Wednesday, 19 September 2018

Buttermere Lake: a bit rough, a bit choppy and a bit chilly, but great fun (despite the bout of sea sickness mid swim).

I have been told that Buttermere is the loveliest place, and if I ever got the opportunity to swim there, I must. Sadly, because of the sea fret (or fog or mist or whatever you want to call it), the rain, and the frankly ‘a bit sh*t’ conditions, last week when we turned up to swim there, there was absolutely no way of knowing if it was beautiful, or not (return trip will be in order to check). What I did know though was that the lake was crystal clear, choppy, proper chilly (13oc) and if you squinted you could just about make out the far end of it. 

We have had an amazing run of sunny days this year, which sadly didn’t stretch as far as the day we had planned to swim in Buttermere. The conditions left me in no doubt that it was going to be a bit rough in parts, and despite considering myself a relatively competent open water swimmer, reminded myself that this does not make me immune from the possible dangers.

The swim was as expected: difficult, challenging, slow going, tiring and cold. I don’t mind sharing with you that I was sorely tempted to sit it out in the lovely, warm café instead drinking coffee, however I had driven three hours to get there (well Shark did, but I did contribute to the journey by being in charge of the Satnav, which is actually crucial to actually getting there seeing as that neither of us can read a map, or have any sense of direction. I managed it perfectly well with only one error, resulting in a ten minute addition), AND I had paid nine pounds to park, AND I had bought some new goggles especially, and so wasn’t not swimming, unless of course the organisers pulled the proverbial plug on the event (I am so not apologizing for that clever pun). 

This year, with all of its weather record-breaking highs, Shark and I, like most others, have been swimming in mostly (one emergency lake evacuation, due to lightning, aside) calm and, sometimes-balmy warm water, AND in skins no less! However Buttermere was a stark reminder of how quickly the weather can make conditions change, and how unpredictable the open water can be. We faced conditions that we have not been used to for a long time, in particular the cold. The week before the lake temperature was still a respectable 17oc. 

*I am well aware that submerging yourself in any body of water colder than yourself can lead to hypothermia, and the colder the water, the more likely this is to happen, and more quickly, and that no-one is immune, not even the most seasoned of swimmers, and so I’ve added a link to a blog I wrote about it that I’m told is worth a read AND was actually re-tweeted at the time by RNLI. Being re-tweeted by RNLI is better is than the time I swam with Duncan Goodhew when I was eight (mostly because I barely remember it, and there were two hundred other people swimming with him too). 

In addition to the cold, the rain meant that the water was really choppy and visibility was low, which made it disorientating and really tough going. Adding this into the mix meant that a swim that would usually (in a lovely chop/wind/cold/rain free lake) take me less than an hour and a half, took me nearly two hours. I am so pleased that I took the time to bilaterally breath when I first started swimming five years ago. This reduced the amount of times I was slapped in the face, by the lake to only several thousand, which made all the difference!

Swimming in a wetsuit was compulsory and I have to say certainly helped against the cold. The organisers had also insisted that we swam with a tow float too, which was a great call, and although they are not considered a safety device by the manufacturers, I do feel that since I bought the most humongous one I could find, that actually in an emergency situation I suspect it would be able to keep a hippo afloat, if necessary. It was great to have it during the swim; it gave me some extra confidence, although it was less great on the times when it decided to become a hat or smack me in the face after a gust of wind.

One final thing about the day that I would like to share and also includes a heartfelt apology, is this - Eating chocolate cake shortly before you get into a choppy lake to swim (like a millpond is fine) should not be considered. It should be a no-no on account that that it may not stay down. I speak from very bitter experience, and as far as I am concerned was a complete waste of a perfectly good, and not to mention expensive, slice of cake that I had forked out an over inflated £3.00 for at the service station. My apologies to the swimmers behind me, of which thanks to the lack of visibility meant that I was unable to apologise in person to after the swim, as I had no idea what they looked like, and again, thanks to the low visibility, would have no idea what they were about to be swimming through. If it’s any consolation, it was advertised as a hundred percent organic and was absolutely delicious at the time!


Here’s that 'must read' link I mentioned.




Once again, thanks for reading, and for those of you that enjoy my blogs, my book 
Open Water Woman Swims Windermere 
is available in paperback and electronically on Amazon. 

Here's the link:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Open-Water-Woman-Swims-Windermere/dp/1980614660/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1535300602&sr=8-1&keywords=open+water+woman

I also have a 'group' page on Facebook and am on Twitter and Instagram, where I post the shenanigans more regularly. If you'd like to join/follow you'd be very welcome. Here are the links. 😊




Wednesday, 29 August 2018

Holidays - trying to train, lilo wars, unexpected swimming costume expose and possible megalodon sightings.


Even on holiday it seems there is no rest for the wicked. Two weeks of doing bugger all is not an option. I still need to train, I have a swim four days after I get back home, and so choosing a holiday destination for me has only one real requirement so I remain in peak condition (not really…you kind of need to be in peak position in the first place, which I’m not!), and that is a body of water suitable for some serious swimming …and snorkeling and paddling and laying on a lilo (although need to master the getting on the lilo bit first, which may actually be the most challenging thing I do all holiday, and the least rewarding!).

Of course there are a couple of other things on my wish list too, like non-stop sunshine, quality time with my family and a sun lounger reserved, every morning, with my towel on it (I know already-highly unlikely).

Very early start before the crowds arrive!

