I have to admit, as I write this I am a little overwhelmed
by my heroes right now. Also a little feeling a little swim fannish!
Today:
·
Stuart Johnson is currently attempting a triple
crossing of the English Channel, a feat achieved only 3 times throughout human
history. On the day that the currents thwarted my attempt to swim to Watson’s
Bay, he swam from Coogee to Bondi to Watson’s and then back again. Sending him
amazement and best wishes. [Postscript - Stuart Johnson didn't quite make the triple crossing. He did make one of the most powerful acceptance (in the true sense of the word) statements ever and inspire the bejesus out of me and a fair few others:
After a 30 hour swim, Stuart Johnson said "I was tired and close to hypothermic, yes the water was warm but if you spend that time in the water it can happen, and despite my considerable pre-channel girth. Because I had slowed down I was going to miss the cap and go south ...for 6 hours. The prediction from Reg [pilot] was 14hrs. I was buggered but figured I could rough it out for 6 (and that would be optimistic at best). No way would I last 14, I (and no one else made the tough decision to abort). The good thing is there is not what if for me now, the weather was good, the 2nd turn easy, in fact at that point I felt the 3 way was in the bag. I trained harder than before, and harder than I could (or would again), I had a good feed plan (thanks Tara) and covered everything that had gone wrong before. There are no parameters to tweak. A 2 way I can do, the 3 way is a bridge too far, reserved for a select few." 10.31 am 8 August 2014]
After a 30 hour swim, Stuart Johnson said "I was tired and close to hypothermic, yes the water was warm but if you spend that time in the water it can happen, and despite my considerable pre-channel girth. Because I had slowed down I was going to miss the cap and go south ...for 6 hours. The prediction from Reg [pilot] was 14hrs. I was buggered but figured I could rough it out for 6 (and that would be optimistic at best). No way would I last 14, I (and no one else made the tough decision to abort). The good thing is there is not what if for me now, the weather was good, the 2nd turn easy, in fact at that point I felt the 3 way was in the bag. I trained harder than before, and harder than I could (or would again), I had a good feed plan (thanks Tara) and covered everything that had gone wrong before. There are no parameters to tweak. A 2 way I can do, the 3 way is a bridge too far, reserved for a select few." 10.31 am 8 August 2014]
·
Colleen Mallon is following in her brother’s
wake across the North Channel (generally acknowledged as the hardest of the
Oceans Seven) battling freezing waters and massive jellyfish with my uni buddy
Alex alongside. Sending you both best wishes and anti Jellyfish forcefields. [Postscript - she nailed it, almost set a new record time]
·
The 5th person ever in the history of
humanity, Adam Walker, completed the Oceans Seven challenge:
o
Cook Strait (26km 14-19 degrees, crazy currents)
o
Tsugaru (19km, 16-19 degrees, crazy currents)
o
Molokai Channel (41.8km, warm, stingy thingys)
o
Gibraltar Straits (20km, warm, crazy currents,
boats and chop)
o
English Channel (34km, 15-18 degrees) (big
ships, currents)
o
Catalina Channel (33.7km, 17-19 degrees)
(currents, sharks)
o
the hardest: North Channel (34.5km, 10-14
degrees, jellyfish)
- Wyatt Song is swimming in 8 degree water at the International Winter Swimming Festival in Argentina. After his experiences in Russia and Finland earlier in the year this is comparatively bathlike. [Postscript = Wyatt went on to become Australia's first Ice Miler]
Then there are the exceptional recent achievements:
- · Fellow BSBLSC lifesavers Dori Miller and LochieHinds, recently, respectively, became the 40th person ever to complete a double crossing of the English Channel and the youngest person ever to complete the Triple Crown of swimming (English Channel, Manhattan Island Marathon (45km circumnavigation) and Catalina Channel). Dori did it after the fastest solo of 2008 and 2 previous double attempts. The double took 26 hours and 21 minutes making her the 117th person to join the 24 Hour Club. Lochie takes that crown from Alison Streeter, the undisputed Queen of the English Channel with 43 crossings including a triple and seven crossings in one year. Dori had her amazing partner and coach, Nick, alongside the whole way. Lochie had his amazing folks who support everything he swims!
