The danger is from the cold water. You can get serious cold shock which will make you unable to swim, you might think you can do it, but it is seriously surprising how bad cold shock can affect the nervous system, and once you sink in one of these, you won’t be able to resurface due to the pressure differences. You’d have to be an extremely, extremely strong swimmer, it can be done, but it’s still very dangerous.
There’s a quarry in my area where you are allowed to swim; it even has a kids section. The same dangers exist, the water is cold and deep. As you enter the water from the beach, you walk out a couple yards and it drops off over 10 feet deep and you can jump from a 15 foot cliff too. They have lifeguards there, which is why swimming, cliff jumping, and SCUBA diving is allowed.
@@player18792 It’s called “Nelson’s Ledges Quarry Park” in Garretsville Ohio. It also has camp sites and holds live music festivals in the summer. Very easy to find party favors too.
I agree with the comments. Un-lifeguarded quarries are dangerous for people with poor swimming skills (or none at all)... but so is the ocean or any lake for that matter. Somehow these officials don't think they can share information about degrees of risk with the public. Worse than that, many bodies of water are patrolled to prevent open water swimming... what a waste of taxpayer money and a disservice to the public. What not just rope off the outdoors entirely. BTW in Scotland, the public has a legal right to swim in ANY body of water including reservoirs (contrary to what most people think, swimming in a reservoir is generally not harmful to the quality of water since it is filtered before being piped in as drinking water. What a bunch of baloney we choose to live with!
BS. Swimming in a quarry is no more dangerous than any other deep water swimming. If you can't swim, go to the beach or public pool. Don't be an idiot and get these media uber-safety fascists to ruin what us good swimmers can easily enjoy.
Tf? Quarry waters are super cold because they're fed by ground water. That's why people die. It can be shocking especially to people not ready for it and their body cramps up and they drown. This isn't a good video explaining it well at all but there are some better ones. There's a reason why more people die each summer in quarries than in normal swimming holes..
@@leland8021 They're not any colder than any other deep water swimming, which is what I stated, and in fact the top several feet of water is very similar to lake water temps. Running streams are often colder. Maybe you'll notice I stated "good swimmers"?
@@themoviemaniac8416 good swimmers don't die here. It's inexperienced one. That's why the warning. Any good swimmer can safely ignore the warning. Easy. But when there are thousands of dumbasses who jump off cliffs into very cold water each summer. Yeah. It's unsafe. All it takes is one bad swimmer to jump in, be shocked, and drown.
@@leland8021 That's what I said in my OP, so what's the point of your reply? Just to hear yourself think out loud? Yeah, I'm sure it's thousands each summer. More people die each year from swimming in pools, lakes or rivers, and ocean beaches in the US. I've been swimming in the type of sand quarry described. The water isn't all that cold but it's the sudden drop-offs that surprise people. If you are a lousy swimmer, stick to life-guarded areas, and leave the rest to us who can swim.
I was in Zarkow quarry lakes in Manchester NJ...One afternoon in summer, 8 of us pitched tent's on one side of the lake for an overnight excursion. One couple pitched their tent on a sandy peninsula directly next to the lake. Then the skies turned dark gray and opened up upon us. It became a flash flood. I was screaming for everyone to come into "my" tent. (9 × 15 with a 7 foot high ceiling) The couple in the 2 person tent on the water's edge were reluctant to leave their own tent as it was pouring hard. AND thank God they did because this wall of water poured down from the tree's and into the lake. BUT it took about 20 feet of the shoreline with it. INCLUDING the 2 person tent that the one reluctant couple were in. They were safe but all of that sand just dissapeared and we never saw their tent again. They slept in their car that night.
That lake is on private property and Manchester Police will ticket you for trespassing. If you go in by atv they will confiscate it and sell it at auction.
I was born in the mid 80's, and yeah I definitely had more fun than you. But honestly they say it's better to have loved and lost than never love at all. I say bullsheit, knowing how much fun something is just to lose it really sucks.
Many times in 70's and 80's I swam at the Gannister Blue Hole in Williamsburg Pa. As long as you know how to swim, you are with friends and you are aware of depth and conditions of quarry you have no problems. Diving from high rocks is not recommended. Follow these simple common sense rules and you will not drown at a quarry.
