Sewage Pouring into Potomac in MoCo

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The Potomac river was already a lifeless cesspool before this happened, so environmental harm will be minimal because the river was already dead to begin with, thanks to five years of Trump pollution from his golf course.


That’s the sliver lining here - the river was already dead to begin with, so there’s no great loss of wildlife or animals.


Wow, what an ignorant statement. Yes, the Potomac was already polluted. But it’s far from dead. It’s home to countless fish and waterfowl, for example. Anyone hiking among the Potomac can see these critters.


Agree - I have walked on the canal near the sewerage spill most days for decades.

I see and enjoy a lot of local wild life and am heart broken for the nature in the affected area.

There are many types of birds (many migratory but not all) and I fear for them. Birds often in that area include great blue herons, egrets, ravens, owls, woodpeckers, seagulls, ducks, Canada geese, hawks, and more.

Other wild life that are often seen on the canal/ river include deer, foxes, otters, raccoons, coyotes, squirrels, chipmunks, turtles and more.

The canal and river trees are glorious (although challenged by invasive vines). I use the picture this app and have identified sycamores, river oaks, river birches, paw paw trees, American elms, tulip oaks, red maples, mulberry, dogwoods, Eastern redbuds, American Holly, American beech, sweet gum, black walnut trees, American beech and more.

The C&O Canal and river is a treasure trove of nature. Many volunteers spend many house tackling the invasive vines and plants. Many cyclists, pedestrians and runners enjoy the beauty every day. Prior to this many people fished on both the canal and river.

It is a unique national park and I hope it can recover quickly from this disaster.



Even walking near the spill today, there were many birds and animals along the river and canal. … hopefully all this rain is helping to dilute the sewerage and the ecosystems will recover. The pungent smell is far better. Engineers and skilled workers are working around the clock to repair the old pipe. The bacteria levels are going down according to UMD researchers.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The Potomac river was already a lifeless cesspool before this happened, so environmental harm will be minimal because the river was already dead to begin with, thanks to five years of Trump pollution from his golf course.


That’s the sliver lining here - the river was already dead to begin with, so there’s no great loss of wildlife or animals.


Wow, what an ignorant statement. Yes, the Potomac was already polluted. But it’s far from dead. It’s home to countless fish and waterfowl, for example. Anyone hiking among the Potomac can see these critters.


Agree - I have walked on the canal near the sewerage spill most days for decades.

I see and enjoy a lot of local wild life and am heart broken for the nature in the affected area.

There are many types of birds (many migratory but not all) and I fear for them. Birds often in that area include great blue herons, egrets, ravens, owls, woodpeckers, seagulls, ducks, Canada geese, hawks, and more.

Other wild life that are often seen on the canal/ river include deer, foxes, otters, raccoons, coyotes, squirrels, chipmunks, turtles and more.

The canal and river trees are glorious (although challenged by invasive vines). I use the picture this app and have identified sycamores, river oaks, river birches, paw paw trees, American elms, tulip oaks, red maples, mulberry, dogwoods, Eastern redbuds, American Holly, American beech, sweet gum, black walnut trees, American beech and more.

The C&O Canal and river is a treasure trove of nature. Many volunteers spend many house tackling the invasive vines and plants. Many cyclists, pedestrians and runners enjoy the beauty every day. Prior to this many people fished on both the canal and river.

It is a unique national park and I hope it can recover quickly from this disaster.



Even walking near the spill today, there were many birds and animals along the river and canal. … hopefully all this rain is helping to dilute the sewerage and the ecosystems will recover. The pungent smell is far better. Engineers and skilled workers are working around the clock to repair the old pipe. The bacteria levels are going down according to UMD researchers.


I drive on the Clara Barton parkway sometimes and the only animals I ever see are deers. Nothing else. I certainly would not call that area a wildlife location.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The Potomac river was already a lifeless cesspool before this happened, so environmental harm will be minimal because the river was already dead to begin with, thanks to five years of Trump pollution from his golf course.