Dori's course across the Channel and Back
- · The bloke who set up the Icebergs / South End Rowing Club (SERC) connection, Simon Dominguez who battled the storm of the century to cross the English Channel and set new standards in sartorial style with his robe. He had his mum, dad, sister, daughter and best mate alongside.
- · Kimberley Chambers, who looks set to become the 6th person to complete the Oceans Seven, completing just the most amazing culturally sensitive (she speaks Japanese, of course!) crossing of Tsugaru to complete her 6th of the 7 swims. She had her mum and colleagues from Adobe alongside. [Postscript - Kim completed the Oceans Seven but at huge cost]
- · All of the amazing Vladswimmers who have just nailed their English Channel swims.
- · The amazing EpicBillBradley who had to call it a day. The hardest call but always the right one.
What is just incredible about each of these swims is the way technology allows all of us playing along from home to track their swims. There is a community of supporters, all over the world, hunched in front of screen, willing those tracking dots (and the swimmer attached) forward. You can yell encouragement in real time. And for that swim, everyone of us is a part of something bigger than ourselves. That inspirational community is cemented by the people willing to spend hours and hours on a boat, alongside those swimmers. Your selflessness is incredible.
And then there the forthcoming achievements:
- Fellow Bondi lifesaver, all around legend and one of the most generous people I know, Cyril Baldock takes on the English channel to honour his mentor, the late, great Des Renford and become the oldest Channel swimmer. [Post script - Cyril did it, and held the record for a little over a week. He's vowed to return making him a truly epic hero]
- Justin Hanby to prove that the third time is the charm when Black Dog swims the Channel [Postscript - Justin Hanby nailed it]
- All the other remaining Vladswimmers [Postscript - All the Vladswimmers succeeded]
- Chloe McCardel using all of her successes and not so successes to mentor a relay team across the English Channel. Chloe beat Des Renford's record of laps of Bondi the day I signed up to be a Bondi lifesaver. His son swam alongside for part of that epic effort. Her achievement inspired one of my greatest challenges. [Post script - Chloe went onto set the World Record for Longest continuous unaided ocean swim. An absolute bloody legend!]
And then there are the people who have inspired me from go to whoa. Tamera Lang, my Can Too team captain who nailed Rottnest solo and then as a duo with an 8 month old baby. Pete Dunne who tells me I can do anything, when he literally can (so long as the water isn’t too cold). Mel Houghton, Micky Ash, Joe Watkins and Colin Hannah who all soloed Bondi to Watson’s and inspired me to try. Mel Speet and Luke Parr who helped me through a lot of nerve wracked start lines and introduced me to North Sydney Masters. Alice Boxhall who helped me through Can Too and the Bronze Medallion. Tori Gorman, whose blog is essentially my bible and who encourages everyone. Fyso and Liam who make training a joy. Jacki who made Alcatraz a reality. Too many swim friends to mention (sorry guys).
Some incredible Can Too coaches: Colin Marshall, Peter Long,
Big Wave Dave, Susan King, Zoe Little, Goldie, Trish Daly and Victor Lee. The
amazing 4Seasons who make ocean swimming accessible to all: Kingy, Zoe, Tamera
and Dave. Hiro and John Wynberg at North Sydney and all the Vladswim coaches whom I’m looking
forward to getting to know. Including Vlad himself who has worked miracles on
my stroke in the past. They inspire with everything they do!
But finally, there are some unsung heroes. They may never
swim those kinds of distances, but I have watched their journey through the waves
and I will never be prouder of anything I do myself than of what these heroes
faced and won. Silpa, Kay, Allison, Anne – I know something of the fears you
faced. You faced down those fears and I am so, so very proud of you. It will
forever be my greatest honour to have swum alongside you in good times and bad.
Because once upon a time, in 2009, I could not breathe when
I swam in open water. I had constant panic attacks. My greatest hero ever, a
Bondi lifesaver whose name I do not know noticed and swam alongside me until I
could breathe. As I don’t know her name, I can never repay the favour, and so I
pay it unto others. Karma rocks.
Thanks heroes. Love your work. Just keep swimming!
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