Posted in: 08-2009

Give Her an Inch and She Takes a Mile

31.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Races   |  (0) comments

Britta Kamrau took a slight lead over three Olympic 10K medalists and won the 1-mile Great Scottish Swim in 18:56 seconds. Larisa Ilchenko was second in 18:58 and Keri-Anne Payne was third in 19:01.

Daniil Serebrennikov of Russia, Jan Wolfgarten of Germany and David Carry of Scotland finished 1-2-3 on the men's side.

Britta's victory over a tough field in Scotland should give her a lot of confidence heading into the RCP Tiburon Mile in San Francisco to be held on September 13th.

Rowdy Gaines and John Naber give a tune-up to the 2008 RCP Tiburon Mile, site of Britta's US$10,000 winner-take-all victory.  Click here to see.

Swimming in Nearly his Backyard

31.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Races   |  (0) comments

Professional marathon swimmers from Azerbaijan, Brazil, Bulgaria, Chile, Croatia, Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Great Britain, Mexico, New Zealand, Russia, South Africa, Switzerland and the USA will compete in the NYC Pro Swim this weekend on September 6th.

While the world's best swimmers are flying into New York from all over the world for the race, 2009 World Swimming Championship bronze medalist Fran Crippen (shown on left) is close enough to drive from home. He will renew his rivalry with fellow medalists Thomas Lurz of Germany (middle) and fellow American Andrew Gemmell (right) in what will undoubtedly be another extremely close race.

With currents expected to run at least 2 knots, both with and against, the athletes at different points along the course, we forecast a lot of lead changes throughout the race, especially when the swimmers are swimming near the seawall where fans will be able to cheer their favorite swimmers on from only meters away.

On race day this coming Sunday, it will be Brazilian Day in New York City, so perhaps the three Brazilian representatives (Poliana Okimoto, Ana Marcela Cunha and Allan Do Carmo) will have some additional countrymen to cheer them on?

Thomas Lurz and Poliana Okimoto Circle Copenhagen for Victory

30.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Races   |  (0) comments

Thomas Lurz continued his winning streak in the Copenhagen 10K pro swim with a closely fought battle against Petar Stoychev of Bulgaria and Sergai Bolshakov of Russia; the respective times were 1:57:40 vs. 1:57.43 vs. 1:57.44. Poliana Okimoto beat Brazilian teammate Ana Marcela Cunha in a time of 2:05.17 to 2:05.29 with Angela Maurer of Germany third in 2:05.30. The swimmers plan to continue their battles next week in New York City.

Salford Online posted a number of great interviews with some of the world's best open water swimmers:

Thomas Lurz said, "I won the race, and I am very happy with the result. 10K race is always very hard, and the water really cold. So I am very glad to win the race, and was perfect for me. My special tactic was until 8K to be the pack and try to save power and draft behind the people. And after the last lap, I wanted to leave the group and then I did this, and it worked very good for me."

"[Swimming] around [Copenhagen] like this is the perfect idea. I think it the future of open water swimming, because all spectators can look the whole race, and walk with it and it is a nice idea. And I think in the future there should be more races like this."

"I was really focused on the race, so during the race I couldn't see the nice houses and buildings, but the day before in training. I watched the city and of course it really nice and perhaps I will come and visit for holiday."

English Channel record holder Petar Stoychev said, "I just wanted to be in the back of the group and try to save some energy for the end. I got a little bit hard time with the jellyfishes. I was feeling comfortable all the time in race, and in the end I was sure that I would be in the top 3. So I did it, and I am really happy with the result."

"First of all I got a chance to swim in the downtown of the city, and in very clean water, which was a really surprise for me. Secondly you have people all around, and it is very easy for the spectators to observe the race and to see swimmers during the 10K race."

World champion Angela Maurer said, "I was just a little bit afraid of the cold water. I had no special tactic, just to swim and see how I felt for the last 400 meters, but today I was little bit tired in the end, so I lost my second position and got the third position. But it was okay for me."

An Incredible Summer of Racing by Rostislav Vitek

30.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Swimmers   |  (0) comments

What a summer it has been for Rostislav Vitek (shown on left). After winning the 36K Maratona Del Golfo Capri-Napoli, finishing third in the 57K Maratón Acuática Internacional Santa Fe - Coronda, and finishing 8th in the World Swimming Championship 25K, he swam the fourth best time in history in the English Channel.

Rostislav recently won both the 5K and 20K races of Czech Open Water Swimming Championships in Lipno, securing his tenth title over the last 12 years. He will wrap up the Czech Cup for the sixth time due to his 19 victories in 22 races on the Czech Open Water Series this year.

In the 5K national championship, the 33-year-old Rostislav closely won over Jakub Fichtl who competed in the 5K and 10K races at the 2009 World Swimming Championships and Jan Posmourny.

He won over Libor Smolka (shown on left) in the 20K race.

On the women's side, Silva Rybarova won her first national title in the 5K. But 15-year-old Lenka Sterbova won in the 20K after her mother, also named Lenka Sterbova, won the 20K title in 2008 at the age of 36.

In another comeback story, the eighth-place 5K finisher was 41-year-old Michael Drozd who won FINA World Cup marathon swims in the 40K Lac St-Jean and 40K Lac Memphremagog race in 1997, the 88K Parana swim in 1996, was second in the 26K Swim Across The Sound (USA) and third in the 36K Atlantic City (Marathon in 1997.

The top 5 men in the 20K Czech Championships were:

1. Rostislav VÍTEK, 4:13:47.2
2. Libor SMOLKA, 4:28:33.1
3. Jan POŠMOURNÝ, 4:35:54.4
4. Josef KUČERA, 4:44:41.1
5. Michael MRŮZEK, 4:52:35.6

The top 5 women in the 20K Czech Championships were:

1. Lenka ŠTĚRBOVÁ, 5:01:39.5
2. Hana NOVÁKOVÁ, 5:03:33.1
3. Tereza MRŮZKOVÁ, 5:20:52.7
4. Helena GILIKOVÁ, 5:42:00.7
5. Tereza SKUHROVÁ, 5:50:35.1

The top 5 men in the 5K Czech Championships were:

1. Rostislav VÍTEK, 1:01:21.9
2. Jakub FICHTL, 1:01:24.2
3. Jan POŠMOURNÝ, 1:01:27.5
4. Libor SMOLKA, 1:04:29.0
5. Adam VILČKO, 1:07:09.3

The top 5 women in the 5K Czech Championships were:

1. Silvie RYBÁŘOVÁ, 1:08:49.6
2. Lenka ŠTĚRBOVÁ (daughter), 1:12:56.8
3. Magda OKURKOVÁ, 1:13:28.7
4. Hana KŘEMENOVÁ, 1:15:02.1
5. Lenka ŠTĚRBOVÁ (mother), 1:17:15.1

Swimming in Moonshine

30.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Events   |  (0) comments

The first-year event, Swimmin' in Moonshine in beautiful Table Rock Lake in Missouri, offered two unique benefits to its competitors:

(1) every open water swimmer received a Long Distance Training Plan upon registration by former national NCAA Division II distance freestyle champion Jason Owen (shown above) and

(2) the winner received a kayak - always useful for open water swimmers.

