Swimmer beware: Pennsylvania drownings highlight river risks
By MICHAEL RUBINKAM, Associated Press, July 16, 2018
Susquehanna River near Marietta, PA
JIM THORPE (AP) — Katelyn Carlisle nervously eyed the murky waters lapping at her feet.
"It's quick. You gotta swim. You can swim, right?" her friend, Chris Manzi, 23, quipped from the opposite riverbank. With that, Carlisle, 25, jumped into the Lehigh River and began stroking her way to the other side.
Neither of them knew that section of …
[View More]the river had recently claimed two lives in 10 days. Nor had they spotted the warning signs that officials at Lehigh Gorge State Park installed in response: "Notice, dangerous currents, not a designated swimming area."
As temperatures rise, people are inexorably drawn to water. But several recent drownings highlight anew the hot-weather danger posed by Pennsylvania's tens of thousands of miles of rivers and creeks, where deceptively strong currents, underwater obstacles and steep drop-offs can make for a deadly combination. Five people have drowned in state park waterways alone so far this year, matching the total for all of 2017.
Tragedy hasn't been confined to the state parks. A 7-year-old boy waded into central Pennsylvania's Pine Creek on Tuesday, got out of his depth and drowned. His mother died trying to save him.
"Even people who know rivers and streams can step into a hole and all the sudden you are over your head," said Terry Brady, spokesman for the state Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.
Manzi and Carlisle — who live in Denver and Milwaukee and were in Pennsylvania for work — entered the water with a group of co-workers on a cloudless afternoon last week.
The current, at least on the surface, seemed relatively tame. But the river still posed a slight challenge for Carlisle, who had never swam across one before. She paddled in place for several seconds before breaking free of the current and making it to calmer waters.
"I'm swimming hard and I'm not going anywhere," she explained after getting out. "I kept telling myself, 'Swim harder, swim harder.'"
A few weeks earlier, two other swimmers weren't as fortunate.
On June 19, 24-year-old Angel Rivas, of Hazleton, drowned as he and his friends swam across rapids. Then, on June 29, the Lehigh took Jersson Lajara of New York. His body was recovered a day later.
Jim Thorpe Fire Chief Vince Yaich is frustrated by the situation at Lehigh Gorge, a popular state park in the mountains of northeastern Pennsylvania, 100 miles (161 kilometers) north of Philadelphia.
He said his department is called to Lehigh Gorge an average of 10 times a year, mostly to rescue people injured near the park's Glen Onoko Falls, but also to recover the bodies of drowning victims.
Yaich said the state should do more to keep swimmers out of the river by issuing tickets to violators.
"If there's no swimming, like the park is saying, then enforce it. Don't just put up a sign," he said. "You catch somebody in there swimming, you fine them. End of conversation."
Park manager Rex Bradish said it's not that easy. There are jurisdictional complications, and the state prefers education over enforcement.
"These types of tragic events are never something we want to see, and if we can prevent them through increased patrols and signage, and engaging visitors and educating them, that is the way we want to go," he said.
The temporary signs near the river do not explicitly state that swimming is banned, only that it's "not a designated swimming area" — which has the same meaning under state law but could sow confusion among park visitors. State officials say they plan to re-evaluate the wording.
Signs or not, at least two groups of visitors — teenagers from the Philadelphia suburbs and the out-of-state colleagues that included Manzi and Carlisle — swam across the Lehigh in the span of a couple hours last week. Most said they didn't think twice about going in.
Had he spotted the warning sign, Ben Mills would have taken it as a challenge.
"It's the cookie jar syndrome," said Mills, 35, of Atlanta. "You want what you're not supposed to have."
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President of river association offers safety tips
William Dean, The Dominion Post, June 27, 2018
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> MORGANTOWN — For some people a relaxing summer day is spent on a boat.
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> “Boating gets you outside on the water and it is one of those great experiences you can have,” Barry Pallay, president of Upper Monongahela River Association, said.
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> Boating can be dangerous, but following the rules can help mitigate that risk and help everyone have a …
[View More]fun, safe, experience.
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> “If you’re a novice the biggest thing is a boat does not have brakes,” he said. “You have to be very careful and keep that in mind.