Fast forward two weeks, and now having returned from my holiday, finished the mountain of laundry, printed off the photographs, been to the supermarket, collected the dog… I finally, find the time (many, many hours later) to sit down with a cup of coffee and reflect on our holiday and my original requirement/wish lists. The holiday was amazing; the sun shone, the body of water suitable for some serious swimming WAS suitable for some serious swimming, we spent lots of quality time together (mostly the kids trying to drown me for using their inflatable as an armchair without permission). Sadly the wish list ends there, as I was unable to find someone to get up at the crack of dawn to put my towel on a sunbed on my behalf. My kids offered to do it for ten pounds a day, however I feel this is borderline daylight robbery and told them politely to sod off! In addition to this, on the back of several other unexpected necessities, which came to light during the holiday, I have decided that my requirements/wish list needs expanding for all future holidays to include the following: 

1)  Absolutely no talking about aquatic livestock at any point during the holiday - Despite loving the quality time with my kids, discussions with my son over breakfast about fishes/sharks I did not love (including photos and video footage that he has provided… next time I shall consider booking somewhere with an iffy or none existent Wi-Fi connection). I must add that his breadth of knowledge, in particular about the top five deadliest sharks, including size, food preferences, map coordinates of their home, migration paths, tooth size etc., is very impressive and is really comprehensive, and although it ruined my sea swim that day, on account that I managed to convince myself that everything that moved (or didn’t move) was the size of a Megaladon, I shall try to remember to thank my dad (once we are home), for sparking such an interest in aquatic life by buying him the million page long A-Z encyclopedia of Sharks, and allowing him to stay up way beyond his bedtime, when on a sleepover, to watch back to back pre-recorded episodes of River Monsters and Deadly 60! Steve Backshall would be proud. 

2)  Prepare some pre-holiday coaching sessions on the importance of the lifeguard taking their roll very seriously – So when asking daughter to fill the roll of lifeguard whilst I swam – basically, sit on the beach (on towel provided), whilst not taking eyes off swimmer (me) whilst swimmer swims, in the very near vicinity and let the swimmer know, by any means necessary (scream, yell, run up and down the sand waving arms, do a cartwheel, whatever it takes) if any large size ocean living creature appears anywhere from the horizon to the shoreline, and if necessary get in and save swimmer if swimmer gets into difficulty because of large ocean living creature, or gets into trouble for any other reason. The whole getting in the sea idea did not appeal to daughter who offered instead to go and get help rather than save her mother (possibly whilst her mother was getting dragged off into the murky depths by her toe… of worse, eaten in situ). Twenty two minutes in, and daughter has abandoned her post already, due, she told me, to getting sea water splashing her sunglasses leaving her unable to watch me clearly (rolls eyes – I suspect that it was more likely to be the lack of internet connection this far from the hotel). I am grateful I suppose that she didn’t just up and leave without signaling to me she was off. I took her flailing arms, trying to get my attention as a sign that a toe-eating shark had rocked up and I should evacuate the water quickly. I did, without elegance or poise (obviously) to finish my swim in the safety of the pool. 

3)  Pack more practical swimwear – the kind with rock solid built in scaffolding to make it impossible to expose those non-tanned parts of the body to other holidaymakers that are, up to that point before said shocking reveal, also enjoying a quiet, uneventful swim in the pool. In brief, deciding to do a couple of impromptu lengths at speed, whilst not wearing proper swimming swimwear, is not advisable. And to offer some further advice, if you do happen to reveal body parts unexpectedly do not make a huge fuss about it. It is more likely to go unnoticed if you are quiet. Next time (not that there will be a next time) I will be more ladylike and dignified about it – in short, I will not shriek and draw the attention of every person in the nearby vicinity to myself, my inadequate swimwear and my non-tanned parts. 

4)  Buy everyone their own inflatables. – Lying on an inflatable (and damn if that isn’t the hardest thing to master), even though you bought it (albeit for the kids), does not mean you have any rights whatsoever to that inflatable. You have none. It is every mother/ child for her/himself in lilo wars. Basically a scrabble involving one child, one adult (me), a plastic cup and a book took place where sadly the inflatable took the brunt of the struggle, and becoming not so inflatable anymore, and despite my very best efforts to revive it with a plaster, I was unable to resurrect it.


R.I.P Angelica

5)  Relax - Do not get upset if you cannot swim for more than an hour because it is too hot, too sunny, too busy (in the pool), too choppy, too scary, you have a trip planned for that day. You are after all on holiday! The hardest decision should be whether you want to wear the nautical looking, sensible swimming costume for a snorkeling trip or the floral bikini (and FYI – floral swimwear is not a great idea when snorkeling on a reef. A certain almost translucent fish took an unhealthy interest in it. I am deciding that it is because it thought that the pattern on my bikini was so lifelike and that was an actual piece of fauna, rather than anything else possibly more sinister)! 




Once again, thanks for reading, and for those of you that enjoy my blogs, my book 
Open Water Woman Swims Windermere 
is available in paperback and electronically on Amazon. 

Here's the link:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Open-Water-Woman-Swims-Windermere/dp/1980614660/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1535300602&sr=8-1&keywords=open+water+woman

I also have a 'group' page on Facebook and am on Twitter and Instagram, where I post the shenanigans more regularly. If you'd like to join/follow you'd be very welcome. Here are the links. 😊







Tuesday, 31 July 2018

Close encounter of a different kind... well a tiny, tiny fish anyway!


If you had asked me before today how my fish issue was coming along, I would have said confidently not too badly, after all I have stopped flinching when one of my own limbs comes into view during a swim, and I am now able to quickly assess, without stopping, whether it is my wetsuit zip pull or a lake snake round my neck (glad to say that it’s only even been the zip pull). In truth, none of the aforementioned are an actual threat, but the point is that I have managed every swim, so far, this season feeling quite relaxed and enjoyable, and although I haven’t actually seen a real live fish in any of the lakes I’ve swum in, I do consider this to be progress! 