Southwest Missouri's Swimmin' in Moonshine event was a fundraiser for the James River Basin Partnership to help improve the area's lakes, rivers, streams and springs. "These funds will be earmarked for watershed festivals to teach our youth about water quality," said race director Holly Neill.

And the winner has a plan and a kayak.

The 2-mile winner was Thomas Bullock of Missouri State University in 42:38.  The 1-mile winner was Ian Harms in 24:14 and the 500-yard winner was Joel Hereth in 8:07.

Come Swim in a World Record Attempt

29.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Events   |  (0) comments

Up to 250 people will take part in the Guinness Book of World Record attempt on September 9th in Camlough Lake in Newry, Northern Ireland to break the existing open water swimming relay record of 480 kilometers (298 miles). The relay members plans to swim 500 kilometers (310 miles), but may go futher if the circumstances (swimmers and conditions) permit.

The Guinness World Record Relay Open Water Swim attempt will be made in a GPS-certified loop course of 750 meters with only one swimmer and a support kayak in the water at one time. When one swimmer completes his or her distance, there is a relay exchange and the next person starts in a continuous rotation until 500 kilometers – or beyond – is reached.

The Swim will continue non-stop for 24 hours per day with an estimated time duration of 9-10 days depending on the weather conditions. The organizers are counting on the stronger swimmers to swim 3K an hour and slower swimmers to average 1.5K per 40 minutes in order to reach their goal.

Registration for this attempt is open to all Irish and non-Irish swimmers. Local swimmers can register on September 1st and others outside the local area can email their interest to .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). The closing registration date for the Guinness World Record attempt in the category of Swimming in Relay, Open Water - Greatest Distance is September 5th.

Photo above shows Sean Mallon who participated in a 13:04 English Channel relay earlier this year together with Padraig Mallon and Aoiffe Mc Court who both came up with this world record idea.

Good luck to all.

What’s Governors Island (NYC Pro Swim)?

29.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Races   |  (0) comments

The New Yorker produced a video on Governors Island where the NYC Pro Swim will be held on September 6th.

The video shows where the world's fastest open water swimmers will compete, including at least 4 Olympic 10K Marathon Swim medalists and 6 2009 World Swimming Championship medalists.

Blazing an Open Water Trail in Alaska

28.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Solo Challenges   |  (0) comments

A week after swimming her third Pennock Island Challenge in Alaska, 45-year-old Claudia Rose of the La Jolla Cove Swim Club and a member of Team Aquaphor, swam an unprecedented 4 hours and 36 minute swim across the Sitka Sound from Kruzof Island to Halibut Point in Alaskain the 54˚F (12.2˚C) waters.

The Catalina Channel swimmer and observer, known for helping new swimmers in the open water, is often called a marine mammal magnet for the number and types of marine wildlife that show up when she is out for a swim. She relishes on being an open water adventurer.

Her adventures include an encounter with a killer whale in the Pennock Island Challenge, but her local escort boat captain with a wealth of knowlege about the Sitka Sound told her that she might encounter bears on this particular swim. "[Bears on an open water swim] had not crossed my mind," Claudio remarked. But the bears steered clear of her path this time.

While Claudia says she is "much more interested in things people have not done," her success has now lead to talk of a new open water swim in the Sitka Sound.

Living Large in Lakes

28.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: History   |  (0) comments

Open water swimmers face sharks in Australia, jellyfish in the English and Irish Channels ... and alligators in the USA and China. 

The alligators in the southern USA tend to be larger than their smaller cousins in the Yangtze River in China. How big? Go to http://www.10kswimmer.com/2009/08/large-lake-creaturesif-youre-not-lucky.html to see a huge critter from Lake Weiss north of Birmingham, Alabama.

When the 28-foot (8.5-meter) alligator was caught by Alabama Parks and Wildlife game wardens, it had an 11-foot (3.3-meter) mature stag deer in its mouth.

From what we understand, there hasn't been an alligator this size sighted yet in the Acuatica 1K Swim in Florida's Lake Cane.

Swimming Faster in Mississippi

28.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Races   |  (0) comments

Eagle Lake in Warren County, on the western side of the state of Mississippi will hold the first Mississippi Open Water Swim Championship this weekend.

Hosted by the Vicksburg Swim Association, the event features a 0.25-, 0.5- and 1-mile swims.

Sheri Wallace, the race director, told the Vicksburg Post, "Plenty of safety precautions are being taken in a lake full of various critters: alligators, snakes, turtles and fish, to name a few. It’s very adventurous. It’s definitely more difficult than swimming laps in a pool. Anything dangerous, wildlife is going to take care of it. But that’s part of the adventure. We joked with the kids that that it might make them swim faster."

Official with river rescue crews from the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks, will be on hand to assist the event's safety personnel.

I Coulda Been A Contender

27.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Swimmers   |  (0) comments

Alex Kostich, one of the 2008 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year candidates, talked about open water swimming on the Morning Swim Show (a free online streaming TV format from Swimming World Magazine) while giving plugs to his employer's movies and blueseventy.

Photo of Alex at the Pacific Open Water Challenge in Long Beach, California by Super Kidz Photo.

Nominate Your Favorite Swim for the World’s Top 100 List

27.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Events   |  (0) comments

We are currently preparing our annual list of the World's Top 100 Open Water Swims.

If you have a favorite open water swim that is not on last year's list, send an email to .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) or post your comments below.

Nominate any outstanding short swims, long swims, solo swims, mass participation swims, charity swims, cold-water swims, tropical swims, new swims or traditional swims with the information noted below for the benefit of our growing global community.

Your opinions are greatly appreciated.

For reference purposes, here is last year's list with swims from England, Turkey, Australia, USA, Spain, Netherland Antilles, Bermuda, U.S. Virgin Islands, Brazil, Denmark, Argentina, Mexico, Italy, Portugal, Macedonia, Jarak-Serbia , Croatia, Canada, Bulgaria, China, United Arab Emirates, Hong Kong, Fiji, Ireland, the Netherlands, Vanuatu, New Zealand, Trinidad & Tobago, Cayman Islands, Japan, Jersey, Indonesia, South Africa, Malta, Brazil, Greece, Russia, Hungary, Belgium, Switzerland, Taiwan, South Africa, Sweden and Israel.

The 2008 World's Top 100 Open Water Swims were as follows:

1. Sun Moon Lake International Swimming Carnival
• Location: Sun Moon Lake (Jih Yueh Tan in Taiwanese) in central Taiwan.
• Course: A mass participation cross-lake swim with up to 22,000 participants.
• Distance: 3.3 kilometers.
• Date: August.
• Description: The world’s largest mass participation open water swimming event has different start groups for individuals of all ages and abilities.
• Additional Information: The attracts between 18,500 and 22,000 (maximum limit) swimmers to a beautifully tranquil lake at 760 meters (2,493 feet) in altitude, including an increasing number of foreign athletes.

2. Midmar Mile
• Location: Midmar Damin Kwazulu Natal in South Africa (one-hour drive from Durban).
• Course: Straight point-to-point swim across Midmar Dam.
• Distance: 1 mile.
• Date: Second Sunday weekend in February.
• Description: The world’s largest competitive open water swimming event also has an associated a series of qualification swims throughout South Africa.
• Additional Information: Attracts swimmers of all ages and abilities, ranging from Olympic medalists to swimmers between the ages of 5 and 83. The event has recently attracted more than 17,000 entrants, a huge increase from the inaugural event in 1974 when 153 swimmers raced across the dam for the first time. Due to the large number of entrants, the swimmers are separated into 8 different races; each race is divided into 5 batches separated by 3-minute intervals; each batch wears a different colored cap to distinguish their batch. A chip timing system was introduced in 2008 to record accurate times for each participant.