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> Pallay encouraged boaters to be aware of the boating rules published and enforced by the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources (DNR) and recommended that people new to boating take a boater safety class. He also offered safety tips, but said the tips are no replacement for a class.
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> According to the DNR, “no person born on or after Dec. 31, 1986, may operate a motorboat or personal watercraft on any waters of this state without first having obtained a certificate of boating safety education from this or any other state.”
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> Pallay recommended people interested try to find a Power Squadron class and said there are free boater safety classes available.
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> Much like the driver of a car, truck or any other vehicle, boat drivers should stay sober, he said.
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> DNR has a boat that patrols Cheat Lake and the enforcement branch has police powers, meaning boaters can be cited by the DNR for violations, Pally said.
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> Friday through Sunday, DNR will participate in Operation Dry Weekend — a national enforcement effort to raise awareness about the dangers of boating under the influence, a DNR press release stated. The DNR will arrest anyone driving a boat with a blood alcohol content of 0.08 or greater.
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> Using alcohol while boating impairs judgment, balance, vision and reaction time and is the leading contributing factor in recreation boating deaths in the United States, according to the press release.
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> Pallay also advised people planning to go out on the water to use sunscreen and not to underestimate the sun.
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> Boating at night, fishing from a boat and boating in areas with dams and locks increase the number of rules and safety concerns. Pally recommended people engaging in those activities look up the relevant rules.
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> “It really can add to the quality of your life and that of your family,” Pallay said of boating.
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> URL:
> https://www.dominionpost.com/2018/06/27/president-of-river-association-offe…
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http://wvpublic.org/post/polluted-playground-its-taken-25-years-clean-cheat…
From Polluted to Playground: It's Taken 25 Years to Clean Up the Cheat River
From an Article by Brittany Patterson, WV Public Broadcast, June 11, 2018
On a recent sunny Wednesday, Paul Ziemkiewicz, director of West Virginia University’s Water Research Institute, was standing on a bridge looking out at Big Sandy Creek. It was a balmy afternoon, perfect for kayaking, and the creek running the Cheat River was clear. …
[View More]But 25 years ago, this water was a shocking orange color -- from acid mine drainage.
"Look at this," Ziemkiewicz said, gesturing to the raging water below. "This is a fishery now, but it was completely dead back then."
This year the last heavily-polluted stretch of of the watershed is set to be cleaned up.
"In my lifetime a river that was dead has now come back," said Amanda Pitzer, executive director of Friends of the Cheat, a local conservation group that was formed by a motley crew of river guides and enthusiasts in 1994 to deal with acid mine pollution. The group also hosts the annual Cheat River Festival to celebrate the river and raise money to restore it.
The Cheat was known to be polluted for decades, but the pollution grabbed national attention after two blowouts at the active T&T coal mine in 1994 and 1995 poured millions of gallons of acidic water into the main stem of the Cheat. Fish were killed 16 miles downstream in Cheat Lake.
More than two decades later, Friends of the Cheat, local residents and businesses and state and federal regulators have a reason to celebrate: Once fully operational, an active water treatment plant run by West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection near the T&T mine will clean polluted water currently running through Muddy Creek.
Once the 3.4-mile stretch of Muddy Creek is clean, fish will be able to travel the entire length of the Cheat River -- one of the longest free-flowing rivers in the eastern United States -- unimpeded by pollution.
"It was such an accomplishment to bring the Cheat back, but to bring Muddy Creek back -- I mean we’re kicking ass and taking names," Pitzer said.
A New Approach
This success is largely the result of a decision among regulators, scientists and a local conservation group to treat the pollution problem as an entire watershed.
Across the Cheat River’s 1,422-mile watershed, more than 340 abandoned coal mines feed pollution into the Cheat and its tributaries, like the Big Sandy. Acid mine drainage, or AMD, is one of the largest contributors of pollution to thousands of miles of rivers and streams from Alabama to Pennsylvania.
The bright orange, and sometimes milky white, pollution contains iron, aluminum and manganese. It forms when pyrite, a mineral buried deep underground with coal, is exposed to air and water.
