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Swimming
Hi, We'll be up on Thursday 8/3/17, will we be able to swim in the lake?
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No. There is no water in the lake this year,
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????????
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Come On In 🏊🏼*♀️ 🏊🏽
The water out here at East Bear Island is crystal clear and seventy-seven degrees. Our guests are lovin' it! 🐻
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swimming
oh for sure shark week was last week they are all gone for the rest of the summer :laugh:
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Don't know....
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great !!
We were at Weirs Beach last year, the first week of August and the lake was closed to swimming. Based on your replies it doesn't sound like it happens that often. :)
My name is not Bob, MeredithMan. |
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geezz
Bob, in the water - no arms no legs ..... you guys are tough on newbies!
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A Good sense of humor....
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Bob & Skip...Now that is funny! I'm glad you folks have a sense of humor :laugh: Sometimes Weirs Beach can get a little gross and the authorities will shut it down to swimming, but that can be influenced by the weather, (e.g., really hot and humid, no winds, etc), and the numbers of people using the beach. I do not believe that there have been any closings this year. |
Public swimming areas all over the state are routinely tested by DES for high bacteria/e.coli levels. These occur after heavy rains and runoff, and are usually very short term as follow up testing is done quickly.
Water conditions at Weirs Beach are not indicative of conditions at other locations, so "the beach area" may be closed, not "the lake". |
Click on the USGS buoy link up top the water temperature page, and there's five different line graphs that show water temperature, lake water height, specific conductance, dissolved oxygen, and ph. The USGS buoy is located just beyond the swim line at weirs beach.
The NH DES does the testing for e-coli bacteria, and will post bright orange warning signs along the beach shoreline. Some NH towns will close their public area, while others will leave the choice up to you, the beach goer/swimmer, without closing the beach/water, even though the state has posted e-coli warning signs. Last summer, 7-acre Corcoran's Pond in Waterville Valley was posted in the sandy beach with two black and yellow e-coli warning signs from the NH DES, and the Town of Waterville Valley closed the pond to swimmers, and closed it to kayaks and paddle boards too. As far as I know, the City of Laconia will not close the water to swimmers when the NH DES posts warning signs for e-coli, and just leaves it up to the individual swimmer/water-goer while the warning signs are posted at the shoreline in the sand. http://www.des.nh.gov/organization/d...teria_sign.gif .... the NH DES travels all across the state, testing the water at ponds, lakes, public swim pools, and hot tubs, and will post these signs in a conspicuous spot like attached to a 48" wood stake, posted into the sandy shoreline at a public beach, at the water's edge. It's up to the local town, not the state, to make a decision to actually close the area, or to leave the sign in place and let people decide for themselves to swim or not to swim .... that is the question! It always seems more than a little strange to me when these signs are posted, and people including children are choosing to go into the water what with the town lifeguard present ........ who will explain the situation ........yes, that sign is for real ........ but, it is your personal choice ..... to swim or not to swim? That's New Hampshire for yuh .........ayuh! |
I think folks with license plates ending in odd numbers can swim in the lake Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Even number plates can utilize the lake on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Sundays are a free for all...
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What happens if they have a NH vanity plate with no numbers? Do they just jump in and join bob?
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I'd prefer the public beach at Ellacoya to the one at Weirs Beach.
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Hi KathyCT - not bob :laugh:
I was swimming in the lake today - clear and warm ! |
OK. So KathyCT is new to the Forum (Welcome). It was a valid question, and yes, there were some great humorous answers.
I hope , KathyCT, you weren't offended by some of the answers and will stay with us awhile. |
Possibly cyanobacteria problems. DES issued some warnings over the past week or so.
Dave Sent from my SM-T580 using Winnipesaukee Forum mobile app |
Ya but....
Will Winni be hungry? :eek: |
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Maybe someone who knows a little about cyanobacteria, or has some experience with it, could chime in with an intelligent comment.
