t love these people. They are extremely rude. This is what Seaside wants. They want these rich blonde girls to come here and buy their things. Seaside is the most expensive place in the panhandle.
“All the girls here love Lululemon, they act so uppity and they all do cola in the bathroom,” said another 18-year-old from Seaside. Slightly ironically, the post later saw an apparent tongue-in-cheek “please do not coke in the bathroom” neon board that hangs on the ladies’ toilet in the Redbar in Grayton Beach.
“We don’t spend our money – T,” said Moran de Post. “We’re going to Walmart.”
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