Skip forward to today… As Shark and I got into the lake, a fellow swimmer was getting out looking rather flustered. I regret now enquiring as to what had rattled her, as it turns out to be the sighting of a large fish. I want to take the words back before they are even out of my mouth, but I find myself bombarding her with many questions:

“How big?”- “Huge” 
“Where in the lake?” I wanted coordinates… - “Pike Corner” (of course). 
“How close was it?” -  “Close enough to see.” 

I stopped myself at this point, for it was looking likely that she could tell me of its vital statistics. I knew enough already. Now I was in two minds whether to not swim at all, but I had paid my five pounds already and I’m not sure if refunds would be administered on the back of fish sighting in a lake that has fishes in it, and also not actually seen by me, and so tentatively got in. 

It was the first non-sunny day we’ve had in ages, in fact the sky was blackening by the minute. Thunderstorms had been forecast, and as a result of the lack of sunshine, visibility in the lake wasn’t as good as usual. It took all of five strokes for the penny to drop that if visibility was low, then the fish must have been really, really close to her, but I was committed now, and getting out would make me the subject of much leg pulling, so we bravely swam on (with me sticking to Shark like glue. They always take the smaller, weaker one first – that'd be her, not me). 

The first lap was event free, and I began to relax a bit (not entirely though…). I had one possible sighting of a fish that turned out to be nothing more than some brown pondweed, but apart from that, all was good. It was the second loop where all the drama happened. I saw a handful of very small fishes out of the corner of my eye, and out of the blue one darted towards me and very unexpectedly, hit me on the side of my head. I’d like to think that is was down to the poor visibility that caused it to hit me, rather than it being an actual attack (but you just can’t rule it out as a possibility, on the back of the fact that when you enter the lake you automatically become part of the food chain), or much worse… the possibility that I am utterly irresistible to fish! 

Anyway, I don’t know who was more stunned, me or it, but I didn’t stick around long enough to find out, I legged it. Sadly this meant quite a sprint as we were at the far side of the lake, and whilst I am not above getting out at the far end in an emergency situation (I would actually consider this an emergency, however if there were to be a handbook of swimming in a lake emergency possibilities, I'm very confident it wouldn't appear), this would alert the attention to the safety crew, and I know I would never live down being rescued on the back of this, and whilst I am not above embellishing the story to make it appear that I was fighting off some kind of overly large fish (a prehistoric Megalodon?) they know me well enough to know that it would have been a tall story. I hate that they know me so well at times! So I pretty much abandoned Shark and fled the scene of the crime (it won’t be for the first time). I was a few hundred metres ahead of her when I came to my senses (that it is most unlikely that the fish will be giving chasing) and to be honest my lungs were on the cusp of combusting and there was a high chance of a hernia happening if I kept at that neck breaking speed, so I waited for Shark at the next buoy. I’d like to add that this is not because she is a nurse, but if I am going to have a medical incident then I could do with someone with lots of experience to be as close as possible.

When Shark caught me up she was under the impression that I had decided to include a sprint into my swim. I was tempted to tell her I had, however I am a shockingly bad liar; I get all flustered, and as we have been friends for a long time, she knows me well enough and would smell a rat, so I told her the real reason for my sprint. Once she had finished laughing at me (she said it was well worth the choking fit she had), she remembered that I had actually left her and was suddenly less than impressed with me. I don’t blame her, but in the same circumstances I’d do it all again. I reminded her of the size of said fish (tiny), and that I suspected her life was not in any danger as even being struck on the side of the head, at what I suspect was it’s full speed, I was without a war wound… Not even got a small mark the size of a full stop to show for it. Nothing! Nada.

Shark was confident, and with good reason, that I would be ribbed about the ‘attack’ once I got back to the shoreline, and as I was considering not mentioning it to anyone, this would not happen, however I know that Shark would not be able to contain herself, and suggested that it would be in my best interest to embellish the story a bit and tell them it was probably a lake barracuda that had attacked me (because that is so much more believable), and offered to punch me in the head to make it seem more likely (is there nothing that she wouldn’t do for me?). Now I am not one for letting the truth get in the way of a good story, however her plan is flawed on several levels. Two immediately spring to mind: 1) Shark is tiny. The whole punching thing will probably result in me getting a mark no bigger than the invisible one I have already. 2) Leon (SwimYourSwim) has promised me that there are only nice fish in this lake, like pink goldfish and lake sea horses, and so they would not believe the barracuda fib anyway, and as Leon would never lie to me about the type aquatic livestock in the lake, we would look rather foolish telling him that it was something that does not actually live here. 

I tell her I’ll think about her offer as we swim back to the shoreline, however to prevent her from executing her plan, as I am not actually convinced she would wait for the green light to do it anyway, I decide my best option is to swim back and to exit the lake at speed and make my way to the showers before her. Hopefully this will be achieved without tripping, falling over or clashing with another swimmer (all possible) along the way, meaning that Shark won’t be near enough to get a good swing at me at any point.


I have added some rain and lightening to give the photo more drama, and to give you an idea of how bad the conditions were.
The rainbow is real though.