http://www.des.nh.gov/media/pr/2017/...tonborough.htm Believe that Lee's Pond, Moultonborough, flows into the Greene's Basin area of Lake Winnipesaukee? https://twitter.com/NHDES_Beaches From this twitter stream, a cyanobacteria advisory was issued for weirs beach on July 27, and removed the next day, on July 28. People tend to ignore the posted warning sign and go in the water regardless. It's like ......well.....here, we are at the beach, so, what's up with a bacteria warning, and I'm going swimming anyway ....just keep my mouth shut? |
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Answer: Matt Welcome to the forum |
check this page out
Hi KathyCT, I'm from CT too. DES has a map of beach inspections at
http://www4.des.state.nh.us/WaterShe...BeachMaps.aspx They used to send out a daily email of testing results but not sure if they still do. The water has warmed up then cooled off with all the temp swings and rain this year, but the good thing is we haven't seen any gloeotrichia yet this year. |
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http://www4.des.state.nh.us/WaterShe...BeachMaps.aspx
Weirs Beach, Lake Winnipesaukee is on the list for fecal bacteria warnings. Water sample taken on August 1, and warning posted on August 2. Next test sample on August 2, with results listed on August 3. Wonder if the shoreline was posted with the DES warning signs, or what, and did Laconia close the beach or just let water-goers be aware via the sign warnings and then decide for themselves? Considering this thread was started on August 1, is this perfect timing or what, for Weirs Beach to get listed by the DES on August 2 ...... how about that! Seems like a coincidence? Hey KathyCT .....are you secretly an inside leaker working for the NH DES to get this message out, or something? |
I cant believe we are going there but since most of the usual have been served up then I will use the last one I know. A girl with a wooden leg is Peg.:laugh:
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The brothers
I think they had two brothers that hung out over the window. You know, Kurt and Rod. :D
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Childish & immature
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This thread needs to be moved into the ISSUES area. Seems like we have a lot of our members with real issues the last couple of days.
How do others feel about that? So, you lost your mood ring and you don't know how you feel? To prove my point, in the middle of a totally hijacked thread, FLL posts something useful. |
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As an added bonus: He wrote the entire post without mentioning WalMart once! |
Well...
We had better check the latest news... http://wmur.com/article/officials-is...403309?src=app Oh poop!!! |
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BTW, I'm gone for a few days, so clever responses will go unnoticed. I do appreciate the banter, however.
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Eileen
Eileen has another brother. He doesn't have legs below his knees, his name is Neil.
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KathyCT, water's fine. Like anywhere, take a look at the DES website to see any new warnings. Absent any where you want to swim, jump in and enjoy.
Oh, and where else can you find great swimming and a great comedian at every marker / buoy? 😎😁 Dave Sent from my SM-T580 using Winnipesaukee Forum mobile app |
Water Is Clean, People Are Not!
All you have to do is stay away from the crowds of people swimming like Weirs beach, Ellacoya State Park, etc, etc. Its the people that are dirty not the water!
Dan |
Bob was arrested for burglary. When he went before the judge, he thought his attorney could get him off the hook. However, the evidence against him was so damaging, he really didn't have a leg to stand on.
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One more...
Bob has a sister who likes to stand in the middle of a tennis court. Her name is Annette.:laugh::laugh::laugh:
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So KathyCT, how was your day at the lake??
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Sand + Laris canus = Beach Closures?
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As mentioned here, a DNA study would be "too costly". I'm suggesting that a "presumptive DNA test" be made to keep costs down. WMUR shows a photo-link to that shoreline that might disclose the nature of all that mischief! :eek2: . |
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http://www4.des.state.nh.us/WaterShe...BeachMaps.aspx |
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Water samples are drawn and tested in many different areas of the lake, not to mention the many islanders that monitor and test their water quality once or twice per season. I don't know of anyone who has had a "fecal bacteria" test sample return... Dan |
Latest Poop...
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Fecal bacteria is deposited from every living thing, including Geese and other waterfowl. Seagulls scrounge through litter at beaches and, like Mallards, "dabble" surface waters for edibles—perhaps mostly floating insects. Cormorants and Loons leave an impressive "cloud" when they dive or take to the air. :eek2: As a likely contributor to fecal bacteria counts, should resources be expended to reduce waterfowl from visiting public beaches? Only a presumptive test for waterfowl DNA would determine some resolution. NHDES has, however, "covered their bases" in their announcements: |
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To your point though, I would suggest that it is these same beaches where you will find that most of the offenders (ducks) are being fed by the beach-goers that is the issue. These same duck/geese or other animal will continue to return if their food supply is so plentiful I sincerely doubt that it is people depositing feces (read pooping, as urine is not fecal matter) in the water that is causing the issue. If 99% of these beaches are closed for human fecal matter, that is a new topic that need serious attention |
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"causes of high fecal bacteria levels are failing septic systems, animal waste on a beach or in the water (typically from birds), leaking baby diapers, and individuals swimming during an illness." I honestly don't think ducks being fed by beach goers is the issue at public beaches.....just my thoughts however. Dan |
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I said the same thing when I read that!! Think I'll stick to swimming away from the masses!! :eek: Dan |
back to the fun thread
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