Water Depth
Quarry depth can look reliable while still hiding shelves, cables, debris, or cold layers.

Delta, United States
PERMISSION REQUIRED*
Delta is a quarry water jump spot near Delta, Pennsylvania. The reported height is about 60 ft, but access and landing conditions must be verified on site.
PERMISSION REQUIRED: confirm legal access, depth, landing clearance, and a safe exit before treating Delta as jumpable.
Overview
Delta is a quarry-style freshwater spot where permission and enforcement are the first checks. Treat this guide as a planning overview, then verify access, water level, landing depth, and exit conditions at the site before considering a jump.
Quick Answer
Delta is a quarry water jump spot near Delta, Pennsylvania. The reported height is about 60 ft, but access and landing conditions must be verified on site.
Key Takeaway
PERMISSION REQUIRED: confirm legal access, depth, landing clearance, and a safe exit before treating Delta as jumpable.
Quick Answer
Delta is a quarry water jump spot near Delta, Pennsylvania. The reported height is about 60 ft, but access and landing conditions must be verified on site.
Key Takeaway
PERMISSION REQUIRED: confirm legal access, depth, landing clearance, and a safe exit before treating Delta as jumpable.
Conditions and planning notes
Quarry depth can look reliable while still hiding shelves, cables, debris, or cold layers.
Confirm lawful access before visiting; do not enter fenced, posted, or private quarry property.
Only scout from permitted areas, and avoid unstable quarry edges.
Trespass risk, high walls, submerged debris, cold water, and no easy rescue access are the main concerns.
Quarry walls can be fractured, vertical, and hard to exit from.
Scout with a partner, avoid jumping alone, and leave if trespass risk, high walls, submerged debris, cold water, and no easy rescue access are the main concerns.
Map location
Delta, United States
39.72705, -76.32663
Delta sits around Delta, PA, United States, putting this quarry-water spot in the orbit of Delta and the broader PA area of United States. Use the saved coordinates and current map view as a starting point, then confirm the exact approach locally because cliff-jumping access can change around parks, private land, roads, shorelines, and water-management areas.
Seasonal conditions matter here, especially after storms, drought, high flow, or unusually low water. Conditions are not static: rain, snowmelt, drought, changing water levels, current, and weekend crowding can all change what looks like the same jump from one visit to the next. Treat saved route notes as background, not as a present-day clearance to jump.
The main assumed risks include cold or changing lake levels, submerged shelves, boat traffic, difficult exits, and limited rescue access. Access should be treated as conditional until signs, land ownership, permits, and local rules are confirmed. Before anyone climbs to a ledge, inspect the landing zone from the water, identify the exit, look for submerged rocks or debris, and be willing to walk away if the depth, footing, legality, or rescue options are uncertain.
FAQs