@@anthonybatulis6516 I was so confused as to what makes them dangerous. Turns out it's just not a gradual drop and the floor under you isn't stable so you just need to swim and not rely on the floor under you
It looks so beautiful yet deceiving it drops off to deep then your swimming skills need to kick in you can do the gentle butterfly stroke to get you back to shore
@@TheWaynelds but what happens when the human body needs to replenish air (inhale & exhale) ?! . Your statement is not helpful. When a person needs to replenish their air & they’re already struggling there’s a potential to drown
@@tm8559 I’m talking about if the person is fully awake, conscious and able to move, then there’s no reason they should drowned. There’s little kids who can swim in deep water just fine.
It's not about being able to swim or not, it's about the depths and how deep it gets with just going out a few yards, not to mention it's so cold and people stiffing up like a quick case of hypothermia smh, and underneath is nothing but mud that is like quick sand, so many things play a part in the drownings, it's not safe people😒
Thank you for ledge demonstration, much needed!!!
PROBLEM FIXED DONT GO THERE IF YOU CANT SWIM LMAFO
I hate to be that guy but *Lmfao*
The danger is from the cold water. You can get serious cold shock which will make you unable to swim, you might think you can do it, but it is seriously surprising how bad cold shock can affect the nervous system, and once you sink in one of these, you won’t be able to resurface due to the pressure differences. You’d have to be an extremely, extremely strong swimmer, it can be done, but it’s still very dangerous.
@@jvogler_art4708 yup un like michael
Phelps . The cold temperatures shocks you like you said it can cramp you
There’s a quarry in my area where you are allowed to swim; it even has a kids section. The same dangers exist, the water is cold and deep. As you enter the water from the beach, you walk out a couple yards and it drops off over 10 feet deep and you can jump from a 15 foot cliff too. They have lifeguards there, which is why swimming, cliff jumping, and SCUBA diving is allowed.
Where is that at
@@player18792 It’s called “Nelson’s Ledges Quarry Park” in Garretsville Ohio. It also has camp sites and holds live music festivals in the summer. Very easy to find party favors too.
Sounds beautiful and Exciting. If you know how to swim you'll be fine
@@snowcapkitty2even if you know how to swim is dnagerous cold water can shock you given you cramps
I pray for those that died in that water may rest to peace ,
Quarrys sometimes have undercurrents due to springs supplying the water..so you dont know if you get swept under
lynden Mcdonald
Exactly finally a well educated person on the web!
Waaaaaaaaaaaaa😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
I'm 38, and have been swimming in quarries and rivers my entire life
Netloc AD 🤡
Nothing happend to you did you know how to swim
So basically, you're fine if you can swim. The only danger is to non swimmers or drunk idiots. The same as ANY body of water.
In fact, it's typically the skilled swimmers who drown
That is not a fact
Yes, many skilled swimmers drown if you're responding to my reply. Do your research
the_real_john_kimball no it has a drain in the middle so you can get sucked into it
These waters can be extremely cold a few feet down. They are not safe
I agree with the comments. Un-lifeguarded quarries are dangerous for people with poor swimming skills (or none at all)... but so is the ocean or any lake for that matter. Somehow these officials don't think they can share information about degrees of risk with the public. Worse than that, many bodies of water are patrolled to prevent open water swimming... what a waste of taxpayer money and a disservice to the public. What not just rope off the outdoors entirely. BTW in Scotland, the public has a legal right to swim in ANY body of water including reservoirs (contrary to what most people think, swimming in a reservoir is generally not harmful to the quality of water since it is filtered before being piped in as drinking water. What a bunch of baloney we choose to live with!
Yeah it's because our country is overrun with commies, pussies, cowards, and bootlickers
Well said. In a free country, people should have reasonable leeway in assuming their own risk.
BS. Swimming in a quarry is no more dangerous than any other deep water swimming. If you can't swim, go to the beach or public pool. Don't be an idiot and get these media uber-safety fascists to ruin what us good swimmers can easily enjoy.
Tf? Quarry waters are super cold because they're fed by ground water. That's why people die. It can be shocking especially to people not ready for it and their body cramps up and they drown. This isn't a good video explaining it well at all but there are some better ones. There's a reason why more people die each summer in quarries than in normal swimming holes..
@@leland8021 They're not any colder than any other deep water swimming, which is what I stated, and in fact the top several feet of water is very similar to lake water temps. Running streams are often colder. Maybe you'll notice I stated "good swimmers"?
@@themoviemaniac8416 good swimmers don't die here. It's inexperienced one. That's why the warning. Any good swimmer can safely ignore the warning. Easy. But when there are thousands of dumbasses who jump off cliffs into very cold water each summer. Yeah. It's unsafe. All it takes is one bad swimmer to jump in, be shocked, and drown.