3. Vansbrosimningen
• Location: Vansbro in central Sweden
• Course: River swim under the six bridges of Vansbro.
• Distance: 1K, 1.5K, 3 kilometers
• Date: July.
• Description: Over 9,700 swimmers participate in the Vansbrosimningen, Europe's largest open water swim with a separate race for women (the 1K Tjeisimmet race for women only).
• Additional Information: Envisioned in 1950 with 10 swimmers in the first attempt, Vansbrosimningen became a national race in 1956 and has been growing ever since, especially when the "En Svensk Klassiker" was added in 1972. Over the past 53 years, one woman, Margareta Rylander, was the fastest overall finisher.

4. Sea of Galilee Swim
• Location: Sea of Galilee in Israel.
• Course: A challenging and extremely popular channel swim with over 750 support boats
• Distance: 4 kilometers.
• Date: October.
• Description: A mass participation event, the largest in the Middle East, that can get rough if winds come up.
• Additional Information: Attracts over 6,000 swimmers of all ages and abilities, an incredible 0.1% of the entire population in Israel. The swim was first held in 1944, two years before Israel was formed, and has continued nearly uninterrupted ever since.

5. Great North Swim
• Location: picturesque Lake Windermere, the largest lake in England, in the Lake District.
• Course: a 1-mile in-and-out-and-in course in a flat, scenic, but cold, lake.
• Distance: 1 mile
• Date: September.
• Description: A very competitive race with several Olympic swimmers as well as the largest mass participation open water swim in Great Britain. Separate start for elite swimmers. Race requires swimmers to exit the water at the halfway mark for a run over timing mats in order to entertain the television audience.
• Additional Information: A 2-day open water swimming extravaganza that will draw up to 5,000 in its second year. Wetsuits are acceptable.

6. Bosphorus International Swim
• Location: Istanbul Strait that connects the Black Sea with the Sea of Marmara in Turkey.
• Course: From Meis to Kas in a narrow channel.
• Distance: 7.1 kilometers
• Date: July.
• Description: Organized by the National Olympic Committee of Turkey and started in 1989 with 68 swimmers, the Bosphorus has recently grown to 4,892 swimmers from dozens of countries.
• Additional Information: Bosphorus is the world’s most narrow strait used for international navigation and enables participants to claim they swam between Asia and Europe.

7. Lorne Pier-to-Pub Swim
• Location: Lorne, Australia.
• Course: Fast pier-to-beach swim.
• Distance: 1.2 kilometers.
• Date: January.
• Description: Mixed field of swimmers with an average time of 22 minutes.
• Additional Information: Started as a challenge between lifeguards in 1981 when 100 people entered the first race. The race is now capped at 4,300 participants and is known as a very successful charity event.

8. Rottnest Channel Swim
• Location: From Cottesloe Beach to Rottnest Island, near Perth, in Western Australia.
• Course: A challenging and extremely popular channel swim with over 750 support boats.
• Distance: 19.2 kilometers.
• Date: February.
• Description: Strong currents, abundant marine life, water temperature averages 21-22°C (69.8-71.6°F)
• Additional Information: Attracts swimmers between the ages of 14 to 72. The Rottnest Channel Swim informally began in 1987 when four men in their forties, sustained by water and bread, swam the channel. The following year, 12 people made the swim. By 2006, an online entry process was introduced where the number of entries for 2- and 4-person teams and solo swimmers was open for 7 days, attracting 3,910 entries. An electronic random ballot was then conducted to determine which 2,300 swimmers would participate. Solo swimmers receive an automatic entry; solo entries close on November 30th. Entries open the first working day in November and are only open for 7 days.

9. Cole Classic
• Location: Manly Beach in Australia.
• Course: Ocean course.
• Distance: 1-kilometer Novice Challenge and 2 kilometers.
• Date: January.
• Description: Started in 1983 with 101 swimmers with the Waikiki Roughwater Swim as an initial inspiration, the Cole Classic has grown to nearly 3,000 swimmers.
• Additional Information: Also an online fundraising opportunity through EveryDay Hero.

10. La Jolla Rough Water Swim
• Location: La Jolla Cove in La Jolla, California, U.S.A., just north of San Diego.
• Course: Beach start and finish in and around the cold-water La Jolla Cove, which is a natural amphitheater for ocean swims.
• Distance: 250 yards, 1 mile and the 3-mile Gatorman Swim.
• Date: September.
• Description: Multi-distance event where many of the most accomplished open water swimmers from across the western American states compete. Marine life and kelp are abundant. Water clarity is among the best along the West Coast. Water temperature can be in the low 60°F’s.
• Additional Information: Started in 1916, it is billed as America’s Premier Rough Water Swim and nicknamed The Big Wet One. The race began in 1916 when 7 men swam 1.7 miles in the beautiful La Jolla Cove. By 1925, 8 men and 11 women swam the race. By 1950, 105 swimmers entered. In 1984, over 1,000 swimmers entered. In 2008, 2,297 swimmers participated, but since 1999, a limit was placed on the number of swimmers in order to maintain the high standards of the organizing committee.

11. Descenso a Nado de la Ria de Navia (Navia’s Downstream Swim)
• Location: River Navia in Spain.
• Course: Swim downstream in a picturesque river.
• Distance: 1.1 kilometers (under 12 years old), 1.7 kilometers (13-15 years old), 3 kilometers (women) and 5 kilometers (men)
• Date: August.
• Description: Started in 1958 when 14 swimmers swam 1 kilometer in a coastal village in Asturias, Galicia in northern Spain.
• Additional Information: Also serves as an official leg of the LEN Open Water Swimming Cup that attracts the top swimmers throughout Europe.

12. Xstrata Nickel Swim Thru Perth
• Location: Perth, Australia.
• Course: Picturesque Swam River, finishing in Matilda Bay.
• Distance: 2.2 kilometers and 4K kilometers.
• Date: January.
• Description: A great community event that attracts a wide mix of swimmers of all abilities and ages ranging from 10 to 83 years old.
• Additional Information: Oldest open water swimming race in Australia with over a 90-year history that serves as a fund-raiser to the Paraplegic-Quadriplegic Association of Western Australia.

13. Bonaire EcoSwim
• Location: Dutch Caribbean Island of Bonaire in the Netherland Antilles, 50 miles north of Venezuela, 30 miles from Curacao and 86 miles east of Aruba, outside of the hurricane belt.
• Course: start and finish at Captain Don's Habitat dock, along the coast of Bonaire. Water stops are available for the 5 kilometer and 10 kilometer races.
• Distance: Kid’s pier-to-pier swim, 1 kilometer (with and without fins), 2 kilometers x 2-person relay, 3 kilometers (with and without fins), 5 kilometers and 10 kilometers swims.
• Date: December.
• Description: Swim over pristine coral reefs amid beautiful marine life in crystal-clear warm waters.
• Additional Information: Scuba Diving Magazine (January 2008 issue) rated Bonaire #1 as the world’s Top Dive Destination and Top Marine Life.

