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Alarming spike in drownings in Lake Michigan, other Great Lakes tied to COVID-19 pandemic, study finds

Alarming spike in drownings in Lake Michigan, other Great Lakes tied to COVID-19 pandemic, study finds
courant.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from courant.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Alarming spike in drownings in Lake Michigan, other Great Lakes tied to COVID-19 pandemic, study finds

Alarming spike in drownings in Lake Michigan, other Great Lakes tied to COVID-19 pandemic, study finds
mcall.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mcall.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Alarming spike in Great Lakes drownings tied to COVID-19, study finds

Alarming spike in Great Lakes drownings tied to COVID-19, study finds Keith Matheny Detroit Free Press An alarming spike in the number of drownings across several of the Great Lakes last year may have been linked to the COVID-19 pandemic, a new research study finds. The drownings, particularly on Great Lakes Michigan, Ontario and Huron, appeared to correlate to times when government restrictions on movement were relaxed amid the pandemic. As community swimming pools, water parks and other options for cooling off in the summer remained closed, more people apparently chose to visit local beaches on the Great Lakes. At many of those beaches, COVID-19 contributed to local governments not providing lifeguards, swimming area markings or flag warnings for dangerous wave days.

Mountain bikers bring trail back to Goshen woods, near otters swimming hole

Jim Wellington and a few pals have resurrected a mountain bike trail that he’d etched about 17 years ago in a Goshen woods as it follows the snaking Elkhart River. He can paddle to the trail across the river from his house, reaching a spot where he’s driven an orange stake to monitor fluctuations in the water level. After all, water affects access. If it’s too high, you can’t take the only path riding into the trail: under a bridge. In that case, you can hoof it — though with extreme caution — across busy Plymouth Avenue. But once you’re there, the two miles of flat trail weave as a quiet reprieve from the busier (and also flat) dirt trails across the river in the city’s 34.5-acre Dr. Larry Beachy Classified Forest.

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