@@leland8021 That's what I said in my OP, so what's the point of your reply? Just to hear yourself think out loud? Yeah, I'm sure it's thousands each summer. More people die each year from swimming in pools, lakes or rivers, and ocean beaches in the US. I've been swimming in the type of sand quarry described. The water isn't all that cold but it's the sudden drop-offs that surprise people. If you are a lousy swimmer, stick to life-guarded areas, and leave the rest to us who can swim.
Breathin' ain't easy when your airholes are submerged. Follow up at 11.
I was in Zarkow quarry lakes in Manchester NJ...One afternoon in summer, 8 of us pitched tent's on one side of the lake for an overnight excursion. One couple pitched their tent on a sandy peninsula directly next to the lake. Then the skies turned dark gray and opened up upon us. It became a flash flood.
I was screaming for everyone to come into "my" tent. (9 × 15 with a 7 foot high ceiling)
The couple in the 2 person tent on the water's edge were reluctant to leave their own tent as it was pouring hard. AND thank God they did because this wall of water poured down from the tree's and into the lake. BUT it took about 20 feet of the shoreline with it. INCLUDING the 2 person tent that the one reluctant couple were in. They were safe but all of that sand just dissapeared and we never saw their tent again. They slept in their car that night.
That lake is on private property and Manchester Police will ticket you for trespassing.
If you go in by atv they will confiscate it and sell it at auction.
Bless you
NO BODY CAN HAVE FUN ANYMORE. I WAS BORN IN 2002 AND IM PISSED THATI MISSED OUT ON THE DAYS OF MY PARENTSAND THIER UNSUPERVISED FUN.
Same man I was born I 2004
You're better off never knowing than just watching it die as you grow up.
Yeah we ran free back growing up in the 50s,60s,70. The population growth is part of the reason. It was nothing like it is now. So many rules!
I was born in the mid 80's, and yeah I definitely had more fun than you. But honestly they say it's better to have loved and lost than never love at all. I say bullsheit, knowing how much fun something is just to lose it really sucks.
Many times in 70's and 80's I swam at the Gannister Blue Hole in Williamsburg Pa. As long as you know how to swim, you are with friends and you are aware of depth and conditions of quarry you have no problems. Diving from high rocks is not recommended. Follow these simple common sense rules and you will not drown at a quarry.
@@anthonybatulis6516 I was so confused as to what makes them dangerous. Turns out it's just not a gradual drop and the floor under you isn't stable so you just need to swim and not rely on the floor under you
A drop off from a couple inches to 10ft is insane 😩
The best advice is to stay away from quarry all together! Be safe people
Quarry waters, and most fresh waters have very little buoyancy. Swimming in clear fresh water is a different animal than swimming at the beach.
It looks so beautiful yet deceiving it drops off to deep then your swimming skills need to kick in you can do the gentle butterfly stroke to get you back to shore
I'm a bit surprised there are no buoy-lines or signs posted on the shore warning about it.
Missed businesses opportunity. Make shoreline more shallow, hire lifeguard, demand entrance fee, beach bath established.
I’ve been sooooo scared of any body of water (except a pool) my entire life because I’m scared I’m going to get pulled down and drown
that's the media scaring you
The human body naturally floats.
You are a weak souI and you need to a buIIIlllllllet to the cranium I’m BIack and I can swim anywhere
@@TheWaynelds but what happens when the human body needs to replenish air (inhale & exhale) ?! . Your statement is not helpful. When a person needs to replenish their air & they’re already struggling there’s a potential to drown
@@tm8559 I’m talking about if the person is fully awake, conscious and able to move, then there’s no reason they should drowned. There’s little kids who can swim in deep water just fine.
I can swim in 200 foot deep water no problem. If you just swim idk why the dropoff is even a problem.
Cold water cramps... if you're in too deep of water you're in trouble.
You can still swim with cramps.
It's not about being able to swim or not, it's about the depths and how deep it gets with just going out a few yards, not to mention it's so cold and people stiffing up like a quick case of hypothermia smh, and underneath is nothing but mud that is like quick sand, so many things play a part in the drownings, it's not safe people😒
Deep water is hazardous for non-swimmers.
Life guards don’t do shit
Not for weak swimmers and kids?
Is it dangerous to people who can swim?????? I don’t get it 🤷♂️
sheltered much?
Jesus Christ, folks, I swam in a 200 foot deep, 1-2 mile wide, 50 mile long lake.