That’s the sliver lining here - the river was already dead to begin with, so there’s no great loss of wildlife or animals.


Wow, what an ignorant statement. Yes, the Potomac was already polluted. But it’s far from dead. It’s home to countless fish and waterfowl, for example. Anyone hiking among the Potomac can see these critters.


Agree - I have walked on the canal near the sewerage spill most days for decades.

I see and enjoy a lot of local wild life and am heart broken for the nature in the affected area.

There are many types of birds (many migratory but not all) and I fear for them. Birds often in that area include great blue herons, egrets, ravens, owls, woodpeckers, seagulls, ducks, Canada geese, hawks, and more.

Other wild life that are often seen on the canal/ river include deer, foxes, otters, raccoons, coyotes, squirrels, chipmunks, turtles and more.

The canal and river trees are glorious (although challenged by invasive vines). I use the picture this app and have identified sycamores, river oaks, river birches, paw paw trees, American elms, tulip oaks, red maples, mulberry, dogwoods, Eastern redbuds, American Holly, American beech, sweet gum, black walnut trees, American beech and more.

The C&O Canal and river is a treasure trove of nature. Many volunteers spend many house tackling the invasive vines and plants. Many cyclists, pedestrians and runners enjoy the beauty every day. Prior to this many people fished on both the canal and river.

It is a unique national park and I hope it can recover quickly from this disaster.




All this may indeed have been the case prior to 2016-2017. But when Trump purchased the former Lowes Island Country Club and turned it into the “Trump National Golf Course” , there was a veritable flood of pesticides, insecticides, herbicides, sewage and soil run-off into the Potomac River due to the redevelopment of the golf course. He cut down over a hundred acres of riparian forest alongside the shoreline of the river to improve “the view”, and this resulted in massive amounts of soil erosion into the river. Millions of tons of silt from the golf course washed into the river during the renovation of the course, smothering and burying the entire bottom of the river and everything formerly living there. This silt wiped out the macro-invertebrates in the river that formed the base of the food web. Then, as the course was planted with invasive species of grass, the pesticides and insecticides used to maintain the exotic turf leached into the river and killed all the fish, as well as the birds that feed on them. Th e entire river ecosystem collapsed within a couple years of the golf course redevelopment, and by 2019, the river was largely dead and completely devoid of fish life. This would’ve been national news at the time, were it not for the covid pandemic which began in early 2020. As a result, the pollution of the Potomac River was forgotten about during the pandemic. It was one of the greatest environmental crimes ever committed in the history of this country, and was totally ignored at the time.

No one is disputing that the Potomac had abundant fish and other wildlife historically. But that ended by 2018.

Now the Potomac is basically a “ghost river”, which is the term used to describe formerly healthy and living rivers that have been extirpated of life.


So yes, it is indeed perversely fortunate that this spill happened when it did. Because the damage to the river had already been done, by Trump. He killed the Potomac in 2017.


This spill is basically nothing compared to what Trump did in 2017.


I’m not sure if you still live in the area? Perhaps you moved away prior to 2017, and remember what the Potomac USED to be like? But it hasn’t been like you described since 2019, at the latest. It’s all dead now.

https://grist.org/politics/pollution-is-now-coming-from-donald-trumps-golf-course-in-addition-to-his-mouth/

https://washingtonian.com/2016/03/30/donald-trumps-golf-course-continues-to-threaten-potomac-river/

https://abcnews.com/amp/Politics/trump-virginia-golf-cited-illegally-cutting-trees-protected/story?id=61531413






DP. Would you just go away? You sound dumb calling it a dead river when anyone with eyes can see it’s not. No one here is defending Trump. But I and multiple other posters live here currently and hike or walk along that part of the Potomac all the time. There is pollution, but also lots of wildlife. Take a walk yourself and you will see.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The Potomac river was already a lifeless cesspool before this happened, so environmental harm will be minimal because the river was already dead to begin with, thanks to five years of Trump pollution from his golf course.


