Virginia Beach Lifeguard Swim Series Results
July 29, 2009 at 10:15 am | In Race Reports & Results | Leave a CommentResults of this past weekend’s 1K & 3K are now available on our results page.
The next VBLS swim (5K & 1K) is on August 23rd (sorry, we inadvertently listed it as August 25 on an earlier post).
And then there’s the other Bay Bridge swim
July 28, 2009 at 2:55 pm | In Chesapeake Bay Swim, Open Water Races, West Coast OW races & events | Leave a CommentTags: San Francisco Bay Bridge open water swim, Ti2Y swim
We’ve been thinking about some fun “challenges” for open water swimming (like the 50-state Life List, where you aim to complete an open water race in every state. Yes, Alaska has one: the Pennock Island Challenge ((and by the way, if anyone’s swimming that this year, we’d love a race report!)). Triathlons count too.) I have 48 to go…
So here’s a challenge for the continent-spanning OW swimmers out there: we’ll call it the “Bay 2 Bay Challenge.” Swim the Great Chesapeake Bay Swim and the Ti2Y 1.5 mile Bay Bridge Swim in San Francisco. If you already have the GCBS under your belt, er, Speedo, there’s still time to put the Ti2Y on your calendar for ‘09.
Here’s the details, from the race organizers:
5th Annual Ti2Y 1.5 mile Bay Bridge Swim
Saturday September 26, 2009
This challenging 1.5 mile course begins off the shores of Treasure Island and ends in San Francisco at Rincon Park. A swift ferry ride from the Port of San Francisco shuttles you off the coast of Treasure Island where the course begins. Swim parallel to the San Francisco/Oakland Bay Bridge and finish at Rincon Park.
This is the only open water swim on the Bay Bridge side of Alcatraz. Expect choppy waters around 57-64 degrees and amazing views of the San Francisco skyline. The numbers are limited to 400 swimmers so sign up now. Register at http://www.active.com. Any questions email ti2y@ymcasf.org.
A few more details:
wetsuit legal? Yes, both wetsuit, and, for the bold and bare-loving, a “skin” category too.
qualifying swim or time required? No time required—but the organizers say this is NOT an event for a novice/first-time OW swimmer (cold, choppy waters and current to be expected).
USMS or USAT sanctioned? No license needed for this swim.
If you complete the Bay 2 Bay Challenge tell us your story! Or heck, we’d welcome a race report on the Ti2Y anyway.
Swim for Life race results
July 16, 2009 at 11:01 am | In Mid-Atlantic OW Races & Events, Open Water Races, Race Reports & Results | Leave a CommentTags: Open Water race, open water swim, Swim For Life results
No one has volunteered to write us a race report yet, but here are the results from this past weekend’s 1-5 mile Swim for Life in the Chester River in Maryland.
Chris Greene Lake Cable Swim 09 – Race Report
July 14, 2009 at 11:37 am | In Caroline, Chris Greene Lake Cable Swim, Mid-Atlantic OW Races & Events, Open Water Races, Race Reports & Results | Leave a CommentTags: Chris Greene Lake Cable Swim, Open Water race, open water swimming
Results from 2009 Chris Greene Lake Cable Swim are available online here or download Chris Greene Lake Results 09.
If you want to skip the synopsis, you can go directly to the 2009 Race Report:
The event: 1- and 2- Mile lake swim at Chris Greene Lake outside Charlottesville, VA. Chris Greene regularly serves as the USMS National 2-mile Cable Swim Championship (this year, it’s in Lake Placid) but even in a non-championship year, should you set a national record, it counts.
The Course: The setting is a small lake in a public park, so this is one open water race where you don’t have to worry about extraneous conditions like wind or waves affecting your swim. The course is a precisely measured 440 yards, marked by a rope stretched between posts and floated by small buoys. (The header photo for this blog is from the Cable Swim.) You swim down one side of the rope and back on the other (which means an about-face turn at each end)—2 complete loops for the 1-mile swim and 4 for the 2-mile. Waves of ten, seeded by 1650 time, are sent off in 30-second intervals. The finish is at the same end as the start, between two inflatable buoys.
USMS sanctioned event? Yes, so you’ll need a US masters swimming license to participate.
