Anonymous wrote:In addition to human feces, the Potomac is infested with Snakeheads.
Anonymous wrote:If you're serious go here:
https://www.waveoneopenwater.com/
It's not the very best open water swimming in the area, but it's safe and calm, and fun. Weekly swims at National Harbor. Yeah, don't just jump in anywhere, but yes, of course, there are safe places to swim in the river.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not hyperbole but reality. It is illegal to swim in the Potomac around DC for a reason. We still Paddle board and canoe but only with life jackets.
Seven persons a year, on average, drown in the area. Nearly all drowning victims are 15 to 25 years old. Most victims had been drinking or using drugs. The Potomac seems so tranquil that people are unaware of danger.
http://npshistory.com/brochures/grfa/info.pdf
Why is Potomac River so dangerous ? In DMV area?
Fast Water
Above Great Falls the
river funnels down to 200 feet, causing the current to speed up tremendously.
Rising Water
Water rises quickly.
Water changing to muddy means danger. In 10 minutes you can be stranded on rocks and islands.
The River's Edge
The rocks are dangerous because of poor footing. Stay a body length from the water.
"Killer Hydraulic"
When water goes over a fall or dam, the current underneath runs faster than the surface. This causes water to curl backward, sucking down floating objects
^ Just stay home if you don't know what you're doing and aren't a strong swimmer.
I’ve seen canoes fully wrapped around a rock on the Potomac. You can’t out-swim a Potomac river current!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of these posters just keep showing their ignorance.
Swimmers drown all the time.
See "In the Potomac's Grip" if you have a Washington Post subscription.
Or the "Potomac River is Alluring but Deadly" in the Richmond Times Dispatch.
Not point using facts to argue with macho bravado though.
It's not macho bravado, it's common sense. Don't swim near Great Falls. Don't swim after it's rained.
I swim in the Potomac throughout the summer. Obv. I've never drowned and I've never caught an infection (I do shower right after).
Swimming in the river is lovely. Sorry, but some of us just love it. I think the people who drown are usually people who are not familiar with the river. And I agree, you need to be informed. But I feel safer in the river than in the ocean.
Anonymous wrote:Some of these posters just keep showing their ignorance.
Swimmers drown all the time.
See "In the Potomac's Grip" if you have a Washington Post subscription.
Or the "Potomac River is Alluring but Deadly" in the Richmond Times Dispatch.
Not point using facts to argue with macho bravado though.