Monday, 25 August 2008

Videos from the swim..... (language warning!)

Setting off at 2am......

5am - Swimming throught the night....


7am - hitting the first shipping lane


10am - into the separation zone


12pm - Sandy gets in for a boost of speed.....


2pm - Inspirational words from the pilot......


2.30pm - Low point - getting worried about the tides and not moving anywhere!


5pm - High Point - Broken the back of the tides pushing us back to England


6pm - The final push for France


7.30pm - Getting back in the boat

7.30pm - Done.

Pictures from the swim.....


Getting greased up prior to the swim......

Getting going at night for the first couple of hours.....

Support crew Keyso and my dad "poisoning" me on my first feed....

Feeding on Maxim.......

Going through the shipping lanes......

Sandy my support swimmer setting the pace.....

Ploughing on.......

France comes into view........

The final push......

Dee and keyso sitting pretty.....

An amazing feeling - hitting France.......

Getting out to a beautiful sunset.....

Done.

The Swim.....

A couple of days after finishing the swim I have had time to relax and get rid of some of the stiffness which has left me walking like in a straight jacket for the past couple of days.

The swim itself - the first hour was possibly the best swim I have ever had - the water felt really warm despite being a tad choppy and it felt amazing to actually be able to have a crack at something I had trained so hard and long for. We set off at 2am and swimming in the dark was a really amazing experience.

For the first 3 hours I fed on the hour, and made a bit of a mistake in the feeding. I was sick on the boat before setting off (combination of nerves and a rocking boat!) and so should have had a weak maxim energy drink feed but was given quite a strong drink on the 1st hour. This have me stomach pains for hours 2-4 and meant I had some 'issues' in the water!?! The support crew handled the situation brilliantly though and the next few feeds were really just hot water to help wash the strong Maxim through my system and settle my stomach.

By hours 5 and 6 the sun had come up and I was feeling much better so went back onto the Maxim energy drink at feeds. I was having some solids (banana and mini rolls) every now and again, and was feeling pretty strong. The weather was overcast and actually felt myself getting quite cold for a couple of hours, and was worried this might impact the swim, but luckily by hour 7/8 ish I warmed up again.

By now we had entered the shipping lanes, which was a truly awesome experience swimming so close to huge tankers and passenger ferries. It never felt scary though as I knew my pilot Paul Foreman, who was brilliant throughout, was setting a 'safe' course through the lanes.

The sea was surprisingly clean, and I did not see much sewage and only a few jelly fish, but by this point a jelly fish sting would have been a welcome distraction! Hours 9 and 10 my pace slowed dramatically and I was really just plodding along. I was tyring to work out how long I had been swimming for and how I had long left - before setting out I was aiming for a 14/15 hour swim.

After hour 10/11 I can't really remember an awful lot. I remember the support crew saying we just need a 30 minute push now about 10 times and just tried to kick my legs as quick as possible and turn over my arms as quick as possible. When my support swimmer Sandy got in however, who incidentally was also a legend throughout, it showed me how slowly I was moving as he was rotating his arms very slowly and I just couldn't keep up with him!

The real crunch of the swim came when we were about 4 miles out. The tides turned from helping us towards France to push us back to England. In 2 hours I move about 50 metres forward and started drifting along the coast. Although they obviously didn't tell me at the time the pilot and support crew were seriously worried that we weren't going to make it.

I was aware we weren't making good progress as the boat's engine wasn't on and I was just staying at the same place on the boat and not moving forward. By this time (14 hours in) my shoulders had pretty much gone and I was really struggling. Some really motivating words from the support crew got me going though and I gave it everything for an hour (the pain was pretty intense by now so i just tried to count to 5000 strokes to take my mind off it...) to try and break through the tides and get into the bay.

