Swimming near Ottawa: Water safety warnings in place for 6 beaches
The Leeds, Grenville, and Lanark District Health Unit is advising people to stay out of the water at six area beaches due to high levels of bacteria.
The health unit says it has found elevated levels of E.coli at the Almonte beach, Riverside beach and Centennial beach in Carleton Place, Merrickville beach, Bellamy Park beach in Kitley, and Dalhousie Lake in Lanark Highlands.
"Our biggest culprits tend to be geese and runoff from heavy rains," said Kim McCann, manager of community health protection with the health unit.
"So, soils that contain geese feces or even dog feces washing into our beaches can cause elevated levels of bacteria. And we've had some pretty heavy rains over the last few weeks."
The beaches at the above locations are not closed, but it is recommended people do not swim in the water, as the high levels of bacteria can be harmful.
"If you were to ingest the water, it definitely could cause some upset tummies and maybe some diarrhea. It could also cause ear, nose and eye infections as well," McCann said.
McCann says the health unit can only test the local waterways once per week due to the time testing takes.
She says the time it takes for beaches to clear up and become safe for swimming is not exact, and depends on factors such as rain, wind and the movement of the water.
"(People) could always go to one of their local municipal pools, that is treated water that's inspected and it's also tested by the operator multiple times per day."
Lifeguards in Carleton Place tell CTV News Ottawa the warnings have been in place for most of the summer.
Those attending the impacted beaches say the water conditions are halting their summer plans.
"I wanted to kind of cool off and dip into the water, but, I guess not, and I'm just sitting here sweating now," said Carleton Place resident Trinity Adams.
"I asked the lifeguard, is it safe to swim? And I guess it's just at your own risk. Obviously they advise not to drink the water, but I think I'm just going to avoid it for now."
Kayaker Wes Rodney says he brought his boat from Ottawa to Almonte Saturday to paddle the Mississippi River, despite being aware of the warnings in place.
"Especially if you're paddling for a long time, you're going to get hot and you want to go for a swim. I guess we took the attitude that the E.coli counts are really high because of geese, and you can see the evidence," Rodney said, pointing to the large amount of goose poop on the beach.
"We kind of debated not coming, but we're in kayaks, so our feet are maybe in water for a couple of minutes."
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING At least nine killed, 300 hurt after second wave of device explosions is reported in Lebanon
Explosions went off in Beirut and multiple parts of Lebanon in an apparent second wave of detonations of electronic devices, Hezbollah officials and state media said Wednesday, reporting walkie-talkies and even solar equipment detonating a day after hundreds of pagers blew up.
BREAKING First Conservative motion attempting to bring down Liberals to simply ask if House has confidence in Trudeau
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has confirmed his party is putting forward a non-confidence motion next week and the wording is very straight forward.
Record-breaking Lotto Max jackpot tickets sold in Ontario, Quebec
Two lucky people in Ontario and Quebec will split Tuesday’s record-breaking $80-million Lotto Max jackpot.
Rogers Communications to buy out Bell's share of MLSE for $4.7 billion
Rogers Communications Inc. is buying out Bell's 37.5 per cent share of Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment for $4.7 billion, giving it 75 per cent ownership of the sports conglomerate.
BREAKING Transport Minister Pablo Rodriguez to step down, will stay on as MP
Federal Transport Minister Pablo Rodriguez is set to announce he’s stepping down from cabinet and as the Quebec lieutenant on Thursday, but he’ll remain an MP, CTV News has confirmed.
'I thought I was dead': Man electrocuted, burned at SaskPower hydro dam calls for compensation
May 9, 2022 was the day Blayne McKay thought he was going to die. He called his wife to say goodbye, after getting electrocuted at the SaskPower Island Falls Hydroelectric Station, about 100 kilometres northwest of Flin, Flon.
8-year-old Ohio girl takes her family's SUV, drives to Target
An 8-year-old girl took an SUV from her Ohio home and drove for miles to a store where she was later found unharmed, authorities said.
Affordability crisis could be reaching its peak in Canada, economist says
With Canada's annual inflation rate reaching the central bank's two per cent target, the country's affordability crisis could be peaking, according to an economist.
Catherine, Princess of Wales, goes back to work days after cancer treatment update
Catherine, Princess of Wales has held her first engagement since revealing that she has completed her chemotherapy treatment.