As we approached Pike Corner I paused (I know right?) whilst Shark swam on. This was not to put some space between myself and Rocky Balboa swimming next to me, but because I was taking a moment to stop to see how much the sky had suddenly darkened further. In all of the shenanigans I hadn’t realised that it had began to rain quite heavily. There had been a weather warning for thunder, and we had been briefed before we had got in as to the procedure in case of lightening in the area (They said “if you hear the klaxon swim to the side and carefully exit the lake, helping others if necessary,” however I heard “if you hear the klaxon swim like you’re being chased and it’s every man for himself”), and then out of nowhere (well, the sky as it goes) the first flash appeared, immediately followed by the klaxon going off, making me jump and swallow a nasty mouthful of water. Once I had composed myself enough to swim, like the clappers, back to the side, I realized that I didn’t actually know where Shark was. I looked back for her, but she wasn’t there. I admit that I kept swimming whilst I was looking, but I was panicking, because who wants to go back into the water after a lightening strike to look for their swim buddy that they have carelessly misplaced? However Shark had been a little more on the ball and swifter in her response than me and was already wind sprinting towards the side… leaving me far behind. Some swim buddy she is!!!😂

I was about to give chase before I remembered that there was a promise to punch me in the chops, and to be honest it was a little like being between the devil and the deep blue sea… Swim out with her and risk a punch, or stay in the water a little longer with the possibility of being struck by lightening… Shark was waiting for me with my Swimzi when I got out, and very carefully at arms length, I took it off her. She told me that although she had initially been following my “every man for himself” philosophy, but when I didn’t get out with her she became concerned that I may actually have a concussion from the fish head butt and felt guilty about leaving me. I know this to be a big fat lie, for I know that she wants to get home in good time to be able to watch the pre-recorded episode of Poldark before Mr. Shark gets home from his cricket match, and as designated driver for the evening, if I am actually injured this would essentially put the kibosh on her plans. I consider pretending to have a bit of an ache from the impact (she did leave me in a lake after all), however don't think she would see the funny side of me coming between her and a historic period drama (😉) for a fake headache...!




Thanks for reading, and for those of you that enjoy my blogs, my book Open Water Woman Swims Windermere is now available in paperback and electronically on Amazon.

I also have a 'group' page on Facebook and am on Twitter and Instagram, where I post regular shenanigans and such like. If you'd like to join/follow you'd be very welcome. Here are the links. 😊



Wednesday, 11 July 2018

Epic Swim - Derwent Water 2018


One of the usual routes to the lakes has a huge detour in place thank to a landslide. Shark and I had already factored this into our journey to Derwent Water for the Epic swim, and set off to Windermere in plenty of time to incorporate some obligatory pre-swim refreshments (basically coffee and a scone loosely passed off as a nutritionally sound breakfast) and to get the best parking spot, or actually any parking spot – it gets really busy. Unfortunately it took us until we were nearly in Windermere itself before Shark told me that she wasn’t a hundred percent sure of the way to Derwent from there, and a frantic look on Google Maps revealed that we should have gone up the A1 (like we did last year…) avoiding the (albeit scenic) long and completely the wrong way altogether journey so far, and were some way off our destination still, meaning that time was now not on our side. Shark began blaming jetlag, having just returned from her holiday with Mr. Shark, however I have been to Amsterdam before and it’s pretty much in the same time zone as we are so I am not buying her excuse for a second. Our detour did sadly mean that something would have to give and unfortunately it was looking very likely that it was going to be our pre-swim breakfast. Using the map this time, we made haste (without breaking the speed limit) across to Derwent and consoled ourselves (made do) with the edible contents of Shark’s glove box (a third of a ClifBar and three unidentifiable objects that I suspect were once Jelly Babies, and were perfectly edible, despite being coated in fluff and a bit of tissue). 

As fortune had it, we found a parking spot straight away and in a slight state of panic we hastily got ourselves ready, before heading to the registration point and the start line. Upon registration I discovered that Shark and I were swimming in separate waves. For some reason I was in the fastest group, along with lots of elite swimmers. I have no idea how this happened, as I am not elite by any stretch of the imagination – hell, I can’t even dive in (thankfully it was a deep water start, otherwise I’d have been in even bigger trouble), and so in a bid to at least not look like a fake, I attempted to blend in by hiding amongst them and doing a few gentle stretches (my wetsuit would not allow for anything too vigorous thankfully, so this also eliminated things like those extreme yoga poses I love so much like Lord of the Dance and Upward Facing Two-Foot Staff Pose), but I had been so worried that we were late that I had asked Shark to zip up my wetsuit as soon as we had arrived, and that was 20 minutes ago. The air temperatures was around 25oc so I began contemplating undoing it before I actually started to cook, but as I had lost Shark in the sea of same colour swim caps, this would mean asking an actual athlete to redo me up, and risk being ousted as a phony once they saw the battle to get it done up again. It could also mean they ran the risk of a possible pre-swim thumb strain getting me in, and the guilt would be too much, so decided on a better plan that included pouring a bottle of cold water down the inside on my wetsuit (absolutely nothing like in a Baywatch fashion I might add).

After the safety briefing we (the rest of the fast group and me, but not Shark) were asked to swim to the starting buoy. I nearly broke my neck even before I was off the pontoon, not because it was slippy, but because the swimmer in front dropped his goggles and in my haste to get in the lake, ran into the back of him in a very unladylike fashion. Let’s just say that wetsuits touched and leave it there.

I knew I was in trouble when everybody was already overtaking me in the warm up swim, and so on the back of this, I figured that as there was absolutely no chance whatsoever, for a thousand reasons that I would never win this race, that I would place myself in front of all of the swimmers so that for the first nanosecond of the swim I could actually say that I was in the lead. Something to brag about after the swim. That was until I overheard the two swimmers near me discussing a sub forty-five minute swim and their strategy. I realized quite quickly that there was a probability that I was about to be swum over if I got in the way, and not one to be preventing someone from achieving their very fast goal, I moved my slow self to the back of the group where the chat was more about the high level of midges (of which I can boast several quite impressive bites to the neck, but none to the other exposed part of my body- my ankles) and types and sizes of fishes in this lake. A conversation I was able to share the breadth of my knowledge (I checked on Google when I entered the swim). I’m not sure whether my fellow swimmers were impressed or slightly alarmed at the lengths of extensive research I had gone to. The expression for both is very similar I think. 

