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The Community Sailing Center and the Northeast Disabled Athletic Association want more people to be able to access and enjoy Vermont's waterways.
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After last summer’s beach closures due to cyanobacteria, some places are implementing a new categorization system that will allow visitors to enter the water at their own risk.
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Fifty-three years after a private plane carrying five men disappeared on a snowy Vermont night, experts believe they have found the wreckage of the long lost jet in Lake Champlain.
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Representatives from the Lake Champlain Basin Program explain how they're addressing the root causes of lake pollution.
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The Lake Champlain Basin Program’s “State of the Lake� report notes changes in phosphorus levels and documents data on the lake’s watershed during the 2023 flood events.
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Para dos mujeres, los baños de agua frÃa son una manera de pausar, recargarse mentalmente, y conectar con ellas mismas y con el paisaje de Vermont.
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The cold water dips are also a way for both women to pause, recharge mentally, and connect not just with themselves, but with Vermont’s landscape.
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Made HereMeet the Scientist introduces viewers to the people working to protect the natural and cultural heritage of Lake Champlain. Host Jenn Jarecki sat down with Chris Sabick, interim co-director and director of archeology and research at the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum.
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At the peak of the flooding in July, more than 4 billion gallons of water flowed into Lake Champlain every hour carrying fuel oil, mercury, diesel, and phosphorus from upstream communities.
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This summer’s heavy rains have led to phosphorus runoff and sewage leaks into Vermont lakes and ponds. A water quality expert with the Lake Champlain Sea Grant explains why it’s important not to swim if there’s a cyanobacteria bloom.