3 Tips All Open Water Swimmers Need To Know

Open water swimmers
Open water swimmers

Open water swimming has become one of the most popular form of swimming over recent years. Swimming has declined in popularity in other countries, but the number of people participating in open water swimming has increased. As one of my favorite pastimes, open water swimming is both a rewarding and fun activity. It differs then regular swimming in the idea that instead of being in a controlled environment, you are in an open body of water and must be able to think quickly. There are numerous different variables that take place and someone has to be prepared for anything to happen.

A pool offers the ease of tranquility and control. Lane ropes will help to stop the waves and wakes produced by swimmers in nearby lanes, lines on the bottom help to guide the swimmer straight, walls to help the swimmer rest against and the water is a controlled temperature. The pool offers no surprises which is fantastic to help with swimmers learn or perfect techniques, and to get a fantastic workout that is easy on the joints at the same time.

Open water swimming offers another level of challenge to swimmers looking to push themselves. There are different challenges that the open water presents such as wind, waves, sudden temperature charges and other unpredictable factors. There is nowhere to just stop and rest if you suddenly get tired either.

So what is the best way to prep for open water swimming? Professionals recommend that you pick a variety of places to practice in. You want to make sure that you are exploring every type of open water so you can get a feel of everything. Try swimming in a pond one day on a calm day, and then a bay the next day when it’s cloudy. Try swimming in the ocean when it’s windy or a lake when it’s raining. By exploring all these different bodies of water with all different types of weather conditions, you’ll never be taken guard when swimming.

There are certain techniques that are required in open water swimming that aren’t needed in other forms of swimming.  Bilateral breathing is critical for a swimmer to learn for open swimming. What is bilateral breathing? It’s when a swimmer will alternate sides during a freestyle swim, or making sure to breath away from the direction the wind is blowing or a wave is forming. Besides ensuring that you are going get the proper breath, this specific breathing technique helps swimmers with a well balanced stroke.

Sighting is the other incredibly crucial move an open water swimmer needs to be safe. Since there are no lines to help guide a person straight, this will ensure you are going in the right direction. There is nothing worse than thinking you are going the right way and realize that you are a mile off course. This technique involves lifting your eyes out of the water and looking at what is ahead of you as opposed to side to side, which can occur when you in a pool. It’s recommended to practice this in a pool at first by lifting the neck out of the water and focusing on something ahead of you such as a water bottle placed at the end.

The final important  technique open water swimmers use is called drafting. This move will be more important when swimming in a competition or race. Drafting involves moving into the slip stream that is formed by another swimmer in front of you. It helps to save energy since you don’t need to use sighting as much. Instead of lifting your head out of the water to guide yourself, the bubbles formed the other swimmer will help to lead the way. If you are interested in a race or competition, there are many different ones for open water swimming. The one I participate in is the US Masters Swimming, but Google your location and I’m sure other events will show up. It’s a great way to explore your environment, stay in shape and make new friends.

I hope these different techniques help to sharpen your open water swimming. Thanks for reading!

Admiral Mark Heinrich

Great Exercises for the Pool

Admiral-Mark-Heinrich-swimHello and welcome to my website. This website is dedicated to my love for the hobbies that drive my life. I would love to share any and all hobby related experiences with you all, so I would like to start it off with a little piece I wrote up on swimming and some of the best exercises when you’re in the pool. Below you will find some of the best pool exercises I know of and that I regularly work on.

Swim Workouts for Cardio:

I recommend sprints or fast swims with a kickboard or underwater swims for 20-30 minutes at a time. This will get your lungs and heart heavily involved and allow the blood to move through your body providing oxygen rich cells to your body. This will decrease fatigue and lactic acid buildup, which cuts down on the burning sensation in your muscles when exercising. After your 20-30 minutes of fast swimming, slow down to and easy pace, which will burn fat at a higher rate in the second half of the workout.

Workout #1

-5 x 50m sprint freestyle (change strokes as desired)

– Rest with 20 seconds (hydrate if needed)

– 5 x 100m sprints — any stroke

– Rest 40-60 seconds

What time you have left in your hour, spent swimming at a regular pace, non-stop for 15-30 minutes

Workout #2

5 x 50-100m sprint/rest with 50m kickboard using flutterkicks

– 5 x 50-100m sprint/rest with 50m kick board using breast or dolphin kick

Use fins for 15-30 minutes without stopping

Workout #3

– Swim 100-200m moderate pace

– Pushups – 30 seconds worth of pushups (10-40 reps depending on fitness level)

– Abs of choice – crunches, setups, flutterkicks, leg levers – 1:00 of abs

Workout #4 (Will need a medium and light set of dumbbells on pool deck)

– Swim 100-200m moderate pace

– Pushups – 10-20

– Crunches – 20-30

– Bicep Curls – 10-20 reps

Repeat this set 5 times

Hope these exercises help and get you off to a good start and a healthy lifestyle one backstroke at a time.

Thank you for reading!

Admiral Mark Heinrich

Pearl Harbor Plane Uncovered

Admiral-Mark-Heinrich-navy-plane1

A day that will live on in infamy has somehow found a way to reveal yet another lost artifact from the past. As the 74th anniversary of the attack of Hawaii’s Pearl Harbor approaches new photos have surfaced showing a US Navy seaplane that was lost during the battle. Archaeologists from NOAA and the University of Hawaii released the images only a few hours ago and said the plane was sunk in the opening minutes of the attack.

Admiral-Mark-Heinrich-navy-planeNOAA and the University of Hawaii uncovered information that before the attack on Pearl Harbor, aircrafts that were part of the Japanese Imperial Navy bombed the nearby U.S. Naval Air Station on the eastern coast of Oahu. About 27 Catalina PBY, also known as “flying boats” were destroyed and sunk.

 

This past June students from the University of Hawaii dove into the waters of Kāne‛ohe Bay to photograph the wreckage. The students were a part of the Marine Option Program and conducted a full archaeological survey of the Bay’s floor. Hans Van Tilburg is a longtime maritime archaeologist with the NOAA’s Office of National Marine Sanctuaries, and was responsible for the efforts to photograph the planes.

 

Van Tilburg said the plane is protected by the Sunken Military Craft Act of 2004 which allows the plane, currently resting in three large pieces 30 feet below the surface, to remain in its place. Van Tilburg went on to say, “The new images and site plan help tell the story of a largely forgotten casualty of the attack,” Van Tilburg said, in the press release. “The sunken PBY plane is a very important reminder of the ‘Day of Infamy,’ just like the USS Arizona and USS Utah. They are all direct casualties of December 7.”

June Cleghorn, senior archaeologist at Marine Corps Base Hawaii was also quoted on the new photos and the plane wreckage, “This sunken flying boat is a window into the events of the attack, a moment in time that reshaped the Pacific region. Understanding this site sheds light on the mystery of the lost PBYs and honors the legacy of the Navy and Marine Corps Base in Hawaii.”

 

Thank you for reading!

Admiral Mark Heinrich