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We had to pull Father out of the water for hypothermia. At a bit shy of the five mile mark. At a bit shy of three hours.
He made nearly five miles in under three hours. In water temperatures between 59 and 63 degrees (15-17 degrees centigrade).
If Father can manage to gain about fifteen pounds over the next year, he ought to be able to make it all the way.
Edited To Add: A correction. I stated here that Father went a bit shy of the five mile mark. However, we were also taking GPS readings every fifteen minutes, and Lis and I just plotted how far he got at his final reading. At his final reading of 12:15, which was about five or ten minutes BEFORE we pulled him out of the water, he had swum 5.23 miles, just shy of five and a quarter miles. He made well OVER five miles in 2 hours 45 minutes.
He made nearly five miles in under three hours. In water temperatures between 59 and 63 degrees (15-17 degrees centigrade).
If Father can manage to gain about fifteen pounds over the next year, he ought to be able to make it all the way.
Edited To Add: A correction. I stated here that Father went a bit shy of the five mile mark. However, we were also taking GPS readings every fifteen minutes, and Lis and I just plotted how far he got at his final reading. At his final reading of 12:15, which was about five or ten minutes BEFORE we pulled him out of the water, he had swum 5.23 miles, just shy of five and a quarter miles. He made well OVER five miles in 2 hours 45 minutes.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-15 12:43 pm (UTC)As to the 15#, I'd be happy to ship him up to 20 of mine. :->
(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-15 01:43 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-15 01:47 pm (UTC)Where/how did your dad get involved? Via triathlons?
(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-15 08:10 pm (UTC)Unfortunately, that group includes folks on the US Olympic swimmers, folks who are nationally-ranked in their age categories in long distance swimming, and, most damningly in this case, the this year's co-ordinators of the Boston Light swim.
He's been swimming a couple miles every morning with these folks, for a year or two now. And they've been hanging out some, too. Anyway, he'd gone out to the pub with them one evening, and he mentioned that, some day, when he was better at this stuff, he'd like to try the Boston Light swim.
They said, "Why not THIS year?"
And Dad was drunk at the time, so he agreed.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-17 10:15 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-15 01:59 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-15 02:59 pm (UTC)SWIM SUIT CLARIFICATION
No swimmer in a standard attempt to swim the Channel shall be permitted to use or wear any device or swimsuit that may aid his/her speed, buoyancy, heat retention or endurance (such as wetsuit, webbed gloves, paddles, fins, etc). The swimmer is permitted to grease the body before a swim, use goggles and one hat. Nose clips and earplugs are permitted. Any kind of tape on the body is not permitted unless approved by the observer.
The swimmer may wear only one swimsuit in one or two pieces which shall not extend past the shoulder or below the knee. All swimsuits shall be made from textile materials. Caps may not be made from neoprene or any other material which offers similar heat retention properties (as determined by the CS&PF Committee). Silicone or latex hats are permitted.
The observer will have to approve that the swimwear rules have been observed. The swimmer must be sure that their costume and cap are of an approved type before the swim starts as the swim will not be recognised if they are later found not to conform. If you have any doubt, please seek advice and/or approval from the CS&PF Committee prior to the swim giving sufficient notice for any research or investigations to be completed.
During a swim no physical contact with the swimmer shall be made by any person other than to pass food and drink or secure such items as light sticks for safety reasons.
The use of MP3 players and other electrical audio / communication devices shall not be allowed by the swimmer while swimming during any English Channel swim attempt.