14. Manhattan Island Marathon Swim
• Location: New York City, U.S.A.
• Course: Complete counter-clockwise circumnavigation of the island of Manhattan Island, starting and finishing near Wall Street in view of the Statue of Liberty.
• Distance: 28.5 miles.
• Date: June or July
• Description: Field is limited to 25 solo swimmers and 18 relay teams that start and finish at Battery Park City. Fields sells out in less than 45 minutes. Race first held in 1927. Substantial surface chop and strong tidal pull are possible. Water temperature varies between (17-19°C (64-67°F). Course may also include random jetsam and flotsam. A Qualifying Swim must be completed.
• Additional Information: This is the premier event of the Manhattan Island Foundation that also conducts 8 other open water events and has attracted nearly 10,000 participants in more than 110 events, including the 1.3-mile Great Hudson River Swim in May, the new 1.2-mile Liberty Island Swim in June, the 2-mile Park to Park Swim in June, the 2-mile Governors Island Swim in September, the 1.5-kilometer Riverside Park Tune Up Swim in July, the 1-kilometer Brooklyn Bridge Swim in September that always sells out, 5.85-mile Little Red Lighthouse Swim in September, and the 17.5-mile Ederle Swim in October that always sells out, the Manhattan 10K Pro Challenge in September, and the FINA 10K Marathon Swimming World Cup in September that offers prize money as part of the global FINA World Cup circuit.

15. Bermuda Round the Sound Swim
• Location: Harrington Sound in Bermuda, 650 miles east of North Carolina.
• Course: Finish at Palmetto Gardens in Palmetto Bay.
• Distance: 0.8 kilometers, 2 kilometers, 4 kilometers, 7.5 kilometers and 10 kilometers races.
• Date: October.
• Description: Swim over pristine coral reefs amid beautiful marine life in crystal-clear warm waters.
• Additional Information: Nearly 200 swimmers from 19 U.S. states and several countries swim along astoundingly beautiful coastline. Flights are less than 2 hours from New York. Event includes fun pre-race swims.

16. Great Channel Swim
• Location: channel between England and France with the narrowest point being in the Strait of Dover between Dover, England and Calais, France.
• Course: a relatively narrow international channel with strong, but manageable, currents.
• Distance: 34 kilometers (21 miles).
• Date: Window of opportunity begins August 19th with 14 of the world’s best marathon swimmers (8 men + 6 women) and charity relays.
• Description: A competitive race with £10,000 to the winner. Similar to the famous professional English Channel races of the 1950’s with modern technologies (e.g., GPS, mobile telephones, AIS transmitters).
• Additional Information: Considered to be one of the world’s most iconic venues for endurance sports. NOTE: Canceled for 2009.

17. English Channel
• Location: channel between England and France with the narrowest point being in the Strait of Dover between Dover, England and Calais, France.
• Course: a relatively narrow international channel with strong, but manageable, currents.
• Distance: 34 kilometers (21 miles).
• Date: Solo and relay swims generally attempted between June and October.
• Description: the world’s most famous channel crossing for swimmers with nearly 1,000 successful swimmers to date.
• Additional Information: Considered to be the standard for channel crossing with the rules and traditions with significantly influence in the global open water swimming community. Most famous channel swim crossing in the world with two recognized governing bodies, Channel Swimming & Piloting Federation and the Channel Swimming Association.

18. Tsugaru Channel
• Location: Deep-water channel between Honshu, the main island of Japan where Tokyo is located, and Hokkaido, the northernmost island of Japan.
• Course: A narrow international channel that connects the Sea of Japan with the Pacific Ocean.
• Distance: 19.5 kilometers between Tappi Misaki in Honshu and Shirakami Misaki in Hokkaido.
• Date: Solo and relay swims generally attempted during July or August.
• Description: Swimmers are carried long distances due to the extraordinarily strong currents flowing from the Sea of Japan to the Pacific Ocean. Swimmers face large blooms of squid during the night.
• Additional Information: Deep-water channel with patches of cold water where many oil tankers from the Middle East travel through to the West Coast of the U.S. The Seikan Tunnel was built below the channel where bullet trains from Tokyo travel to Hokkaido. First crossed in 1990.

19. Beach-to-Beach Power Swim
• Location: Maho/Cinnamon/Trunk/Hawksnest on St. John in U.S. Virgin Islands.
• Course: 3 separate courses starting from the same beach.1-mile swim to Cinnamon Bay, 2.25-mile swim to Trunk Bay or 3.5-mile swim to Hawksnest Bay.
• Distance: 1 mile, 2¼ miles and 3½ mile.
• Date: May.
• Description: Swimmers compete as an individual or as part of a 3-person team.Some swimmers also compete in the "assisted" category using snorkel and/or fins.
• Additional Information: Swimmers compete as an individual or as part of a 3-person team. Additional Information: About 165 swimmers are hosted by the Friends of Virgin Islands National Park in a growing tradition on St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

20. St. Croix Coral Reef Swim
• Location: St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands.
• Course: From Buck Island, an underwater coral reef park, to The Buccaneer, a luxury destination resort on St. Croix’s east end.
• Distance: 2-mile and 5-mile swims.
• Date: October.
• Description: Spectacular blue water is home to the largest island barrier coral reef in the Caribbean, endangered fish species, starfish and many green and hawksbill sea turtles.
• Additional Information: Described by many participants as a fantastic swim with the most pristine water they have ever seen. Proceeds are donated to The Nature Conservancy.

21. Maratona Aquática Internacional de Santos (International Aquatic Marathon of Saints)
• Location: Santos, Brazil.
• Course: Ocean course with occasionally rough water off Boqueiro Beach of Santos.
• Distance: 1 kilometer, 2 kilometers, 4 kilometers and 10 kilometers.
• Date: January.
• Description: Very competitive professional marathon swim that attracts top swimmers from around the world to the FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup race which is preceded by very large 1-kilometer, 2-kilometer and 4-kilometer races.
• Additional Information: Offers US$20,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup circuit. 84 swimmers from 15 countries took part in 2008.

22. FINA 10KM Open Water Swimming World Cup in Cancun
• Location: Cancun Bay, Mexico.
• Course: Tropical ocean course with occasionally rough water.
• Distance: 10 kilometers.
• Date: September.
• Description: Start near the Oasis Viva Beach Cancun with four 2.5-kilometer loops. A very competitive marathon swim that attracts top swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$20,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA pro tour. Only swimmers from recognized National Federations affiliated with FINA are eligible to participate. Entry forms must be signed by appropriate National Federation executive.

23. Round Christiansborg Swim
• Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
• Course: Five 2-kilometer loops in Fredericksholm’s Canal around the island that houses the palace of the Danish Parliament.
• Distance: 10 kilometers.
• Date: August.
• Description: Popular Danish swim for amateurs and a new FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup event with US$11,000 in prize money.
• Additional Information: Swimmers will swim through canals alongside Holmen Church, the Danish Parliament, the Danish Ministry of Culture, royal riding stables and near the central shopping area of Copenhagen. Amateurs swim in the morning and the pro swimmers start the FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup race in the afternoon. Water temperature is between 64-72°F (18-22°C).

24. Maratón Acuático Rio Coronda
• Location: Santa Fe, Argentina.
• Course: Swim down the River Coronda with many currents and eddies.
• Distance: 57 kilometers.
• Date: February.
• Description: A very competitive and tactical race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$11,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit.