That couple of hours was the hardest test I have ever encountered both mentally and physically and I did seriously consider that I would not complete the challenge and thought how horrible it would be to have to tell everyone. We made it through though and when we got through the tides into the bay the last hour or so was in flat water and with a beautiful sunset was an amazing swim. I finally hit France at about 7.15pm elated and knackered - an amazing day and one I definitely would not have completed had it not been for a superb support crew.

Sunday, 24 August 2008

Job Done

I swam the channel on the 22nd August 2008 in 17 hours 13 minutes.

It was an amazing experience swimming at night, swimming through the busy shipping lanes and finally hitting French sand!!

It was touch and go for a while whether I would get there as the tide started going out and we drifted sideways for couple of hours, but a magnificent support crew of Sandy, Keyso, Dee and my dad helped massively in getting to France.

Will post videos and pictures soon.

Sunday, 17 August 2008

Frustration! w/c 11/08/08

I have been on standby waiting to swim now for 10 days.

My original slot was the 7th - 16th August, but due to the rubbish weather that we have had recently unfortunately I haven't been able to go, despite an addiction to weather forecasting website windguru!!

My neap tide has now expired and the spring tides are back (spring tides are not favoured by swimmers as there is more water in the sea, meaning a bigger "S" has to be swum across the channel - increasing the distance swum).

Despite this though I really want to get a swum done before Saturday, as if I don't manage to go before then the next set of neap tides, new swimmers will get priority and I will potentially have to wait until the end of the season; i.e. end of September. This is the worst case scenario as it would mean I would have to scale back up the training to longer swims, and also mean I will miss loads of good events at the end of summer. Not ideal, but I am more than willing to do it given all the time invested into this challenge.

Due to the bad weather this year the success rate of swimmers has been low. On Friday 10 people attempted to swim the channel and only 1 succeeded, as the weather got quite nasty at very late notice.

As the channel swimming mantra states though ".. nothing great is ever easy..." and that has been bourne out to me over the past few weeks.

Sunday, 3 August 2008

Taper Down w/c 27/07/08

Nice and relaxing week this week still tapering down so only a few short swims.

The weekend was slightly more eventful though. On saturday driving to the harbour for an early start I managed to write off my mum's car by getting spun around and subsequently hit by a lorry! We were going pretty slow but it was still a bit shocking and got neck ache. As I was spinning round though and saw the lorry coming all I could think of was I hope I don't get hurt here or I won't be able to do the swim!

Apart from a stiff neck I was fine, although I was straddling the dual carriage way so the police had to close the road for a couple of mins to move the car! My mum came and get the car towed leaving me to go down to the harbour and do my swim!

All I did though was 2 hours on saturday and 2 hours on sunday - enjoyable swims although it was bit chilly going in on sunday with pretty heavy rainfall.

Hopeful swimming the channel next Saturday, weather pending - can't wait to have a crack at it!!!!

Sunday, 27 July 2008

The Theory of Relativity w/c 20/07

7 hours training on saturday and 3 hours on sunday - the taper has now seriously begun!

Weather much better this week and that made a huge difference as it enables you to relax and enjoy the swimming rather than being worried about being cold.

This was my third weekend of doing a 7 hour swim and perhaps unsurprisingly it gets slightly easier every time. During the hours of swimming I was thinking just how relative everything in life is. When we were swimming 2 hours a 3 hour swim was scary, when swimming 4 hours 5 seemed ridiculous; but when you have met / are familiar with these goals they become much less imposing. This is surely the same for most things - i.e. hours worked, acceptable pain threshold etc....

Its made me very interested in just how far you could push the body - if you did 15 hours every week could that become "normal"? Also is it your body adjusting that makes it easier or the fact that you know mentally that you can do it - i.e. no 'fear of the unknown' - I remember someone saying to me that the only people afraid of getting punched on the nose are people who have never been punched on the nose as they cant rationalise the pain - i.e. its never as bad you think it might be.....

Lots of swimmers now going out, including Pete and Kev from the Malta crew who are out at the moment - massive amounts of good luck to both!