Monday, November 23, 2009

Health

Swimming Nine Rivers: One Woman's Adventure

By Adam Voiland
Posted 7/10/07
Page 2 of 2

No. I know what you're saying—I think a lot of people are drawn to doing things outdoors because of the appeal of danger. Certainly danger came up from time to time—such as when I saw a large rat snake on the Delaware—but the thrill-seeking aspect was of no interest to me. I'm a 53-year-old woman with two children. It wasn't a huge athletic feat. It wasn't about stretching myself to the max or testing my limits. I think as you get older and hit the half-century mark, you can't help but assess things. You start to think about time in a different way. There's something about drifting along with a river that really helps you think about time.

The James River
(Jim Lo Scalzo for USN&WR)

This didn't start out as a book, but as a series of swims. It didn't occur to me to do a book until I realized that the sense of personal restoration I felt was happening all along these rivers in a much bigger way. These communities were finding ways to clean up their rivers and waterfronts and use the river, and I realized the sense of reclamation I felt was happening in a much broader way.

One of the interesting things you describe in the book was your encounters with officials who said you shouldn't be swimming there. How did you deal with that?

Everywhere we went people really love rivers. They look at them. They walk by them. They go on boats on them. But almost always when we said we were going to take a swim people would say: "Why would you ever do that? You're crazy!" To me there was this incredible disconnect. Rivers are just these wonderful images in our lives, but people don't want to get in them because they're afraid the water isn't safe for swimming.

What was the concern? Bacteria? Drowning?

I think it was bacteria. The Susquehanna has a lot of outdated sewage treatment plants that can overflow in stormy weather. The Susquehanna also has a real legacy of both industrial and agricultural pollution, but those are being cleaned up and aren't a danger to swimmers. With Three Mile Island, the toxicity of the river almost becomes part of an engrained mythology. Whether it's true or not people almost just don't care. They just think you don't get into the river. Part of our doing these swims was just to say: "Oh, yes, you can." I never got sick, and I didn't wear a wet suit or even goggles usually. Of course, I didn't swim in any urban rivers. Maybe that's next. I guess I would take the health concerns a little more seriously there.

What would your advice be if people were going to try doing this sort of thing?

The first thing I would say is be safe about it. Know what you're doing. Know the current. Know the tide if there's a tide. Know the depth of the water. I know some of the things I've said have seemed a little blasé, but there are real safety concerns.

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