State regulators have limited federal dollars to ensure water coming from these mines meets federal Clean Water Act standards. An estimated 300,000 abandoned mines dot Appalachia, complicating the problem. Water that comes from mines built before 1977, when the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act went into effect, must be treated by the state. The law mandated that mines built after 1977 must be bonded, or have insurance, in case they go out of business or the operator chooses to stop maintaining the site. If that happens, DEP takes the money from those bonds and must reclaim the land and treat the water from these so-called “bond-forfeiture” sites.
Ziemkiewicz, of WVU, said originally in the Cheat River watershed -- as is the case in many places dealing with AMD across Appalachia -- regulators tried to address the problem by treating each individual mine contributing pollution to the river. But it’s not always effective.
"You can throw almost infinite amounts of money trying to treat point sources like that in a watershed like this that has both abandoned mines and also bond forfeiture sites and not make any impact at all on the quality of the stream because the abandoned mines dominate the whole picture," he said.
A key piece to making this new approach work was some innovative thinking on the part of state regulators. The state DEP created an alternative clean water permit, which allowed the agency to address streamwide water quality, rather than treat individual pollution sources.
"The watershed scale strategy that DEP is using here actually restores the creek and for a lot less money," Ziemkiewicz said.
Scientists also needed to show federal regulators they could get results treating AMD pollution on a watershed level.
A Testbed in the Watershed
Standing in a grassy clearing overlooking this forested valley, it’s just possible to see the entry to a now-abandoned coal mine here in the headwaters of Sovern Run, a tributary of Big Sandy Creek, which runs into the Cheat.
Ziemkiewicz and his team built what’s called a "passive treatment" system. At Sovern site No. 62, AMD pollution flows through a series of limestone-lined ponds and channels. The alkaline limestone turns low pH, acid water coming out of the mine into much cleaner water through naturally-occurring chemical reactions. Passive systems don’t require power or the addition of chemicals and are often lower maintenance.
"We were able to knock off something like 80 percent of the acid load, most of the iron," Ziemkiewicz said, of the passive treatment system. "The idea was to put a lot of these all over the watershed."
During the first Cheat Fest in 1995, Friends of the Cheat and Ziemkiewicz and his team took federal officials from the Interior Department and Office of Surface Mining the treatment system at Sovern site No. 62.
The strategy being employed in the Cheat River watershed could be valuable to other communities struggling with AMD pollution. To help widen the scope, the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement created a federal plan inside its acid mine drainage program that allowed states to dole out federal Abandoned Mine Land dollars to local government agencies and watershed organizations, like Friends of the Cheat, to clean up streams impaired by acid mine drainage.
Friends of the Cheat took it and ran with it. They installed more than a dozen passive treatments. Today, they maintain those and a series of active treatments, or engineered systems. Active treatments include in-stream dosers, which deposit a steady stream of alkaline lime to help neutralize the water. Active treatments also include things such as water treatment plants.
Toddi Steelman, one of the founding members of Friends of the Cheat, studies watershed restoration She said the collaboration between Friends of the Cheat and regulators at both state and federal levels has been a 25-year experiment.
"Having the university close by and invested was a huge stroke of luck," she said. "Having several sources of financial support in the 90s has really been essential."
She also underscored the importance of having a local conservation group that is deeply invested in seeing the restoration of a river come to fruition.
"You need a local champion that is going to see it through because it’s really a labor of love," she said. "It’s really about love the land, love of the river, love of community and I would say that’s really what has really characterized the group over time."
This type of grassroots model can be a template for others, according to Scott Hardy, with the Ohio Sea Grant program at Ohio State University.
He studies collaborative watershed management and said the federal government moved toward providing resources for more grassroots, collaborative watershed restoration in the 1990s, with plenty of success stories.
Hardy said although collaboration can take longer than traditional top down restoration efforts, having local groups that are passionate about their watershed helps.
The Last Piece
It takes a lot of heart, but it also take a lot of money to clean a watershed.
Since 2000, the Environmental Protection Agency has contributed more than $5 million to the Cheat watershed. The state DEP has spent more than $13 million constructing and maintaining treatment systems across the area.
Now, one of the last treatments is almost in place. Once fully operational, a water treatment plant near the T&T mine will take care of the last major polluted stretch of the watershed.
You can see the T&T Treatment plant just off Route 26 near Albright. In some ways, it can best be described as a dishwasher for dirty mine water.
