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Well apparently your not up on the facts here. The issue Perry lake is haveing is due to all the flood waters bringing in all the fertilizers from all the feilds I know this because we spoke to a wildlife officer. So now is your chance to swim. I guess if you wanna wait for a bigger flood then I guess there will be even more crap being brought in.
I makes me laugh at how many hypocondriacts there are sitting around worring about this and that darn folks get out and frickin live.
I would also love to see your home bottled water system. Are you collecting rain water?
Daren
Sorry to hear you're sick Daren, I hope you are starting to feel better.
I have to say I don't agree with the conservation officer's assessment, not that I am any expert in the field myself. The flooding that is affecting the local rivers is caused from rains and snow melt in the northern states. We haven't seen any significant flooding in the midwest that would affect the watershed of Perry. The lake is high because the Corps of Engineers are keeping the dam closed to prevent further flooding of the Missouri River at the confluence in Kansas City. Flood control and navigation is the primary function of the corps lakes projects that were developed as part of the New Deal that helped bring the U.S. out of the depression in the 1930's.
Now, fertilizer runoff does contribute to algae bloom, but I think the real problem is runoff in general washing nutrient rich substances (fertilizer, minerals, and yes poop) into the lake in a high-heat climate while the lake is relatively calm. So Lake Perry is a great big petri dish right now.
BTW, to substantiate my opinion, have a look at this report from 2006 from the Corps of Engineers on Lake Perry water quality...
http://www.nwk.usace.army.mil/lakes/WaterQualityReport/06_Perry_Lake.pdf