After several minutes of treading water, and the obligatory pre-swim sing song (heads, shoulders, knees and toes), which had I have known about in advance would have spent time practicing my vocal ranges and gargling with salt water to help improve my tone, we were off, and all at very different speeds, mostly everyone else very fast, and me just doing my usual steady pace at the back. Having privy to the fast swimmers conversation about times I decided that my only goal was to swim fast enough to not be lapped by one of them. This meant that there was no time for faffing about, which was easy really as the water was lovely and warm, and calm, all thanks to the great weather we’ve been having, and all combined made for a great and relatively fast swim, with only one Day of the Triffids incident, involving a large piece of pond weed (probably not its botanical name) that was determined to share my swim experience by attaching itself, one way or another, to me. I did learn though that it is virtually impossible to continue to swim whilst battling to free your limbs (arm/watch) and your goggles from the stuff, and it is best, in the interest of safety to stop swimming for a second and just untangle yourself rather than attempting to detach it mid stroke, bringing myself to the attention of a very keen eyed safety kayaker, who appeared very quickly out of nowhere (honestly I’m talking Liam Heath fast) to check I was okay. 

As the finish pontoon approached, a grim reality hit me; how was I going to get out when any kneeling down on my left knee means there’s a good change that it will dislocate, leaving my very much in trouble. It hadn’t crossed my mind when we got in that it may cause me, and possibly the organisers, a problem and the last thing I wanted was to be yelling “I need an ambulance!” without even crossing the finish line. This would not be happening. I wanted a finishers medal suddenly even more than I wanted my post swim cake, and so some quick thinking was required on my part, and so without caring what I looked like, I launched myself onto the jetty stomach first, before turning over, sitting up, and then standing; all with one straight leg. I still can’t decide whether it was comedy gold or utterly genius, but one thing is for sure, I was out in one piece to take ownership of my well-deserved, rather lovely medal, and there was more cheerful news, I also wasn’t lapped! Yay!  




Derwent was such a lovely swim day out, and to celebrate our amazing swim, and to make up for this morning’s food routine going to pot thanks to Shark’s ‘jetlag’ we decided we deserved a huge slice of cake… and quickly, so hastily got dressed, which on reflection should not be attempted when you are still damp from your swim and cocooned in a Swimzi coat for modesty reasons, because you can get kind of tangled in your vest and in your panic to rectify the situation end up with the coat falling to the floor whilst not fully dressed and rather unexpectedly revealing yourself to the good people of Derwent! 

On that bombshell we quickly packed up our belongings with me, red faced from embarrassment, and Shark red faced from laughing (lack of oxygen I think, serves her right) and after consulting with Google Maps once more, headed towards home… pretty much as the crow flies this time, and after a lengthy coffee and cake stop I admit I really wouldn't have minded a Nanna nap on the way back, however I was worried that Shark was still suffering from a case of same time zone jet lag, that I put myself in charge of map reading in a bid to get home whilst there were still daylight hours to be had. No rest for the wicked I guess!  





Thanks for reading, and for those of you that enjoy my blogs, my book Open Water Woman Swims Windermere is now available in paperback and electronically on Amazon.

I also have a 'group' page on Facebook and am on Twitter and Instagram, where I post regular shenanigans and such like. If you'd like to join/follow you'd be very welcome. Here are the links. 😊





Friday, 22 June 2018

Great North Swim 2018

For me, every open water swim event must incorporate a cake stop, and therefore a recce to locate nearby cake selling shops/cafes beforehand is essential. The Great North Swim is no exception to this rule, and the pre-swim checks reveal there are several on the way and about a thousand in Windermere itself. I think it’s safe to say that Windermere has that aspect of the swim more than covered!


My well deserved finishers medal

Swim buddy has drawn the short straw and is designated driver to the two-hour drive to Windermere. This suits me well as it means that I may be able to have a recovery Nanna nap on the way home if I need it. Shark insisted on picking me up at the crack of dawn; a whole five hours before we were due to swim. She says she needs plenty of time to check my bag, to avoid any potential road closures, to get ahead of any race traffic and the extra time means there is no need to rush the journey that usually takes all of two hours… I am fine with this, once I’d got over the early start, as we had agreed before hand that we would stop along the way for coffee and cake, and I would hate to think that there was a possibility of the café underestimating the amount of fellow swimmers passing through on their was to the swim, and there being none left when we arrived. This would be a very bad thing.

As I put my carefully and neatly packed bag into the car, Shark insists that we do one last and final bag check (emptying it all out again), at which point she notices I have included the furry lined non-croc croc-like shoes that I know she hates passionately. They became an essential part of my kit bag over the winter, and I’ll admit, I have very much warmed to them, despite my initial dislike, and despite the fact that they are still very, very unattractive, and it worries me that someone else may take a shine to them, despite their uncool exterior. Shoe envy is a very real possibility and I was worried that someone may well come along whilst I was swimming and lets just say, permanently borrow them, so in a bid to make them even less attractive than they are already (and they truly are) I decide to take out, possibly the only slightly redeeming positive point of the shoes, the furry lining. Shark thinks that no one will want them and that this will not happen- ever. I think it’s safe to say that from the horrified look on her face, if I'm reading her right, she does not have shoe envy. 

I have also packed my wetsuit, with its newly acquired large hole on the shoulder (?). It’s far too late (and possibly too large) to do anything about it now. My only concern it that I may well have a lot of lake passing through it, causing a lot of unnecessary drag, thus slowing me down, or even pulling me under… It needs urgently repairing before it gets worse, and if I survive the swim I shall get someone (probably Leon at SYS) to look at it, and hope he takes pity on me and my non-existent fixing wetsuit skills and offer to mend it in exchange for cake (cake talks more than money in these situations I find), but it’ll have to do for now and as a precaution I instruct Shark to send out a fleet of kayaks to look for me if after two hours I’m not back. She says she’ll think about it, and on the back of this I am not one bit confident that I will be rescued if my wetsuit becomes a ballast tank. 