The plant will process AMD polluted water from three abandoned mine sites. Water pumped in from the polluted Fickey Run, will also be piped to the plant, said Larry Riggleman, the regional engineer for northern region of DEP’s Office of Special Reclamation.
Riggleman helped design the plant. It can treat between 800 to 4,200 gallons of polluted water each minute. A lime slurry is added to the two 80-foot tanks, or clarifiers, as they’re called. When the lime is added the iron and aluminum to drop to the bottom. The metal sludge is pushed to the middle, drains out, and is pumped back into the T&T mine nearby.
"And then from here it’s a straight discharge to the river," Riggleman said.
If another mine blowout were to happen similar to the events in 1994 and 1995, the plant can handle up to 7,600 gallons per minute, which will flow through the two tanks and come out the other side clean.
The site cost about $8.5 million to construct and $30,000 a month to run, funded in part by the bond forfeited by the T&T mine. DEP also received support from oil and gas company, Southwestern Energy. The company has a policy to offset its water use by contributing in other water restoration efforts.
"Within West Virginia we were looking for meaningful projects that were out there that we could be a contributor towards and the Cheat River is a beautiful river and one that stood out to us as a place that we could make a positive impact," said Rowlan Greaves, manager of strategic solutions for Southwestern Energy.
Riggleman has been working in this watershed for years and he said once the plant is fully operational, Muddy Creek, which has been the single largest contributor of acid mine drainage for years, will be clean. He said it’s hard to quantify what that will mean.
"I mean, to be able to bring a stream back to life -- which I can’t tell you when the last time it was it had a life -- but from an environmental standpoint on the Cheat it’s huge," he said. "I think from a recreational standpoint with people wanting to fish, kayak, things of that nature, I think that’s huge. I think it’s very important that this gets done and I think it’ll be very successful."
Paul Hart, president of local rafting company, Cheat River Outfitters, agrees that the work done over the last two decades has made a difference in the water quality of the river. Today, he said, guides will often catch fish in the clear, clean water.
"A lot of people have seen it and decided 'you know we can do better,'" he said. "And they’ve put their heads together and made it happen, which is a dream turned into a reality. The Cheat is just too much of a gem to be lost to something like acid mine drainage, it really is."
But Hart added the river was already losing appeal as a rafting destination before the big mine blowouts in the 90s, and it has yet to recover. Pitzer, with Friends of the Cheat, said they recognize overcoming a polluted reputation takes time.
"Just like anything it takes time to change people’s perception of what a river is," she said. "If you came here in the 80’s and you paddled the river and you remember it being orange and awful and then someone tells you 'oh my gosh, I went and I caught walleye down in Jenkinsburg,' they might be like 'oh, get out of here' you know. So, I think it just takes time."
The groups plans to continue working to restore the river in the hopes that one day the Cheat has a different reputation: One of a clean, beautiful river.
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https://taskandpurpose.com/west-virginia-national-guard-video/
Watch West Virginia Guardsmen Train For Swift Water Rescues In This Intense Video
By Brad Howard on June 15, 2018
Looking for a great career? Or know another veteran, service member, or military spouse who is? Get started at Hirepurpose.
On June 11th, the West Virginia National Guard practiced rescuing mock victims out of fast moving river winding through the rolling hills of Appalachia. The harrowing training involves nerves of …
[View More]steel by the skilled helo pilots, and in video captured by reddit user M109A6Guy, the UH-60 Blackhawk skirts just above the churning waters as one guardsman scoops his target to safety.
The Swift Water Rescue Team is assigned to the Army Interagency Training & Education Center. Training missions like these help prepare guardsman for unpredictable weather events, like the floods that ravaged West Virginia in 2016. They also certify the unit to support Federal Emergency Management Agency operations across the country, which can range from flooding search and rescue to hurricane response.
We here at Task & Purpose want to give a shout out to not only the amazing helo crew, but also the National Guardsman who volunteered to be literally be sucked down a river in the name of realistic training. If anyone deserves a free beer in Greenbrier, West Virginia, it’s you.
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http://nationswell.com/kayakers-saved-cheat-river/
How Kayakers Saved a River and Started a Movement
From Eric Jankiewicz, Nation Swell, June 8, 2018
The Cheat River in the Appalachian region was doomed — until a group of local outdoor enthusiasts stepped in.