25. Maratón Acuático Internacional Ciudad de Rosario
• Location: Rosario, Argentina.
• Course: Six 1.7-kilometer loops of a triangular course located in front of Rambla Catalunya Beach in Rosario after starting 2 kilometers downstream.
• Distance: 15 kilometers.
• Date: February
• Description: A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$10,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit.

26. Maratón Patagones Viedma
• Location: Viedma, Argentina.
• Course: Swim in the Rio Negro.
• Distance: 15 kilometers.
• Date: February.
• Description: A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$11,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit.

27. Sumidero Canyon Swimming Marathon
• Location: Within the Sumidero Canyon, Chiapas, Mexico.
• Course: A point-to-point course along a meandering warm-water (26°C or 78.8°F river within an incredibly scenic canyon, with towering cliff walls, in southern Mexico.
• Distance: 15 kilometers.
• Date: April.
• Description: A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$20,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit.

28. Marathona del Golfo Capri-Napoli
• Location: Island of Capri to Napoli, Italy.
• Course: From Marina Grande Beach on the island of Capri to the seafront of via Caraccioli in Naples, Italy.
• Distance: 36 kilometers (22 miles).
• Date: July.
• Description: Warm-water (28°C or 82°F) ocean course with occasional large swells and heavy surface chop. A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$20,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit. One of the world’s most competitive professional marathon swims with a long, proud and colorful history since 1954.

29. Setúbal Bay International Swim Marathon
• Location: Setúbal Bay, Portugal.
• Course: Four loops of a 2.5-kilometer triangle course where warmth and sunshine are expected along the Portuguese coast in beautiful Setúbal Bay, located 40 kilometers south from Lisbon.
• Distance: 10 kilometers.
• Date: June.
• Description: Setúbal bay is one of the most beautiful bays in the world with Serra da Arrábida on one side and Rio Sado magic waterfront on the other. The water temperature is between 18-19ºC with a water depth of between 3-25 meters.
• Additional Information: Offers US$20,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup tour. A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.

30. Ohrid Lake Swimming Marathon
• Location: Ohrid Lake, Macedonia.
• Course: Lake course that starts from the monastery St. Naum, goes along the lakeshore and finishes at the town harbor.
• Distance: 30 kilometers.
• Date: August.
• Description: A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world. Offers US$10,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit.
• Additional Information: The first mass swimming competition in Lake Ohrid took place in 1924. The first marathon swim was held in 1954 along a 2.5-kilometer course "Gorica-Ohrid". The first ultra-marathon (36 kilometers) was held in 1962ide-appreciated marathons such as the Capri Marathon in Naples, Italy.

31. Jarak-Sabac Swim Marathon
• Location: In the Sava River near Sabac, Serbia.
• Course: A multi-race event starting from Gomolava on the Sava River.
• Distance: 2 kilometers, 4.5 kilometers and 18.7 kilometers.
• Date: July.
• Description: A very competitive race with the world’s top professional marathon swimmers competing with amateurs competing in the shorter events. Even has nearly 40 years of history.
• Additional Information: Offers US$20,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit as well as 50-meter races for young children.

32. Faros Marathon Swim
• Location: In Stari Grad Bay (Hvar Island) in Croatia.
• Course: Scenic venue and surrounding area.
• Distance: 16 kilometers.
• Date: August.
• Description: Generous hospitality and enthusiastic support of swimmers from the local community.
• Additional Information: Serves as the Croatian International Long Distance Swimming Championships. Started in 1976 by Vicko Soljan, the race has been hosted to about 1,000 swimmers of its 32-year history.

33. Santa Barbara Channel 6x6 Relay Race
• Location: Channel between Santa Cruz Island and the City of Santa Barbara in California, U.S.A.
• Course: From Santa Cruz Island to East Beach on the California mainland.
• Distance: 42 kilometers (26 miles).
• Date: September.
• Description: Prize money offered. Race is limited to 6 boats with 6 swimmers per boat. Channel has mild currents with the average water temperature is 15-21°C (60-70°F). The 6x6 Relay Race is a fund raiser for ocean-caring non-profit organizations.
• Additional Information: Santa Barbara Channel Swimming Association also offers four different length of crossings: 12, 20, 26 and 30 miles. The Association also conducts the 26-mile Big Swim and 3-mile and 10-mile coastal races in Santa Barbara and open water swimming trips to Baja Mexico, Chile and Guatemala via the Ocean Ducks Swimming Adventures.

34. Traversée Internationale du lac St-Jean
• Location: Lac St-Jean, Roberval, Quebec, Canada.
• Course: A crossing of a cold-water lake from Peribonka to Roberval, Quebec.
• Distance: 10 kilometers and 32 kilometers.
• Date: July.
• Description: The 32-kilometer race is one of the world’s most prestigious professional races with a long and rich history. The swimmers are cheered on by more than 100,000 people who visit the area during La semaine de la Traversée Festival with thousands of fans at the finish to cheer on the swimmers. Water temperature and winds can very, but water temperature under 20°C (68°F) is expected. Offers US$40,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit that always attracts the world’s best professional marathon swimmers.The 10-kilometer race is one of the FINA 10KM Open Water Swimming World Cup races on the global circuit. Elite professional marathon swimmers also compete in this race that includes eight 1.25-kilometer loops in Lac St Jean for US$20,000 in prize money.
• Additional Information: The Traversée Internationale du lac St-Jean has been held continuously for 54 years since 1955. The race organizers offer 5 open water events in addition to the professional 10-kilometer and 32-kilometer races: a 10-kilometer youth marathon swim, a solo 32-kilometer Traversée (a personal challenge for the non-professional swimmer) and 1-kilometer, 2-kilometer and 5 -kilometer swims.

35. Traversée Internationale du lac Memphrémagog
• Location: Lac Memphrémagag, Quebec, Canada.
• Course: A long-loop course starting and finishing in Magog, Quebec, Canada in the narrow Lac Memphrémagag.
• Distance: 34 kilometers.
• Date: July.
• Description: Water temperature and winds can vary widely, especially with strong winds, but 20°C (68°F) is average. A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$25,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit.

36. FINA 10KM Open Water Swimming World Cup in Bulgaria
• Location: Varna, Bulgaria.
• Distance: 10 kilometers.
• Date: August.
• Description: A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$20,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit.

37. FINA 10KM Open Water Swimming World Cup in China
• Location: Shantou, China.
• Course: Loop course in the Xinjin River with water temperature around 23°C (73°F).
• Distance: 10 kilometers.
• Date: September.
• Description: A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$20,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit.

38. FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup in Hong Kong
• Location: Repulse Bay, Hong Kong.
• Course: 3 loops in a generally calm bay with mild currents and expected water temperature between 25-27°C (77-81°F).
• Distance: 10 kilometers.
• Date: October.
• Description: A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$20,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup circuit.

39. FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup in Sharjah
• Location: Sharjah, United Arab Emirates.
• Distance: 10 kilometers.
• Date: October.
• Description: Minimal currents and generally flat water. A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$20,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup circuit.

40. FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup in Dubai
• Location: Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
• Course: Two 5-kilometer loops in a river course inside an urban park.
• Distance: 10 kilometers.
• Date: October.
• Description: Minimal currents and generally flat water. A very competitive race with elite professional marathon swimmers from around the world.
• Additional Information: Offers US$20,000 in prize money as part of the global FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup circuit.