The drive to Windermere takes no time at all, and we decide not to stop for coffee until we are nearly there, just in case there is a sudden rush of traffic and, as fortune had it this became a happy coincidence, as some enormous scones were just being taken out of the oven at our chosen cafe, and as it is important to have some carbohydrates before a long swim, and as we are always up for a challenge, we buy two – to see us on! This is a good omen for the swim, for if we can take on the challenge of eating the mother of all scones and succeed, then the swim will surely be a piece of cake! 

Enjoying our pre-swim fodder!

The new venue for the Great North Swim is great, and arriving with eons of time to spare means that we are able to hunt down the post swim food stalls (as if we haven't eaten enough already!), in particular the ClifBar tent, where we were able to pretty much top up our pre-swim nutrition by working our way through all of their samples (I may actually have had several samples of the mint flavoured bars)! Once the food priority is sorted we head to look round the swim village. It’s as well organized as usual, although one piece of feedback would be to possibly make the signs for the showers very large and very obvious for those of us (me and Shark) with middle aged eyes, and feel we are above reading the site map beforehand. Sadly this meant that we went home after our swimming smelling of less than delightful, because we didn’t manage to locate them until after we were dressed. You know when your kids offer to Febreze you when you get home, it must be really bad!


Shark and I pre-swim. We look very much worse afterwards, and that's why there isn't a close up post-swim photo on here. You're welcome!

With Liam Hancock and Caitlin  McClatchey at Swimzi...
Both kind of big in swimming 😂
Filling the ClifBar camping chair after lots and lots of sampling 
The swim itself is absolutely amazing. The sun is out, the water is a warm 19.5oc, and I manage to get through it without enlarging the hole in my wetsuit, sinking (no thanks to the hole in my wetsuit), seeing any fishes, swans or lake snakes (unlike Shark, who mistakes a large pebble for a possible turtle sighting…she is very short sighted and has a very vivid imagination which probably contributed), or making contact with a.n.other swimmer, buoy or boat. Yay! The getting in bit is a bit tricky, as the bottom of the lake is pebbly, but it is a lake after all, and I am unsteady on my feet at the best of times, and true to form after several precarious steps I fall in (with a bit of a thud). I don’t bother to try and get up again, it would be an accident waiting to happen with my track record, and so I just crawl using my arms and straight legs until it is deep enough to swim properly. I would dearly like to take the credit for this genius entry style, but alas I am just copying several other clever swimmers. 

The conditions are perfect, the water is calm and clear and I am able to sight easily and manage to swim only 122m over the 5,000m I am meant to. This is a personal best for me, I am known for going far, far off-piste usually, so I am quite pleased really. I’m eager to get out quickly as I know that the time keeps ticking until you cross the line, which happens to be out of the water. This is not great when you have a history of shoddy exits, and today sadly it turns out to be my most spectacular to date. As is standard I am very disorientated, despite the earplugs, and the exit from the lake is tricky to navigate. Thankfully there are some G.N.S staff to help the swimmers get out. Regrettably I am so unsteady on my feet that the poor man wasn’t strong enough to hold me up, and in my rush to get upright and over the finish line I lose my balance again and I reach out with my other hand to steady myself on anything, or risk face planting the water; unfortunately the 'anything’ turns out to be the other helper’s backside (I just thank goodness, and I suspect he does too, that he wasn't facing the other way!). Still mortified!

After the swim I have arranged to meet Shark back near the start where we have left my beloved furry non-croc crocs (providing someone hasn't taken a shine to them and claim them for their very own) and her flip-flops. We decide that discarding them near the entrance to the swim is a great idea, however this actually turns out to be quite a bit further away from the exit than we remember, meaning that there is a bit of a walk across a pebbly area to retrieve them. Any large pebbles in the lake paled into insignificance against these small yet sharp bad boys (I shall make a note for next year), and therefore to be successfully reunited with my shoes some pretty sleek footwork is required, sadly sleek is not in my repertoire, but somehow I manage some kind of very non-pretty, non-elegant hopping/skipping manoeuvre that (I am told by an amused onlooker) is comedy gold to watch, and whilst I am convinced that Diversity will not be looking to adopt this move, or even add me to their squad/troop (whatever you call them?), it did get me there unscathed. 

To save Shark from this unpleasant experience I decide to overrule her instructions, and as I was actually wearing my shoes and carrying hers I kind of thought I would do a good deed and reunite her with her flip-flops at the finish line, however on the way back I am stopped by a very lovely lady that had recently read my book, and wants to talk all things swimming… I am torn as I am concerned that Shark will be looking for me, but then I remember that she did not take my request for a search party as seriously as I would have liked, and as the lady pats the camping chair next to her and wiggles a box of Jaffa Cakes at me,  I feel less torn (and as we know I have zero will power as far as Jaffa Cakes are concerned), and so I pull up a camping chair and talk swimming until Shark finds me after searching (barefoot) for the best part of ten minutes. 

I feel bad, but there is no point in trying to win Shark round with Jaffa Cakes as she is not a fan, and so once we are changed, in the very spacious changing rooms, I offer to buy Shark some post swim chips to make up for it. She knows I feel bad, and is milking it by also ordering a large coffee and extra sachets of ketchup. She then goes round the swim village, and I find myself offering to also buy her some ClifBars, a Swimzi water bottle and an Outdoor Swimmer hat. I figure that if she was prepared to walk over more or less hot coals (well sharp pebbles) for me for that length of time, then she deserves all of them! 


For those of you that enjoy my blogs, my book Open Water Woman Swims Windermere is now available in paperback and electronically on Amazon.