While most mines in the eastern region of the Appalachian Mountains are no longer in operation, they are far from inactive.
In lightly populated places such as Albright, West Virginia, water with heavy metals seeps from mines into …
[View More]tributaries — the small streams that flow into rivers — finally pooling in reservoirs near the Chesapeake Bay. It’s also here where a group of kayakers made it their mission over 20 years ago to clean up one of the most polluted rivers in America: the Cheat River, a 78.3-mile tributary that runs through eastern West Virginia and southwestern Pennsylvania. And they’re still at it today.
Jim Snyder, a 64-year-old thrill-seeker who lives on the banks of the Cheat River near Albright, was one of those initial kayakers.
“The pollution there would burn your eyes,” Snyder says, recalling the condition of the river in the mid- to late-’90s, when a series of underground coal mine blowouts released orange-tinged water thick with heavy metals into the river.
The first blowout, in 1994, lowered the pH of the water to dangerous levels, killing off fish as far away as 16 miles downstream. Another blowout a year later eventually devastated the area’s tourism industry, known for its whitewater recreation. The Cheat River soon after became ranked as one the nation’s most endangered.
To reckon with the pollution and damage to the river’s ecosystem, Snyder and other kayakers in the community formed Friends of the Cheat to clean up the dirty streams and creeks that fed into the Cheat River. Their efforts helped the river recover and, with it, a tourism industry centered around its rapids.
“I’d never done much work on committees at that time so it was an awkward fit for me, but we kept making it work,” Snyder tells NationSwell. “We were rookies, but we endured.”
Eastern Pennsylvania Coalition for Abandoned Mine Reclamation works to counteract the damage done to rivers by mining.Photo courtesy of EPCAMR
After the mine blowouts, the whitewater industry suffered from more than a 50 percent drop in business, while whitewater participation increased nationally by 33 percent during the same time period.
“Twenty-thousand people were going down the canyon annually in the ’80s and ’90s,” says Owen Mulkeen, associate director of Friends of the Cheat. “Albright [became] a ghost town compared to what it was like at the height of rafting.”
Friends of the Cheat led an effort with the Environmental Protection Agency to use various methods of water treatment, such as limestone filtration, to clean up the tributaries in the area. The success Snyder and the others had with bringing back the Cheat River became widely considered one of the most successful conservation stories.
“[Kayakers] have a passion and that usually keeps them in West Virginia,” says Mulkeen. “We are blessed with the natural beauty and recreation here.”
And that has helped keep the organization’s ranks filled — a necessity, given that mine pollution is still a very real problem in the waters around the Cheat.
Over 7,500 miles of streams in Appalachia are still polluted by heavy metals from abandoned mines, according to data collected by Friends of the Cheat. Before the passage of the Surface Mining and Reclamation Control Act in 1977, mining companies could seal their operations in whatever way they liked, with little or no oversight. And over the decades many of those seals have busted open.
“Mining had a huge impact on the industrial revolution, and allowed us to win or at least participate in two wars,” says Gavin Pellitteri, a recreational kayaker and outreach specialist for the nonprofit Eastern Pennsylvania Coalition for Abandoned Mine Reclamation. “There’s a lot of that culture and pride left in the area.”
Pellitteri’s coalition works to correct for acid mine drainage, known as AMD. Similar to Friends of the Cheat, EPCAMR’s treatment strategy is to find an empty piece of land that can be filled with mine water into a pondlike basin. Limestone is used to neutralize the water’s acidity, and exposure to oxygen removes iron and drives off sulfates. Once done, the clean water is put back into a river.
“If you look at where these impacts are, it’s the spine of Appalachia — Northern Georgia, Tennessee, West Virginia, up to Pennsylvania,” says Pellitteri, who estimates that there are over 400 billion gallons of mine water in the Scranton, Pennsylvania, area alone.
As water conservationists like Snyder and Pellitteri continue to clean up the area’s waterways, where a virtually endless flow of polluted water streams from abandoned mines, there’s a fear that they’ll fail to attract a younger generation of outdoor activists to the mission.
“Unfortunately, there’s a brain-drain out of West Virginia,” Mulkeen says. “But we’re born and bred by paddlers, and we hope to continue that relationship. That’s our base.”
