Ederle Swim update

October 20, 2009 at 4:21 pm | In OW swim stories | 4 Comments
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After Nancy Steadman Martin pulled out, Hannah Borgeson continued to hold the lead until sometime in the last mile, when apparently she pulled out due to cold (she must have been seriously cold to have pulled out so close to the end).  Julie Sheldon took first place finish in 6:14.    Way to go!  Now get that woman some hot soup!  (But no–swimmers have to get back in the water after touching land to swim back to the escort boats.  I suppose once you’ve lost all feeling in your limbs, what’s a few more minutes of cold?)

Ederle Swim today, NYC to Sandy Hook, NJ

October 20, 2009 at 1:05 pm | In Mid-Atlantic OW Races & Events, News, Open Water Races | Leave a Comment
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A small group of brave souls are plugging along in today’s Gertrude Ederle swim, from the Battery in NYC to Sandy Hook state park in NJ, via New York Harbor.  The swim had to be postponed from Saturday until today due to weather conditions, but it’s still no day at the pool out there.  Here’s what the swimmers are enjoying:

Share photos on twitter with TwitpicWater temps: 54-60 degrees F.

Weather conditions – sunny, winds 10-15 knots, gusting to 20, with 2-3 foot seas.

Currently in the lead by about a half mile are Hannah Borgeson (37) and Nancy Steadman Martin (55).  Way to represent, ladies!  You can follow their progress via Twitter and/or GPS tracking.

The swim is in honor of Gertrude Ederle, first woman to swim the English Channel, who made this swim herself before conquering the Channel.

And don’t bother cooling down, either

October 15, 2009 at 8:50 pm | In News, OW Training | 1 Comment
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First we pointed out you have more to fear from Bambi than Bruce.*   Now, another misconception put to rest, courtesy of the New York Times.  To wit, a cool down is apparently worthless.  Or at any rate, there’s no evidence it does you any good.

…the cool-down is enshrined in training lore. It’s in physiology textbooks, personal trainers often insist on it, fitness magazines tell you that you must do it — and some exercise equipment at gyms automatically includes it. You punch in the time you want to work out on the machine and when your time is up, the machine automatically reduces the workload and continues for five minutes so you can cool down.

The problem, says Hirofumi Tanaka, an exercise physiologist at the University of Texas, Austin, is that there is pretty much no science behind the cool-down advice.

(* The mechanical shark used in the film [Jaws] was nicknamed “Bruce” by its handlers, and the “full body” version tours around museums, while “Bruce II” resides at the Universal Theme Parks and “bites at” tourists on the tour ride.  From IMDB.com)

Beware the swift and deadly strike

October 15, 2009 at 9:48 am | In OW swim stories | Leave a Comment
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No, we don’t mean sharks.  The Florida Department of Natural History’s Ichthylogy

be very afraid

be very afraid

Department shows that you’re far more likely to be killed by lightning, dogs, even deer, than by a shark, and that far more people are injured every year by  room deodorizers than by those toothy predators of the deep.

Take away?  Never swim with your AirWick.

An interview with Steven Munatones

October 13, 2009 at 8:46 am | In Interviews, OW Training | Leave a Comment

Today we are thrilled to have a conversation with Steven Munatones, who may know more about OW swimming, swims, history, training, competitors, and techniques than any other human on the planet.  He is the man behind 10KSwimmer, the encyclopaedic must-read blog for anyone interested in OW swimming.  We don’t know how he manages to be everywhere at once in the world of OW swimming, but we are thankful he does.

Read on for our interview with Steven Munatones, with a few special tips for newer competitive OW swimmers at the bottom.

Continue reading An interview with Steven Munatones…

Why they do it

October 8, 2009 at 9:05 am | In OW swim stories | 1 Comment
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Great multimedia piece in The Sydney Morning Herald on OW Swimmers.

USMS 2010 Open Water Championships Info

October 6, 2009 at 3:59 pm | In News, Open Water Races | Leave a Comment
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Get out your calendars: the 2010 USMS open water championships schedule is posted.  All the events will take place in inland bodies of water (lakes & reservoirs, that is).  No ocean swims.

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