Update 2020-03-16: More testing needed to track river pollution –Suwannee Riverkeeper in Gainesville Sun 2020-03-16.
No rain for a week (since March 5th) meant not much E. coli washed into creeks and rivers.
WWALS is testing upstream this weekend. You can help.
WWALS Composite table
For context and the entire WWALS composite spreadsheet of data from Georgia and Florida sources, see
https://wwals.net/issues/testing/.
Apparently the high numbers WWALS saw on Crooked Creek Saturday a week ago (March 7th) washed on down through Okapilco Creek and Brooks County to the Withlacoochee River by Monday. Apparently that contamination got diluted pretty quickly by all that rainwater coming down from as far north as Tifton.
The most recent numbers we have are Valdosta’s for Wednesday, March 11, 2020, with Knights Ferry, Nankin, and State Line Boat Ramps only slightly above the longterm desired limit of 126 cfu/100 mL E. coli, and below that upstream.
Madison Health tested Tuesday, and got actually slightly lower (135.4) at State Line, and below 126 at CR 150 (Sullivan Launch) and FL 6 (upstream from Madison Blue Spring).
Nobody tested downstream from there in the past week. Nobody knows whether any of the most recent contamination reached the Suwannee River.
Quitman and Valdosta to Suwannee River
In the WWALS
map of the Withlacoochee and Little River Water Trail.
The USGS gauges upstream from US 84 peaked days ago, and the US 84 (Quitman) gauge is coming down now, soon to be Continue reading