Because unlike a tree falling in the forest, a blown-out mine will matter, even if no one is around to witness it.
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https://www.dominionpost.com/2018/06/03/time-to-see-the-sites/
Time to see the sites 30
Columns/Opinion, John Samsell, The Morgantown Dominion Post, June 3, 2018
The geographic territory in which we live was developed through the centuries in a manner that included oceans and glaciers too big it’s hard to imagine.
If you are taking a mobile vacation this summer, you might try the Piedmont area on one side of the mountain ranges and the mountains and valleys of West Virginia on the western …
[View More]side. That’s how they were left after a large sea and glacier receded.
The geographic makeup can be observed along I-68. A rest area pinpoints the separation of the mountains and valleys of the Mountain State and the less mountainous area east to the Atlantic Ocean and Tidewater area.
Actually the eastern area is divided into four different sections. One begins at the Atlantic Ocean and goes westward to a Fall Line, a granite ridge connecting Fredericksburg, Richmond, Petersburg and other cities to the north, the Tidewater area.
West of the Tidewater area are the Piedmont and Blue Ridge Mountains. that leads to the Appalachian Valley.
Between the top of the Alleghenies and Lake Erie is part of the Allegheny Plateau. Land immediately to the west is the Central Lowland and Plain. That’s West Virginia with its combination of fertile soil and fine climate.
It also has “easy communication and possibilities for manufacturing and commerce, according to early geologists. Temperature between warmest and coldest is 20 degrees.
The Allegheny Highland has an area of about 6,000 square miles. Because of its scenery West Virginia has the name Mountain State. Its topography causes its varied climate and ample rainfall.
The state’s natural resources represent vegetative life aged from an ancient sea bed.
Rivers poured mud, sand and stones under conditions that led to the formation of the area now known as West Virginia. Under the conditions present stones were formed.
In deeper parts of the sea, from its shores were many marine animals that shed their shells and skeletons that fell to the bottom and pressure cemented them into limestone, a prime state product in this 21st Century.
Through the ages the processes continued and coal also was developed. The geologists explain the formation of the state’s Natural Wonders are now tourist attractions. The emergence of rivers in the north and east was gradual.
Potomac, South Branch and New rivers and others cut beds across the rising surface.
The Ohio River originally flowed north to create lakes and possibly a sea.
The glacial movement from the north cut rivers into lakes and left the Ohio as it is today.
Lakes in the West Virginia area were drained completely dry.
Glacial movements also left deposits of gravel and fertile soils. Much of the soil had large amounts of sandstone. West Virginia has nothing but sedimentary rocks. Thus, there is nothing but bituminous coal. Pennsylvania has the “hard coal” and some “soft.”
Tourist attractions include “Hanging Rock,” in the South Branch River in Hampshire County. The rocks reach 300 feet, while the state’s highest point, Spruce Knob is over 4,600 feet.
“The Trough” in Hardy County the South Branch travels 7 miles between the “Image Rocks.”
Blackwater Falls in nearby Tucker County is at the bottom of the Blackwater River that travels down a hillside. It not only is a site of beauty but is a state park, with many attractions.
The Blackwater River flows into the Cheat River, that flows into Cheat Lake (Lake Lynn) that empties into the Monongahela River at Point Marion, Pa.
Seneca Rocks in Pendleton County is said to be a “picturesque scene of the Far West.” Seneca Caverns is nearby at Riverton.
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https://www.dominionpost.com/2018/05/28/ices-ferry-bridge-finally-has-its-h…
Ices Ferry Bridge finally has its history back
Submitted to The Dominion PostMay 28, 2018 1:15 pm
The Ices Ferry historical marker at Cheat Lake.
MORGANTOWN — Ices Ferry Bridge, a historical landmark and a vital part of the history in Cheat Lake got its history back.
Two years ago, the historical marker for the bridge was destroyed due to an automobile accident. This Ices Ferry marker had been on display for many …
[View More]years and gave visitors to the area a brief history of the bridge.
The damaged marker actually ended up in a garage of a local resident, where it sat for months before the local West Virginia Division of Highways picked the marker up and sent it to the DOH facility. It sat in the DOH facility for years, until that same resident thought it was important to do something.