Wetsuit legal? No
Qualifying time/swim required? No, but you do have to be able to complete the 1 mile within an hour or the 2 mile within 2 hours. You seed yourself in your race entry form by entering your 1650 time.
Novice-friendly? Yes. A sheltered lake setting, small wave starts, comfortable water temperature and relatively easy sighting, this is a great swim for first-timers, but year after year it also attracts seasoned veterans at the top of their form as well.
What you have to contend with: The water can be quite warm, though this year it was a perfect temperature. Other than that, about all you have to worry about is the occasional floating weed and the possibility of a rope burn from getting too close to the cable. You might also want to keep in mind that the hard-core swimmers treat CGL like a sustained sprint; if your 2 mile time is in the 55-plus-minute category, expect to be lapped.
How we trained: Allison had to miss CGL this year due to schedule conflict. Since the Bay swim I’ve been focusing more on shorter distance, 3000-4000 meter workouts with more emphasis on shorter, speed-focused sets. But it’s only been a month since the Bay, and the week immediately after was really just recovery for me, so what I’m saying is that I’ve really only had a couple of weeks with this speed focus. And speed, of course, is a relative term, but the point is that I’m trying to go faster.
Nice features: Even in a championship year, this is an extremely well run and very friendly, low-key event. Chris Greene Lake features a pleasant sandy beach, plenty of parking, and a bath house with running water (including cold-water outdoor shower). Good post-race food and friendly people too.
2009 top finishers: Just so you know.
In the 1 mile race, the overall winner was 19-year-old Abigail Nunn with an age group record time of 20:02.38. The men’s winner was 18-year-old Luke Robbins in a time of 21:46.62.
In the 2 mile race, having put in a good warmup with the 1-mile, Abigail Nunn came back to be the overall winner again, and broke a 12-year-old age group record (and set a new CGL women’s record) with a time of 40:39.67. The first place male finisher was Chris Stevenson, yet again breaking his own age-group record to finish in 41:03.05.
Web site: CableSwim.org.
2009 conditions included pleasantly cool water and a lightly overcast day that quickly turned sunny, but not oppressively hot. There were about 100 swimmers registered for the 2 mile race, and 63 for the 1 mile (which was first), with some of those swimmers registered for both.
Although it is possible that you, our reading public, are all agog for the moment-by-moment details of my particular swim, I suspect that what you’d really like to know is information you might generalize to your own swims. So here goes:
1) Preparation: I didn’t eat enough. Chris Greene Lake is pretty much a sprint, but instead of keeping that in mind (sprint=energy demand) I let myself get lulled by the relatively undemanding distance into being very unfocused about eating the whole week. It’s not like you need to stuff yourself, but the week before a 2-mile sprint race is not the week to be saying, “oops, forgot to eat dinner again.” Race day is too late to make up for this, and yet I didn’t really eat enough on race day either, and when my blood sugar crashes, it really crashes, and I am thereafter useless. Everyone seems to have a different eating strategy, but I think the key is to have a strategy. And practice it in training, and stick to it come race day. I’ve decided that part of my future strategy will need to be planning out my eating for the week before so it’s not something I keep forgetting to get around to.
2) Pacing: I am good at maintaining a steady pace over a distance. What I realized Saturday is that I’m not so good at estimating what that pace is. Amy (a fellow member of what I am here and now officially dubbing our Local Cohort) set a goal pace and checked her splits at every 1/4 mile turn, which was smart! Why can I never remember these things in the middle of a race? I am almost positive I went out too fast, and if I’d taken my splits I’m pretty sure they would have shown me doing the second mile slower than the first. That second mile really hurt, too, and I had to resort to the desperate maneuver of doing a Gu Roctane (which I’d stuffed in my suit before the race in anticipation of the coming to unfortunate fruition of #1 above, “Preparation: I didn’t eat enough”) with 3/4 mile to go just to make it to the end with any shred of decent speed left in me. And what did I learn from all this? That I will be focusing in my training more on “feeling” my pace—what level of effort translates to what kind of time? What level of effort can I sustain in a nonstop swim? Also that I will try to remember to set a goal pace and check my splits to see if I’m on track.
