Tryin to beat the heat? Stay out of the Hudson River!

soggy_feet

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Oct 10, 2009
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Re: Tryin to beat the heat? Stay out of the Hudson River!

When was the Hudson ever a GOOD place to swim... ;)
 

JB

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Re: Tryin to beat the heat? Stay out of the Hudson River!

Around 1500.

Of course, it wasn't the Hudson then. Fishing was good, too. Atlantic salmon, stripers, etc.
 

ziggy

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Jun 30, 2004
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Re: Tryin to beat the heat? Stay out of the Hudson River!

i reckon they do that to all the rivers (just a guess). omaha has a certain amount of raw sewage that can be introduced into the missouri river untreated too. the percentage went up when it flooded real recent too. with the flood, the river is closed though. when it's not flooded and folks can boat there. folks swim anyways... me too, though i must say, i try to at least go above omaha prior to getting wet, like that might help..:rolleyes:

after removing my boat from the missouri river. i always have a nasty, greasy, slimy bathtub ring around my boat... it is yucky. but it's exciting boating..
 

Mark42

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Oct 8, 2003
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Re: Tryin to beat the heat? Stay out of the Hudson River!

I've boated on the Hudson in the last few years. The whole stretch by the city is pretty yucky. It actually looks like chocolate milk up close. Can't see into/through it at all. Farther north it is actually very nice. Plan on taking a few days and head up north as far as I can. Sleep in the cuddy at marinas, etc. Should be a nice trip.
 

angus63

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May 20, 2002
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Re: Tryin to beat the heat? Stay out of the Hudson River!

Hudson still is host to most NE spawning stripers. Attend sailing events and rowing events regularly from GW bridge to Troy every year. Other than the GE discharge 30 yrs agothat tainted the ecology, the Hudson remains a thriving river with excellent fishing, active with commercial and recreational boating, and an occaisional successful commercial jetliner landing.:)
 

soggy_feet

Senior Chief Petty Officer
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Oct 10, 2009
Messages
713
Re: Tryin to beat the heat? Stay out of the Hudson River!

Hudson still is host to most NE spawning stripers. Attend sailing events and rowing events regularly from GW bridge to Troy every year. Other than the GE discharge 30 yrs agothat tainted the ecology, the Hudson remains a thriving river with excellent fishing, active with commercial and recreational boating, and an occaisional successful commercial jetliner landing.:)

commercial boating. read: garbage barge.

I was above the city, but not quite to the cleanest waters when I swam in the hudson. Was in college, went down to the area to visit some friends. Went down to the bank, swung off a rope swing a few times, and then someone spotted some feminine products floating by. Quickly exited the water, haven't been back in. You can have it. I much prefer Lake Champlain. Don't even have zebra mussels in my area!
 

Fireman431

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Sep 17, 2007
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4,292
Re: Tryin to beat the heat? Stay out of the Hudson River!

Around 1500.

Of course, it wasn't the Hudson then. Fishing was good, too. Atlantic salmon, stripers, etc.

JB was in college then....
 

angus63

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Joined
May 20, 2002
Messages
3,726
Re: Tryin to beat the heat? Stay out of the Hudson River!

commercial boating. read: garbage barge.

I was above the city, but not quite to the cleanest waters when I swam in the hudson. Was in college, went down to the area to visit some friends. Went down to the bank, swung off a rope swing a few times, and then someone spotted some feminine products floating by. Quickly exited the water, haven't been back in. You can have it. I much prefer Lake Champlain. Don't even have zebra mussels in my area!

There is next to zero garbage traffic north of the GW bridge. The vast majority of waste traffic departs from the NY bight outbound. The majority of southbound traffic from upstate NY is gravel, slate, bluestone, food product and coal. Northbound traffic is mostly fuel product and construction supply.
In the 70's the river was at its worst with little effluent regulation leading to closed fishing and recreational use. Since that time, regulation and oversight has brought the river back to conditions better than the first reliable records were generated over sixty years ago.
I am currently staying on a small lake in the Poconos roasting my stuff off. The lake is gin clear with no motors allowed and only a handful of homes. I would hardly expect this of a river that serves the most populated city and busiest port in the nation.
I am headed via the Hudson to West Point from Long Island Sound next month. My only wish is cooler weather!!!!!
 
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