• Doctors say a Stafford, Virginia man will be able to keep his leg after contracting dangerous bacteria while swimming in the Potomac River.

    For the Fourth of July holiday, Joe Wood and his wife Jeana visited family near Callao, Virginia and swam in a Potomac River inlet.

    “We were jumping off the dock, throwing sticks for the dogs to catch, just normal horseplay,” Wood says from his hospital room in Fredericksburg.

    “At one point, I scratched my knee climbing on a wooden pylon and I kinda bumped my knee on it.”

    It left a scrape, but nothing he gave anymore though to, Wood says.

    A day later, the cut was swollen and he felt sick. Wood went to the hospital and was quickly transferred to an infectious disease specialist at Mary Washington Hospital who diagnosed him with a specific type of vibrio bacteria, eating away at his flesh.

    “It has acted [like flesh eating bacteria,] eating the skin and the layer below the skin of a good chunk of my leg,” Wood says.

    Doctors tell Wood he’ll survive. Wood knows the quick diagnosis is part of the reason why.

    “It moves so fast. By the time folks do diagnose it, they run the cultures and normal testing, they get behind the curve on it,” he says.

    Read WTOP

    Photo by Alexandr Trubetskoy

  • Just a few months ago Dan had ended up in a US jail overnight after urinating on a police car while celebrating his birthday.

    It could have spelled the end of his Commonwealth dreams but instead the brush with the law spurred him on to win.

    Dan said: “There were cries of ‘freedom’ when I won my medal because that is how the other team members know me.

    “It’s not a political statement, it’s because a few months ago I was in a jail cell and now I’m free.

    “It was the wake-up call I needed. I want to be the best swimmer in the world and that was enough for me to get my act together.”

    Read EveningTimes

  • With the conclusion of the swimming for the 2014 Commonwealth Games, Cameron McEvoy and James Magnussen are already looking to improve their strokes for the Pan Pacific championships in mid-August.

    See brisbanetimes

  • A German chemistry professor started on Monday a gruelling four-week solo swim down the Rhine river for the benefit of science and the environment.

    Self-confessed “mad professor” Andreas Fath, who set off on his 1,231-kilometre (764-mile) adventure with a splash into Switzerland’s Lake Toma, plans to swim through Germany and France to reach the river’s mouth at the Dutch port of Rotterdam on August 24.

    Read globalpost

  • In the end, the odds were too much for the three Wahls.

    Devin and Danielle Wahl completed their English Channel swim Sunday. The 21-mile crossing in 64-degree water was more harrowing and painful than they expected. Their younger brother Dustin was forced to quit 13 miles in, overcome with cramps and nausea.

    The goal of being the first three siblings to swim the Channel simultaneously—statistically, they had about a one-in-eight chance of success—remained elusive. But their sense of accomplishment was huge.

    Read The Washington Post

    http://youtu.be/HXAtWg9MsUI

  • Footage taken from Lava Hot Springs, Idaho, USA, shows a girl on the edge of the middle board, about to dive in to the swimming pool below.

    But in a last-second change of heart, she grabs onto the railings to stop herself – even though she’s already too late to stop.

    What happens next is far worse than what would have happened if she’d just gone through with the dive in the first place.

    See the Daily Star

    http://youtu.be/VFKUKX9ToNI

  • It’s the biggest little secret and now it can be revealed: Everyone’s favorite prince is learning to swim.

    Like his father and grandfather before him, Prince George is experiencing the royal splash-about with his mother at the world’s most exclusive gym, the Buckingham Palace pool. Kate was seen driving in to the grounds of Buckingham Palace with George and a nanny in tow on his birthday Tuesday.

    Many assumed she had brought him to visit his grandfather, but the Duchess of Cambridge has been teaching the future king how to swim.

    Read ABC News

  • In the warm, calm waters of Crystal River, Fla., there resides an aggregation of some of the most magnificent and mysterious creatures that perhaps ever survived on this planet. The manatee, as I was fortunate enough to find out first hand, are not only gentle giants, they are playful, curious and simply fascinating to watch in their natural habitat.

    See Stacey Page Online

  • A “devastating” fire has destroyed part of Eastbourne Pier after an arcade caught light at the popular seaside resort.

    Up to 80 firefighters battled the blaze from the coast, the beach and from underneath the Victorian structure to bring it under control.

    Police evacuated scores of tourists and beachgoers from the attraction, while lifeboats were launched amid reports some people may have leapt from the pier into the sea.

    The emergency services were alerted to the blaze at around 3.15pm [Wednesday, ed.] when a small fire in the wall panelling of an arcade took hold and quickly spread across the two-storey main building at the front of the pier.

    Dramatic footage and images taken by onlookers from the beach and promenade showed the pier’s wooden roof and timber structure entirely consumed by giant flames, as huge plumes of black smoke leapt hundreds of feet into the air.

    All that remained was the metal carcass of the building.

    Read Sky News