41. Clean Half Marathon Swimming Open Water Relay
• Location: Hong Kong Bay, Hong Kong.
• Course: From Stanley to Deepwater Bay around the beautiful waters of Hong Kong’s south side.
• Distance: 14.5 kilometers (9 miles).
• Date: October.
• Description: Solo and 5-person relay race in blue, clean 22-27°C (71-81°F waters in the back half of Hong Kong Island. Swells can get large with heavy surface chop depending on the wind.
• Additional Information: Large swells and heavy surface chop can be experienced at times, especially from backwash from rock cliffs. The world’s first and only “carbon-neutral” option is available where the swimmers can choose to compete with an outrigger canoe instead of a traditional motorized escort boat. Relay swimmers rotate every 20 minutes.

42. Sheko Challenge
• Location: Hong Kong Bay, Hong Kong.
• Course: Point-to-point course from Shek-O Big Wave Bay to Back Beach (Rocky Bay).
• Distance: 2.2 kilometers.
• Date: July.
• Description: Festive ocean race for all ages and abilities.
• Additional Information: Relatively calm waters.

43. Fiji Swims
• Location: Treasure Island and Beachcomber Island, Fiji.
• Course: Held in a tropical island paradise, swimmers swim in crystal-clear waters over beautiful coral reefs and abundant marine life.
• Distance: 1-kilometer and 2.7-kilometer races and 18-kilometer solo or “free-style” relay swim.
• Date: Mid-August.
• Description: The 1-kilometer race is from a floating pontoon near Treasure Island to Beachcomber Island. The 2.7-kilometer swim is at Beachcomber Island and starts on a sandbar. The 18K relay is from Sofitel Fiji Resort & Spa to Beachcomber Island. The 18-kilometer race can be done solo, with 2 swimmers or with 5 swimmers.
• Additional Information: Considered to be one of the most beautiful open water swims in the world with numerous world-renowned Olympic medalists annually participating, such as Natalie Coughlin, Shane Gould, Debbie Meyer (1968 triple gold medalist), Danyon Loader (double gold medalist from New Zealand) and Murray Rose.

44. Galata-Varna Swimming Marathon
• Location: Varna on the west coast of the Black Sea in Bulgaria.
• Course: Loop course with start and finish at Varna’s main beach.
• Distance: 4.4 kilometers and 10 kilometers
• Date: August.
• Description: Warm-water 23°C (74°F) course with the start and finish with occasional large swells and heavy surface chop.
• Additional Information: Considered to be the ‘Sea Capital of Bulgaria’ where the 4.4K event has been held for nearly 70 years. The 10K event is part of the FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup circuit where professional swimmers from around the world compete for US$20,000 in prize money.

45. Cook Strait
• Location: Channel between the North and South Islands of New Zealand.
• Course: Large tidal flows, cold water temperatures (14º-19ºC or 57º-66ºF) and jellyfish present significant challenges.
• Distance: 26 kilometers (16 miles).
• Date: January through April.
• Description: Both sides of the strait have rock cliffs. To date, only 71 successful crossings have been made by 61 individuals from 8 countries. Hypothermia and change in weather conditions are the most common reasons attempts fail.
• Additional Information: 1 in 6 swimmers encounter sharks on their crossings, although no one has been attacked during a swim.

46. Maratón Internactional Hernandarias – Parana
• Location: From the city Hernandarias to Parana, Argentina.
• Course: Longest professional marathon swim under extremely competitive conditions down a river with varying currents and flotsam.
• Distance: 88 kilometers (54.6 miles).
• Date: July.
• Description: Warm-water (28°C or 82°F) ocean course with occasional large swells and heavy surface chop.
• Additional Information: Tens of thousands of spectators line the course in an extremely festive atmosphere. Offers US$25,000 in prize money when it is part of the global FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit.

47. Irish (North) Channel
• Location: Cold-water channel between Ireland and Scotland.
• Course: From Mull of Galloway to County Antrim or Co. Down.
• Distance: 33.7 kilometers (21 miles).
• Date: Window of opportunity is July through September.
• Description: Heavy seas, cold water, thunderstorms and strong currents must be overcome to be successful. Considered by many to be the most difficult channel swim in the world with the water temperature around 12-14°C (54ºF) on normally overcast days.
• Additional Information: To date, only 16 successful crossings have been made, including 13 solo swims by 9 swimmers and 5 relays. Most of the 70+ attempts have been abandoned due to difficult conditions and hypothermia. Swim crossings are governed by the rules set by the Irish Long Distance Swimming Association. First attempt was made in 1928 and the first success was 1947. There is difficulty in predicting weather and water conditions; swimmers face large pods of jellyfish if conditions are calm.
• Additional Information: Swim crossings are governed by the rules set by the Irish Long Distance Swimming Association.

48. Ijsselmeerzwemmarathon
• Location: From Stavoren to Medemblik in Ijsselmeer in the Netherlands.
• Course: Formerly the ocean, but now a large lake, Ijsselmeer that can develop very difficult conditions with the winds.
• Distance: 22 kilometers (13.6 miles)
• Date: Usually the second Saturday in August.
• Description: A competitive field.
• Additional Information: Now in its fourth decade, the event was recognized for merit by the International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame in 2007. Individual escort boats are required and some prize money is offered that has served as the Dutch Marathon Swimming National Championship.

49. Fiji Ocean Swim Festival
• Location: Plantation Island, Mamanuca Islands, Fiji
• Course: 1.5-kilometer and 3-kilometer loop course off of Lomani and Plantation Beach. 10-kilometer course is around Plantation Island.
• Distance: 1.5 kilometers, 3 kilometers and 10 kilometers.
• Date: October.
• Description: The Mamanuca Group of islands provide ideal conditions for swimming with clear waters & beautiful reefs.
• Additional Information: Includes a 5-person relay over a 2-kilometer course. Attracts a growing number of swimmers from Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Korea USA and Europe as well as swimmers from throughout the South Pacific.

50. Vanuatu Ocean Swim
• Location: Port Vila in Vanuatu.
• Course: Diamond shaped course from Port Vila's seafront around Iririki Island and back.
• Distance: 1.5 kilometers and 3.2 kilometers.
• Date: June.
• Description: Port Vila is one of the most beautiful harbors in the world and swimmers pass over reefs and deep channels in clear waters around Iririki Island. Attracts over 200 swimmers from Australia, New Zealand, New Caledonia and Fiji. Features clinics with some of the world's top distance swimmers, artifact trophies for top 3 finishers in each age group.
• Additional Information: Pacific Swims also holds the Espiritu Santo Aore Swim on Luganville, Espiritu Santo right after the Vanuatu Ocean Swim. This 2.8-kilometer swim crosses the Segond Channel from Luganville to the Aore Resort. Espiritu Santo is Vanuatu's "Big Island" steeped in tradition and history. Luganville and the Segond Channel was an important US WWII base for the push on Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands and at the eastern end of the channel is the wreck of the President Coolidge now one of the world's most famous dive sites.