That’s the sliver lining here - the river was already dead to begin with, so there’s no great loss of wildlife or animals.


Wow, what an ignorant statement. Yes, the Potomac was already polluted. But it’s far from dead. It’s home to countless fish and waterfowl, for example. Anyone hiking among the Potomac can see these critters.


Agree - I have walked on the canal near the sewerage spill most days for decades.

I see and enjoy a lot of local wild life and am heart broken for the nature in the affected area.

There are many types of birds (many migratory but not all) and I fear for them. Birds often in that area include great blue herons, egrets, ravens, owls, woodpeckers, seagulls, ducks, Canada geese, hawks, and more.

Other wild life that are often seen on the canal/ river include deer, foxes, otters, raccoons, coyotes, squirrels, chipmunks, turtles and more.

The canal and river trees are glorious (although challenged by invasive vines). I use the picture this app and have identified sycamores, river oaks, river birches, paw paw trees, American elms, tulip oaks, red maples, mulberry, dogwoods, Eastern redbuds, American Holly, American beech, sweet gum, black walnut trees, American beech and more.

The C&O Canal and river is a treasure trove of nature. Many volunteers spend many house tackling the invasive vines and plants. Many cyclists, pedestrians and runners enjoy the beauty every day. Prior to this many people fished on both the canal and river.

It is a unique national park and I hope it can recover quickly from this disaster.



Even walking near the spill today, there were many birds and animals along the river and canal. … hopefully all this rain is helping to dilute the sewerage and the ecosystems will recover. The pungent smell is far better. Engineers and skilled workers are working around the clock to repair the old pipe. The bacteria levels are going down according to UMD researchers.


I drive on the Clara Barton parkway sometimes and the only animals I ever see are deers. Nothing else. I certainly would not call that area a wildlife location.


Driving??? The wildlife is closer to the water. You think because you can’t see any wildlife from your car that there isn’t any???
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The Potomac river was already a lifeless cesspool before this happened, so environmental harm will be minimal because the river was already dead to begin with, thanks to five years of Trump pollution from his golf course.


That’s the sliver lining here - the river was already dead to begin with, so there’s no great loss of wildlife or animals.


Wow, what an ignorant statement. Yes, the Potomac was already polluted. But it’s far from dead. It’s home to countless fish and waterfowl, for example. Anyone hiking among the Potomac can see these critters.


Agree - I have walked on the canal near the sewerage spill most days for decades.

I see and enjoy a lot of local wild life and am heart broken for the nature in the affected area.

There are many types of birds (many migratory but not all) and I fear for them. Birds often in that area include great blue herons, egrets, ravens, owls, woodpeckers, seagulls, ducks, Canada geese, hawks, and more.

Other wild life that are often seen on the canal/ river include deer, foxes, otters, raccoons, coyotes, squirrels, chipmunks, turtles and more.

The canal and river trees are glorious (although challenged by invasive vines). I use the picture this app and have identified sycamores, river oaks, river birches, paw paw trees, American elms, tulip oaks, red maples, mulberry, dogwoods, Eastern redbuds, American Holly, American beech, sweet gum, black walnut trees, American beech and more.

The C&O Canal and river is a treasure trove of nature. Many volunteers spend many house tackling the invasive vines and plants. Many cyclists, pedestrians and runners enjoy the beauty every day. Prior to this many people fished on both the canal and river.

It is a unique national park and I hope it can recover quickly from this disaster.



Even walking near the spill today, there were many birds and animals along the river and canal. … hopefully all this rain is helping to dilute the sewerage and the ecosystems will recover. The pungent smell is far better. Engineers and skilled workers are working around the clock to repair the old pipe. The bacteria levels are going down according to UMD researchers.


I drive on the Clara Barton parkway sometimes and the only animals I ever see are deers. Nothing else. I certainly would not call that area a wildlife location.


Because you’re DRIVING A CAR.

WTF people are really this stupid?
Anonymous
But don’t worry water is still safe to drink.
Just like Covid wasn’t really a big deal.
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