3) Sighting: Someone told me last year that the “cable” is not actually straight, that it curves a bit, and after 2 years of wobbling around trying to follow it, I have decided in the future just to sight along the rope without trying to stay right on it. On the “out” leg I was always finding myself ten feet off from it and trying to correct for that, and on the “in” leg I was always blundering into the rope. (John, another of our Local Cohort, got some rather nasty rope abrasions).
4) So what, I still had fun: even though I was clawing my way to the finish and my arms kept begging me to just stop already. My goal for 2009 was to go faster than 2008, and I did by more than a minute. That wasn’t as much faster as I wanted to go (see “Pacing”), but it was faster.
4) 1650 to open water: It’s very hard, possibly impossible, to guess how your pool time will translate to open water time, but CGL gives you the best setup for comparison, because it’s a measured course with no external factors like current to affect your time. A browse of the seed and finish times suggests this very broad formula to translate from your 1650 pool time to the CGL 2-miler: double the 1650 and add 5-10 minutes.
2009 Results
MD, VA, NC upcoming swims
July 13, 2009 at 11:45 am | In Mid-Atlantic OW Races & Events, Open Water Races | Leave a CommentJuly 26 – 3K & 1K Virginia Beach Lifeguard swim.
August 9 – 2 mile Bud Beatty memorial swim, MD
(more information about this swim is available here)
August 23- 5K & 1K Virginia Beach Lifeguard swim.
August 30 - 1 mile Open Water Swim Series, Raleigh-Durham, NC
September 12 – 1.71 mile Pier-to-Pier swim, Wrightsville Beach, NC
September 20 – 1400 Meter Wharf-to-Wharf Swim in Mathews County, VA
Know of a swim we haven’t included? Add a comment to this post.
Maryland Swim for Life tomorrow
July 10, 2009 at 1:30 pm | In Mid-Atlantic OW Races & Events, Open Water Races | Leave a CommentTags: Maryland Swim for Life, Open Water race, open water swimming
1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 mile swims in Maryland’s Chester River, hosted by the District of Columbia Aquatics Club to benefit “the Chester River Association along with various small local organizations that assist individuals and families affected by HIV/AIDS.”
Online registration is closed, but race-day registration is available. Minimum $100 contribution.
If you are swimming in this event and would be interested in writing a race report, leave a comment below.
USMS license required? Yes, or USMS one-event pass available for purchase for $15.
Westuit legal? Yes, although water is expected to be very warm.
Minimum age? yes, 18.
Qualifying time/swim required? No. However, the 5 mile race begins at 9 AM, all other distances in waves thereafter, and all swimmers must be finished by noon or will be pulled from the course.
Course: Parallel to the shore, a 2.5 mile up-and-back course. Turn buoy depends on race distance swimmers have chosen. That is, 5-milers will go all the way to the 2.5-mile marker and turn and come back, shorter-distance racers will turn at their appropriate halfway points. There are five inflatable orange buoys at 1/2 mile intervals, each spray-painted with its mile point.
Nice features: Chip timing!
Race support: Per the race organizers – “US Coast Guard and Maryland Natural Resources Police patrol boats are located near 3 locations: start/finish, half-way along the 2 ½ mile course (3rd buoy, 1 ½ miles upriver), and by the final buoy (5th buoy, 2 ½ miles upriver). Paddlers in kayaks will be stationed at all turn buoys and along the outside length of the course. Boston Whalers will also patrol swimmers along the course. Kayakers and Whalers will keep swimmers on course, provide swimmers food and drink, act as a buffer between swimmers and boat traffic, and be available for any water assistance. A local rescue boat with medic/dive personnel will also be on hand.”
More information about the Maryland Swim for Life is available online here.
Chris Greene Lake Psych Sheet now online
July 9, 2009 at 12:36 pm | In Mid-Atlantic OW Races & Events, Open Water Races | 1 CommentWho’s your competition this weekend? See the psych sheet here.
Lake Montclair runs aground
July 9, 2009 at 12:26 pm | In Mid-Atlantic OW Races & Events, Open Water Races | 3 CommentsTags: Lake Montclair Swim, lake swim, open water swim
For those of you who might be looking to the calendar for the Lake Montclair swim, the unfortunate news is that the Lake Montclair Homeowners Association denied the permit request this year, so the swim will not be held.
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