51. Molokai Channel
• Location: Channel between the islands of Molokai and Oahu in Hawaii.
• Course: Difficult deep-water channel in the middle of the Pacific Ocean where heavy seas, tropical heat and extremely strong currents can push swimmers off-course by miles.
• Distance: 42 kilometers (26 miles).
• Description: Beautiful channel between two tropical islands with abundant marine life.
• Additional Information: Known as the Kaiwi Channel, it has only been successfully crossed by 13 individuals

52. New Zealand Ocean Swim Series
• Location: Throughout New Zealand, from Wellington to North Shore City.
• Course: In stunning beaches and major waterways.
• Distance: 0.7 kilometers and 2.8 kilometers
• Date: Harbour Crossing in Auckland is in November, Capital Classic in Oriental Bay is in January; Corsair Classic is in February, Mt Maunganui is in March, King of the Bays is in April
• Description: Five-part series includes Harbour Crossing, Capital Classic, Corsair Classic, Sand to Surf Mt. Maunganui and King of the Bays.
• Additional Information: Very well-marketed series has introduced and incorporated many event innovations including OceanKids and the Golden Goggles Club.

53. Strait of Gibraltar
• Location: Between Europe (Spain) and Africa (Morocco). Strait between Spain and Morocco that connects the Atlantic Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea.
• Course: Shortest point is between Punta Oliveros in Spain and Punta Cires in Morocco.
• Distance: 14.4 kilometers (8 miles)
• Date: June to October.
• Description: Swimmers must cross an eastern flow of water from the Atlantic Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea with an average of 3 knots (5.5 km per hour). Heavy boat traffic, logistical barriers and surface chop confront swimmers throughout each attempt.
• Additional Information: First successful crossing in 1928. Its boundaries were known in antiquity as the Pillars of Hercules. The currents remain at Herculean strength. Combined with the unpredictability of the water conditions and high winds, only 185 successful one-way crossings and 7 double-crossings have been made to date. Most attempts are made from Tarifa Island due to the influence of strong currents, a distance of 18.5 – 22 kilometers (10-12 miles).

54. Pennock Island Challenge
• Location: In Ketchikan, Alaska, U.S.A.
• Course: Around Pennock Island in the Tongass Narrows.
• Distance: 13.2 kilometers (8.2 miles).
• Date: August.
• Description: The Pennock Island Challenge is a current-assisted course sheltered from large surf everywhere except the sound end. Water temperature ranges from mid-50s°F to low 60s°F (12.7 to 16.6°C). Air temperature will range from the mid-60s°F to mid 80s°F (18-29°C). Swimmers can enter as solo and as members of a relay. • Additional Information: Wetsuits are allowed, but will have their own awards category. Fundraiser for the American Diabetes Association.

55. Trinidad & Tobago Open Water Classic
• Location: Maracas Beach in Trinidad (northeast of Venezuela).
• Course: Out-and-back course in a stunningly beautiful stretch of beach in the southern Caribbean Sea.
• Distance: 5 kilometers.
• Date: September.
• Description: Formerly a 5-mile race, the Open Water Classic serves as the Amateur Swimming Association of Trinidad & Tobago national championships.
• Additional Information: Over a 50-year history, the Open Water Classic was once a 5-mile race, but is now a 5-kilometer race in order to confirm with international open water swimming standards.

56. Flowers Sea Swim
• Location: In the pristine waters of Seven-Mile Beach on the Grand Cayman Islands in the Caribbean Sea.
• Course: Point-to-point, in-the-water finish in relatively shallow, but incredibly clear waters.
• Distance: 1 mile.
• Date: June.
• Description: Described as the world’s flattest and fastest ocean mile.
• Additional Information: Over 600 swimmers participate in the race in addition to the 400+ individuals who participated in the Walk-and-Watch event along the tropical beach. Cayman Islands Amateur Swimming Association’s Open Water Sea Swim annual series also includes the Zulu 2–mile sea swim in October, Cable & Wireless 800-meter Swim in April, Cayman Brac 800-meter Swim in April, Butterfield Bank 800-meter in May, CUC 800-meter in October, the Pirate’s Week 5K in November and the Cayman Islands Amateur Swimming Association 10K in November.

57. Sakurajima Kinko Bay Open Water Swimming Championship
• Location: In Kinko Bay in Kagoshima in southern Japan.
• Course: Point-to-point, cross-bay swim
• Distance: 4 kilometers.
• Date: July
• Description: Hundreds of teams take part.
• Additional Information: 23 years of constant growth in the number of teams and participants.

58. FINA London Marathon Swim
• Location: Albert Dock in London, Great Britain.
• Course: Generally flat four 2.5K loops.
• Distance: 10 kilometers.
• Date: August.
• Description: A very competitive race that attracts many of the world’s best marathon swimmers.
• Additional Information: Part of the FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup circuit.

59. Sandycove Island Challenge Race
• Location: Sandycove Island in Kinsale, County Cork, Ireland.
• Course: Counterclockwise circumnavigation around the island.
• Distance: 2 kilometers (1.25 miles), depending on how close one swims to the island.
• Date: September.
• Description: The Old Head of Kinsale shelters Sandycove Island from the prevalent westerly winds. Swim at high tide for the easiest swim. Low tide exposes hidden reefs and a beach at the base of the slipway. Medium currents at mid-tide can present problems for slower swimmers.
• Additional Information: Training swims are made from late winter when water can be 45°F to late summer. Nearly 150 swims are scheduled each year at the primary training spot for open water swimmers and triathletes. Excellent training location for those preparing for an English Channel attempt. Clean crisp water with sunken reefs and waving sea plants clearly visible.

60. Yonaguni Island
• Location: Most southwestern island of Japan in Okinawa near Taiwan.
• Course: Demanding swim in the East China Sea around an isolated, incredibly beautiful tropical island known as one of the top three hammerhead shark breeding grounds of the world.
• Distance: 29 kilometers (18 miles).
• Date: Attempts can be made in spring or fall.
• Description: Population of island is under 1,700 people. Thousands of hammerhead sharks congregate near island within view of swimmers.
• Additional Information: Water temperature about 26.6°C (80°F) in spring and fall; much warmer in summer. First circumnavigation completed in 1993 in 7 hours and 8 minutes.

61. Island of Jersey
• Location: Island located in the English Channel approximately 14 miles (22K) from Normandy, France and approximately 100 miles (162K) south of Great Britain.
• Course: Scenic terrain ranging from long sandy bays to rugged cliffs.
• Distance: Approximately 70 kilometers (43.5 miles) of coastline.
• Date: July or August.
• Description: Jersey is the largest and southernmost of the Channel Islands. First circumnavigation swim successfully completed in 1969; fastest circumnavigation swim is held by Alison Streeter, the Queen of the Channel, in 9 hours and 53 minutes.
• Additional Information: Water temperature is 17.7ºC (64ºF) and the swim is tidal assisted if timed right.

62. Asian Beach Games
• Location: Sanur Beach in Bali, Indonesia.
• Course: Tough ocean loop course.
• Distance: 5 kilometers and 10 kilometers.
• Date: October.
• Description: Competitive races that includes many of the top marathon swimmers throughout Asia.
• Additional Information: Part of the Asian Beach Games that includes other sports such as beach soccer, beach sepak takraw, beach handball, bodybuilding, windsurfing, triathlon, dragon boat, sailing, paragliding, surfing, windsurfing, woodball and beach volleyball. Open water races are officiated by members of the FINA Technical Open Water Swimming Committee.

