The Swimming River is an estuary and the name of the Navesink River upstream of Red Bank in Colts Neck Township and Middletown Township, located in Monmouth County, New Jersey in the United States. Estuaries and coastal waters are among the most productive ecosystems on Earth, providing numerous ecological, economic, cultural, and aesthetic benefits and services. ... The Navesink River is a tidal estuary, approximately 8 mi (12 km) long in Monmouth County in northern New Jersey in the United States. ... Map of Red Bank in Monmouth County The Borough of Red Bank is a Borough located in Monmouth County, New Jersey incorporated in 1908. ... Colts Neck Municipal Center Map of Colts Neck Township in Monmouth County Colts Neck Township is a Township located in Monmouth County, New Jersey. ... Map of Middletown Township in Monmouth County Middletown Township is a Township located in Monmouth County, New Jersey. ... Location in the state of New Jersey Formed 1675 Seat Freehold Borough Area - Total - Water 1,723 km² (665 mi²) 500 km² (193 mi²) 29. ... Official language(s) None defined, English de facto Capital Trenton Largest city Newark Area - Total - Width - Length - % water - Latitude - Longitude Ranked 47th 22,608 km² 110 km 240 km 14. ...
The Swimming River headwaters upstream of Swimming River Road have been dammed to form the Swimming River Reservoir. Scrivener Dam, in Canberra, Australia, was engineered to withstand a once-in-5000-years flood event A dam is a barrier across flowing water that obstructs, directs or retards the flow, often creating a reservoir, lake or impoundment. ...
Swimming in downtown rivers and lakes is a very democratic way of bringing pleasure and healthful exercise to everybody not just those who can afford a boat, or pool or trip to the ocean.
Swimming in the Charles should be an urban amenity that Boston and Cambridge can claim and share with its citizens and visitors.
The Charles River Conservancy, whose mission is the stewardship and renewal of the Parklands from the Harbor to the Watertown Dam, sees swimming as yet another aspect of make the Charles River Parklands more active and attractive, or regaining the use of a marvelous, yet long-neglected public amenity.
The state allowed swimming at Magazine Beach into the 1950s, but no wading can be countenanced there today until the sediments, containing many toxic substances, are removed, and the cost may be prohibitive.
DeVillars's swim came during a duck boat cruise organized by the Charles River Conservancy, an advocacy group that focuses on enhancing the appeal of the river in Boston, Cambridge, and Watertown.
Although there is talk of reviving swimming in the Chicago River and in the East River in New York, it is not allowed in any major urban river in the United States.