I also have a 'group' page on Facebook and am on Twitter and Instagram, where I post regular shenanigans and such like. If you'd like to join/follow you'd be very welcome. Here are the links. 😊




Thursday, 7 June 2018

No two open water swimming seasons are the same.


After an amazing winter season in the pool, including an odd dip in the lake (get me!), I was expecting that the transition to open water this season would be seamless, not enough to be able to give Keri-anne Payne a run for her money (there's the two hundred year age gap for starters...), but enough to see noticeable improvements. It wasn’t, and I don’t mind sharing with you the fact that I found it difficult, frustrating, uncomfortable and slow going, and what made it difficult to understand was that this is my fourth year of open water swimming, and every year before this I have had no problems at all, and there was no obvious reason as to why this year would be so different.

And so as things haven’t gone according to plan, and with Great North Swim just around the corner, time is not on my side, I started to look at what might be going wrong. I really needed to get to the bottom of it, and quickly (and potentially something to blame). 

Sadly holding something accountable proved to be more difficult than I thought. I thought of blaming the weather, but officially we've had the sunniest and warmest May since records began in 1910 (and you can't argue with the experts, can you?), which in turn meant that the water temperatures have been warmer too. My first swim at the beginning of May this year was a balmy 13.9oc compared to the same week last year where it was a life affirming 10.1oc. I can’t blame my wetsuit either, as I wore it all of last season without problem, and whilst I know you’re wondering if I’d piled on some timber over the winter, the answer is no (although I thoroughly deserve to, I ate so much cake). I’d followed my pre swim routine diligently, and so knew getting into the lake I was warm enough, and so couldn’t blame being cold either. I’d even wondered if there was a way in which I could legitimately blame the fish, or actually any wildlife in general (specifically my Stalker Swan) for my poor performance, but sadly my lack of love for fishes and is not enough reason to blame them either, although I would dearly love it to be.

Step in my diligent swim buddy. It was very obvious from our very many conversations that I am not one bit happy, and so she suggests that rather than moaning about it constantly, that I perhaps look a little closer to home for the actual issue. Her delivery of  “just get your sh*t together” was as blunt as it gets, but sometimes all you need is a swift metaphorical kick to galvanise you into action. 

And it did. As I don't have the luxury of time to get this sorted I needed to do as I was told, and so I contacted Leon at one of the lakes I swim at, to ask for his thoughts, opinions and some help. The following day I went to the lake, where he had arranged for one of his coaches to spend a couple of hours with me, for which I am very grateful. She watched me swimming from the side, and from the elevated position of the jetty. She then got in the water with me offering me feedback as we went. I was also videoed by my friend Karen, and so I could see for myself what was happening. They were able to identify straight away what was going on, meaning that I will have enough time before the Great North Swim to put the tweaks into practice and have a more enjoyable swim than was possible before. 

After my session at the lake, swim bud Shark and I were putting the swim world right (over post swim chip shop chips of course) and discussing a plan moving forwards when it suddenly dawned on me that whilst I have been so busy over the last few weeks concentrating on my poor performance, and then focusing on “getting my sh*t together,” one thing that I haven’t had time to focus on is any aquatic livestock that live in the lake (or swans for that matter). I have literally spent the whole month not giving them any thoughts whatsoever, and whilst I am not convinced that I am cured of my lack of love, due to the fact that I am not entirely sure how I will respond when I do come face to face with an actual real life moving fish, but I suppose one could argue that it could loosely be considered an unexpected silver lining on the back of my terrible 2018 open water season so far! 



For those of you that enjoy my blogs, my book Open Water Woman Swims Windermere is now available in paperback and electronically on Amazon.

I also have a 'group' page on Facebook and am on Twitter and Instagram, where I post regular shenanigans and such like. If you'd like to join/follow you'd be very welcome. Here are the links. 😊


Thursday, 10 May 2018

Let the 2018 open water swimming season begin!

What could be better than your first open water swim of 2018 coinciding with it being the hottest May Day Bank Holiday on record (except perhaps for my first open water swim of 2018 being somewhere very tropical with very white sands)?

The only downside to this weekend’s swimming was that swim buddy was away celebrating her birthday with family, and no, not a big birthday -that’s next year! (I am going to be in so much trouble for sharing this), but Shark likes a large celebration every year, regardless of age, hence the weekend away. Historically the water temperatures aren’t usually as favourable as they are this year, and our first dip back in the lake after the winter is usually the week after the Bank Holiday. Despite her being away I didn’t want to miss the fact that the water temperature was likely to be higher than usual, and so making the most of the opportunity, and so in the absence of Shark, and for safety reasons, I recruited a fellow squad member, Richard, to come with me (well actually in truth, he was going anyway). I just told him that it was just for a bit of encouragement on the way round etc., and I bribed him with the promise of coffee after as a thank you. To be honest I was expecting him to counter with the suggestion of cake thrown in, but he didn’t. He is a far cheaper swim buddy than Shark!

What I didn’t tell him (I was worried he’d say no if he knew in advance) was that I hadn’t tried on my wetsuit yet and that there may be a struggle to get my very inflexible self into it, requiring his (and possibly others) support (as in physical, not just standing near me cheering and offering words of encouragement!), brute strength and possibly some kind of implement (whatever works: shoe horn, wrench, crowbar) to get me in.

The lake looked glorious, and at 13.8oc, which compared to this time last year when I got in (10.1oc), was pretty much considered warm in my mind, and if wetsuits weren’t compulsory I may have considered getting in without, but they are, and so back to the difficult job in hand, which turned out to be less traumatic than I thought, that was until I was reminded that in order for it to be fully functioning I needed it to be not only on, but on and zipped up… Knew it was too good to be true! Step in my new, temporary swim buddy, who I might add made such a song and dance before he had even got hold of the zip, muttering he may “need the strength of an ox” but I was optimistic that all would be well, and it was, with what I would consider a bit of overacting from him, it was on, done up and with the added bonus that I could not only still move, but I could also breath (provided I didn’t do it too deeply).