63. Cadiz Freedom Swim
• Location: Robben Island to Big Bay, Cape Town, South Africa
• Course: Across the cold-water Robben Island Channel (13°C or 55°F).
• Distance: 7.5 kilometers.
• Date: April.
• Description: There are two categories: solo swimmers that compete under standard rules and relays of 2 or 4 swimmers (no wetsuits, wetsuits, corporate relay, schools relay).
• The Cape Long Distance Swimming Association offers information on swimming various distances between 7-35 kilometers between Cape Town and Robben Island, False Bay, Cape Point and other locations with water temperatures range between 13°C (55°F) and 19°C (66°F).
• Additional Information: Robben Island is located 12 kilometers offshore from Cape Town, South Africa. Robben Island was used as a cruel prison for nearly 400 years, including the imprisonment of Nelson Mandela from 1964-1982. Today, the island is a World Heritage site and offers one of the world’s great channel challenges. Since it was first crossed in 1899 by Henry Charteris Hooper, nearly 300 individuals have successfully swum between the mainland and Robben Island.

64. Peter Pan Cup Christmas Morning Handicap Swim
• Location: Hyde Park in the heart of London in England.
• Course: Short, but shockingly cold, swim (4°C or 40°F) on the south bank of the lake.
• Distance: 100 yards.
• Date: December 25.
• Description: Christmas tradition since 1864.
• Additional Information: Site of the Olympic 10K Marathon Swim during the 2012 London Olympics. The Serpentine was man-made by joining a series of small ponds together back in 1730, under the direction of Queen Caroline. One of the first competitions in the Serpentine was in 1837 promoted by a London wine merchant by collecting an entrance fee from competitors. A gold medal and the title of 'Champion of the Serpentine River' was first awarded in a 1838 Grand Match. Twelve athletes, including the Champion of England and the Champion of London, competed in front of 20,000 spectators over a distance of 1000 yards in a Bridge-to-Bridge race.

65. Lange Afstandzwemwedstrijd Sluis
• Location: Canal Hoeke – Sluis with start and finish in Sluis in the Netherlands.
• Course: Back-and-forth swim in old shipping canal with the turn-around point in Brugge in Belgium.
• Distance: 2 kilometers, 5 kilometers and 2.5 kilometers (breaststroke)
• Date: Usually the first Sunday in July.
• Description: Turning point is in Belgium making it truly an international swim.
• Additional Information: The event continues to be popular in its fourth decade.

66. Traversata dello Stretto
• Location: Strait of Messina in Sicily, Italy.
• Course: Various courses in the Strait of Messina which is a narrow channel between the eastern tip of Sicily and the southern tip of Calabria on the Italian mainland.
• Distance: Between 1.8 kilometers and 5.2 kilometers
• Date: August and September.
• Description: The first race is the 5.2-kilometer 45th annual Traversata dello Stretto. First crossed in 1930, the Strait has strong currents and natural whirlpools that make for a challenging and enjoyable event to do and watch, especially on a clear day. The Traversata dello Stretto starts at Torre Faro, crosses the Strait of Messina to a turn in Cannitello in Calabria on the Italian mainland, then traverses along the Italian coast and finished in Villa San Giovanni. The second race is the Trofeo Baia di Grotta. The third race is the 1.8-kilometer II Trofeo Onda Azzurra along the Calabria coast. The fourth race is 36th annual 3.7-kilometer Favazzina-Scilla swim in late August. The fifth race is the 5.1-kilometer XI Memoria Nino Sofi. The sixth race is the 3-kilometer Città di Reggio Calabria II in September.
• Additional Information: In an earlier poll, the establishment of the Traversata dello Stretto race in September 1954, inspired by Giuseppe Dominici's 1930 crossing, was chosen as the Top Open Water Moment in History as it is typical of many local coastal swims in the Mediterranean.<

Hollywood Actress Does Reality Swim

26.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Solo Challenges   |  (1) comments

Hollywood actress Alexandra Paul, best known for her character as Lt. Stephanie Holden in the American TV series Baywatch, took a short break from her busy schedule to complete her first solo long-distance swim in the 18K Fiji Swims, finishing in 6 hours and 56 minutes.

Alexandra seems to be working her way around the world westward as she first did a 10K solo swim at the Bonaire EcoSwim in the Caribbean and then followed up with a 9.6-mile solo swim in the Maui Channel in Hawaii.

Alexandra is shown with her paddler from the 18K Fiji Swims.

 

 

Young Men and the Sea

26.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Swimmers   |  (0) comments

SwimNetwork posted an article about Sean Ryan and Alex Meyer's first-time experiences in a 25K race at the world championship level.

Click here to read about their experiences.

Cold-Water Contingencies

26.Aug.09   |  posted by: steve munatones  |   filed under: Rules   |  (1) comments

The 19th annual Big Shoulders 5K and 2.5K races will be held in Lake Michigan on September 12th. This year, the Big Shoulders 5K race will also serve as the US Masters Swimming 5K Open Water Championships.

The site of the Big Shoulders race is very near the proposed 2016 Chicago Olympics course.

What makes the situation noteworthy and thought-provoking is that the current water temperature in the Big Shoulders course is 56°F (13.3°C) - and Lake Michigan can rapidly change temperatures. According to experienced and local marathon swimmer Marcia Cleveland, the water temperature has been documented to shift as much as 20°F (11°C) in one 24-hour period.

Under FINA rules, that are used by the International Olympic Committee, races are not held if the water temperature is under 16°C (60.8°F). The rule is as follows, "The water temperature should be a minimum of 16°C. It should be checked the day of the race, 2 hours before the start, in the middle of the course at a depth of 40 cm. This control should be done in the presence of a Commission made up of the following persons present: a Referee, a member of the Organising Committee and one coach from the teams present designated during the Technical Meeting."

USA Swimming has a similar rule for its open water swimming events that states, "The water temperature should be a minimum of 16°C (60°F)."

However, there is another USA Swimming rule that allows for wetsuits in non-championship events:

"Events/Meets. Wet-Suit Events - Meet directors may request permission for their LSCs to allow the use of wet-suits in any non-championship event. If approved, there shall be separate classification for wet-suit swimmers which shall be clearly stated in the meet information and on the accompanying entry form. Swimming using wet-suits shall be scored separately from swimmers competing without wet-suits."

US Masters Swimming does not have water temperatures guidelines at present. However, the Big Shoulders 5K race committee is very carefully monitoring the water temperature and has made several different contingency plans.

Other than the traditional solo swims across channels and lakes, many open water events nowadays have both wetsuit and non-wetsuit categories. Some races have specific limitations on what type of technical swimsuits are allowed (e.g., the RCP Tiburon Mile, the NYC Swims, the Big Swim and the Byron Bay Ocean Swim Classic). Some races have no specific rules at all concerning technical swimsuits or wetsuits (e.g., thickness, coverage) unlike the triathlon world. And, of course, the interpretation of these current (and evolving) rules is up to the individual referees at each event.

But the number of open water swimmers and the number of locations where open water swims continue to grow, the rules, their interpretations and contingency plans vis-a-vis water temperatures will be discussed, debated and settled for the safety and enjoyment of all.

To be continued.

Photo shows athlete after a cold-water event. Note: she recovered quickly after being professionally attended by the medical personnel at the venue.

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