Nine months ago, Cheat Lake residents reached out to Pokey Weiss, of the Cheat Lake Rotary. They knew the Cheat Lake Rotary Club did community projects and hoped the organization could help get the sign restored.
Since July 2017, Weiss has worked with Matthew McGrew, coordinator of Highway Historical Marker Program, and with the state Division of Culture and History in Charleston to have the marker replaced.
McGrew and Weiss believed that having a new marker built was important to the local community and the Ices Ferry Bridge history. That history is unique. The first bridge was built to cross Cheat River in 1900, but an ice flow took it out in 1918. The bridge that came to be known as the Ices Ferry Bridge was built in 1922 by the Independent Bridge Co., of Pittsburgh. It spanned the lake along Monongalia County 857.
Due to years of deterioration, the original bridge was dismantled and imploded in 2012, as a more modern version with wider lanes and lighting was constructed.
The new bridge was named the Col. Garry Bowers Bridge. Bowers was the first president and one of the founders of the Rotary Club of Cheat Lake in 1979.
On April 2, the state Division of Highways installed a brand-new marker at the end of the bridge; this will now give all visitors the chance to learn more about the bridge history as the first, and for many years, the only way to cross Cheat Lake.
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https://www.dominionpost.com/2018/05/21/crews-searching-for-possible-drowni…
Authorities recover body of man who drowned 210
The Dominion Post
May 21, 2018 11:25 am
MASONTOWN — Authorities on Monday recovered the body of an Ohio man who drowned after being swept away by the Cheat River in the Bull Run area early Sunday.
The body of Michael A. Lewis was found Monday afternoon in Cheat Lake. According to the Preston County Sheriff’s Department, at about 4:21 a.m. Sunday, deputies were …
[View More]dispatched to the Bull Run area to a report of a drowning. A deputy arrived and learned that Shane Nelson Forame, 23, was stranded in the water and another man, Lewis, 23, had been swept away by the swift Cheat River current.
Both men are from Petersburg, Ohio, and were camping in the area.
Preston Deputy 1st Class R.A. Stockett Jr. was able to reach Forame with a series of ropes tied together and the assistance of Aaron Williams, also of Petersburg, Ohio, and drag Forame to the shore.
Lewis could not be located and an ongoing search by multiple agencies was conducted Sunday and Monday.
On Sunday, a West Virginia State Police helicopter flew over the area, searching for a heat signature or sign of Lewis. A drone was deployed Sunday and Monday in the search, without success.
The National Weather Service reported the Cheat River crested about 8-9 a.m. Sunday, Preston Emergency Management/911 Director Duane Hamilton said.
State Division of Natural Resources (DNR) officers and boats were involved in the search from the area where Lewis entered the water to Cheat Lake. Hamilton estimated it is 7.5 miles from the Jenkinsburg bridge to the backwaters of Cheat Lake.
Masontown Volunteer Fire Department deployed its boats on the river as well.
Volunteer fire departments from Masontown, Reedsville and Newburg, along with KAMP Ambulance, West Virginia State Police, Mountaineer Area Rescue Group, Preston County Dive Team and a Grafton volunteer K-9 unit assisted in the search.
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https://www.wvnews.com/prestoncountynews/news/ohio-man-missing-in-cheat-riv…
Vehicles are parked at the Bull Run area for a search in the Cheat River for an Ohio man who was swept away early Sunday.
Save
MASONTOWN — An Ohio man remains missing after being swept away in the Cheat River, the sheriff’s department said Monday.
Michael A. Lewis, 23, of Petersburg, Ohio, was in the Bull Run area when he was swept away by a strong current early Sunday, deputies said.
At 4:21 a.m. Sunday, the …
[View More]sheriff’s department was alerted to a reported drowning at Bull Run. A deputy found Shane Nelson Forame, 23, also of Petersburg, Ohio, stranded in the water.
With the help of Aaron Williams of Petersburg and several ropes tied together, the deputy was able to reach Forame and drag him to shore.
Lewis, however, could not be located, and an ongoing search is being conducted with volunteer fire departments from Masontown, Reedsville and Newburg; KAMP ambulance; State Police; Mountaineer Area Rescue Group; the Preston County Dive Team; and the Grafton Volunteer K-9 unit.
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