The Dangerous Potomac River

Consider this post a public service announcement.

Usually it’s pretty peaceful in the Potomac Gorge – sure, you can hear some airplanes and depending on where you are, maybe traffic on the Beltway, or a boat on the water or equipment running on the other side – but usually it’s just the birds and fellow hikers.

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This past Saturday, Steve and I hit Billy Goat B early in the morning, and by 9:30 or so the quiet was being interrupted by a US Park Police helicopter flying low over the river.

One or two passes, and I assume it’s training.  But this was continual.  When we reached the Old Anglers Inn boat ramp, we saw local search and rescue vehicles (trucks, boat trailers), bags of gear, and one uniformed man.  So I asked.  And sure enough, the first drowning of the year had happened.  Assumed drowning, that is: they were looking for the body.  The other swimmer had made it to shore.

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Many access points in the Gorge are posted with warnings about the river; it doesn’t always look like much, but it is a wild river and the unusual geology of the region leads to unusual hydrology, with deceptive currents that kill about six unwary people a year.

Did you know that the Potomac Gorge is a world-class kayaking area?  Many fine athletes train there.  I don’t think they’re the ones who die. It’s the casual users who wade in for a quick swim who get swept away.

Please don’t be one of them.

My condolences to the family of the drowned man.  May he rest in peace.

Tree of the Day: Sweetbay Magnolia

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aka a host of other names, including swamp-bay, white-bay, and swamp laurel

Magnolia virginiana
Magnoliaceae

Maybe I should dub this “magnolia week”.  It is that time of year.  Sweetbay is a coastal plains plant, so I wouldn’t expect to see it in the Potomac Gorge, except maybe on the southern end.  (The one pictured here is from my evergreen garden, which is slowly becoming a native plants showcase.) Its native range is from southern Massachusetts along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts to Texas. It’s endangered in Massachusetts and New York, and threatened in Pennsylvania and Tennessee.

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This magnolia likes wet, acid soil.  It’s a slow-growing, small-to-medium sized tree, often multi-trunked, with a narrow crown, making it suitable for narrow vertical spaces in the landscape – say next to a building, or as a street tree.  In warmer climates it’s evergreen.  The flowers have a lovely, mildly citrusy scent.


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For any gardeners who might be curious, surrounding the sweetbay in the picture to the right are:
redbud (Cercis canadensis)
Burford holly (Ilex cornuta ‘Burfordii Nana’)
cotoneaster (Cotoneaster salsifolius ‘Scarlet Leader’)
false cypress (Chamaecyparis pisifera ‘Gold Mop’)
bird’s nest spruce (Picea abies ‘Nidiformis’)

Three Views

After four days of rain, the water was high, brown, and running fast.

Don’t forget to go to the Three Views page to see the same views in from earlier this year.  The month-to-month changes are dramatic.  I expect they’ll be less so as summer arrives.

June 6, 2015 
67 F at 8:30 am; high overcast

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8:39 am EDT  18mm  f/8.0  1/200sec  ISO 200

Billy Goat B trail, east end, looking southeast across a narrow channel toward Vaso Island


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9:23 am EDT  18mm  f/8.0  1/200 sec  ISO 200

Billy Goat B, mid-way between trailheads, looking upstream (more or less northwest) with Hermit Island on the left.


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10:04 am EDT  18mm  f/8.0  1/640 sec  ISO 200

boat launch ramp near Old Angers Inn, looking downstream and more or less south

Après la Pluie

Continuing my fascination with small, ephemeral things, and also bored to tears by four days of wet weather (no complaints, we really needed it), I went outside during a break in the rain to try to photograph water droplets.

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American smoketree (Cotinus obovatus)

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cedar of Lebanon (Cedrus libani)

 

 

 

Also, with all this rain I’m running out of things to post about.