Reunited once more with my Swimzi coat and my nemesis swans!

Getting myself acclimatized to the water was fine; it was the foggy goggle issue that I had that was not fine. It was not fine because I couldn’t see that swim buddy had set off and was swimming, very fast, off into the blue yonder (without a backwards glance). I also couldn’t also see the fellow swimmer next to me that I took a swipe out of (accidentally), and nor could I see the buoy that I think I was swimming towards.

In previous swim seasons I would have been delighted with foggy goggles, after all if you can’t see it, then it simply isn’t there as far a aquatic livestock go, however this year I am determined to overcome my fear of anything in the water, moving or non-moving - this includes my own limbs and that of those around me, ropes attached to buoys, the bottom, plants, twigs and so on, and so to rid myself of my fear I need to actually be able to see what was in the water, however today it took several frustrating stops to de-mist them whilst trying to stay afloat before they were fit for purpose again, by which time I noticed that a couple of the safety crew were circling me with their radios at the ready. I gave them a thumbs up, because as much as I do love ride on a jet ski (well I went on one once twenty years ago and loved it), I don’t fancy them getting it out in a rescue attempt because of my goggle issues. Shark would never let me live it down.

All this faffing about with my goggles had taken quite some time. And by the time I was organized and fog-free my temporary swim buddy was nowhere to be seen (even in the absence of fog). I would like to point out in the interest of honesty, that I didn’t actually have a cat in hells chance of keeping up with him, and so set off at my own pace knowing that he was probably going to lap me at some point.

My first lap round I would have had the biggest grin on my face if it weren’t for the fact that I know that smiling dislodges my goggles. It felt great being back in, AND I feel I’d made a small improvement in my progress as I was only startle three times (believe me when I say this is progress) thanks to unexpectedly seeing the bottom of the lake, a fellow swimmer and a ray of sunlight, which I feel deserves a pat on the back, or at the very least some celebratory cake afterwards.

On my second lap round as I approached the first buoy I was asked by the safety crew to stop as the jet ski was out on the lake taking a fellow swimmer back to the shoreline (he was fine, had got cold and had asked the safety crew for help). During this time I was forced to tread water (well it was that or drown!?!) and whilst we were being corralled into one area for safety, I decided to use the opportunity to actually look under the water, and I mean really look to see what was there, so I positioned myself in the middle of a few other swimmers (just in case…) and put my head under the water. Only for a few seconds, but enough to convince me that there were no man-eating minnows, in fact there were nothing more than some plants dappled with sunlight to be honest, looked quite pretty and not dangerous at all.

Several brave minutes of observing the subaquatic terrain without incident I was feeling very pleased with myself and more relaxed and wondering what all the fuss I was making for nothing, when out of the corner of my eye I spotted a thin black creature right next to me. How had I not seen a lake snake coming? There was quite a few swimmers waiting by the buoy by now, and if I made a fuss I was either going to scaremonger everyone from fleeing the area, and possible into the path of the jet ski or look a complete idiot if I made a fuss meaning the safety crew may think I was in trouble (not sure I’d live down having to be rescued due to being a scaredy cat either), especially when after the initial shock I realized that it was not a lake snake after all, but was the cord from the back of my own wetsuit that had come away from the Velcro (my temporary swim buddy is so responsible for this). Confirming that there is still work to do in the bravery department.

The final lap was thankfully uneventful, and I even managed to get out without breaking my neck, only to find no sign of my temporary swim buddy. I didn’t remember over taking him, but I must have done, as unbelievable as this sounds, as he wasn’t out on the shoreline. I was very surprised, and actually delighted if this was the case. I got changed (carefully and with a lot of effort) only to find that he was still not out, I would have been worried had someone not spotted him going round the starter buoy again, for what I now know to be the start of his fifth lap. I was sure we had said three, but as I had already taken off my wetsuit, wild horses would get me back in it again, and so I made myself useful by going to get us some coffee. I might add that the sneaky slice of cake I had whilst he was busy swimming his extra two lengths was delicious too, and probably the best cake I’ve ever had!

After I had devoured my well deserved slice of cake I though my swim buddy would probably like some too, after all, despite leaving me, and who could blame him, after all he was probably traumatised after having to zip me in my wetsuit, and I did faff about for an age trying to de-fog my goggles, and he’ll be thanking his lucky stars he wasn’t there to witness me wrestling a lake snake, he did come with me in the first place so I wasn’t on my own, for which I am very grateful. Unfortunately for him it seems that it wasn’t just me that thought it was enjoying the cake, but every other swimmer getting out sooner than my swim buddy did too, and by the time I got to the front of the food queue to get him a slice, there was none left, and so sadly he had to make do instead with a pre-wrapped flapjack to go with his coffee, and bless him, he even offered to share the flapjack with me. I declined, telling him he needed the extra calories after all he had swam an extra two laps of the lake. I decided not to tell him was that I had eaten a large slice of cake already, and really I should have got him one too at the same time. No, I decided that my best option, just in case I may need to ask him again to be my temporary swim buddy, would be to keep my mouth shut. And that's exactly what I did!


For those of you that enjoy my blogs, my book Open Water Woman Swims Windermere is now available in paperback and electronically at:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Open-Water-Woman-Swims-Windermere-ebook/dp/B079ZB1775/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1523686408&sr=8-1

I also have a 'group' page on Facebook and am on Twitter and Instagram, where I post regular shenanigans and such like. If you'd like to join/follow you'd be very welcome. Here are the links. 😊

 @Openwaterwoman_
Open Water Woman