Every Tuesday and Thursday morning, I'm coaching my boys early in the morning. They all have uniquely different styles of freestyle with varying strengths and weaknesses. One in particular, Jonas, was having difficulty with over rotation in his freestyle.
I tried getting him on a snorkel, and focusing on his head position that way, and it worked fine, until he took off the snorkel.
With him swimming and me walking alongside the deck, I would look down and his arms would cross over quite dramatically as he overrotated, and also took a breath almost at his 12 'o clock rather than a 4 or 8 o'clock position.
He has been playing a superhero game on the ipod where Superman blows his enemies away with his laser vision. I explained that he should imagine he is superman when he swims and intensely focuses his vision on the bottom of the pool directly beneath him. And by so doing, creates a laser between his eyes and the pool bottom. If he crosses his hand or arm in front of that line, his arms/hand will get cut off at that point.
Once I added that imagery to his mind, he then started having a high elbow pull, his back almost remained flat in the water, with his hands pointed down towards the bottom of the pool and palms facing behind him. He no longer had the cross over and it also fixed his over-rotation! It was like a totally different swimmer just jumped in! Now that we have that imagery that corrects the problem, we gotta keep working on that and get the muscle memory to kick in.
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Friday, September 26, 2014
Monster Slayer Chad
Yesterday I witnessed an amazing thing. Chad swam the length of Bear Lake. That's a 19 mile freshwater swim at an elevation of 5,924 feet above sea level folks!
Chad picked me up on Wednesday night and we drove straight up to the marina. The crew consisted of myself, Sue Frehse, Sarah Jones and Chad's wife Chandra.
We got the boat loaded up and had a crew conference where Chad discussed his plan including feeds, direction of swim (which we decided at the time of arrival and referring to the weather forecast for the next 14 hours). We discussed the roles every had and safety. We then tied the kayak to the back of his boat and motored to the north end. We went towards lights that we thought were the marina, but once we got close the lights disappeared. They were on the other side of the north road which was confusing. We slowed down and saw the shoreline was covered with reeds and difficult to get to.
I turned on my handheld GPS and I could see Goody's track from a couple weeks earlier. The marina was a couple miles east of us. So we started heading east. But no lights. What happened. Once we got close to where we should be based on the GPS Sarah turned on a flashlight and BAM! The marina wall was right there! If we had gone a few seconds further we would have ran right into it. There were no lights whatsoever near the marina, no buoy lights, not even the lights along the ramp were on. Very dangerous situation. Good thing we slowed down when we did. Idaho State parks really needs to think about how safe it is to not have a single light on in that area.
We motored over to the end of the boat ramp and Chad started greasing up. He then waded over to the rocks at the end of the ramp and started walking back in and we started the clock. (12:45:10 am)
Here are my transcribed notes:
Start Time: 12:45:10am
Total time elapsed: 13:09:06
Here's a few pics and video I took.
Some things to work on:
He does have some stroke techinique that'll we need to work through to help with his lower back pain. He needs to drive his head a little lower to get a more streamlined position, and we need to work on bilateral breathing. The goal on a long swim like this should be at least 34 minute miles. Why? Because in order to hit Cap Griz Nes in a tide cycle that lasts 6 hours, a 12 hour swim is ideal. Unless your Trent Grimsey and can swim it just under 6 hours.
The English Channel from the shortest distance (Cap Griz Nes to the coast in Dover), is 21 miles. If you're able to swim the English Channel in 12 hours, you're averaging 34 minute miles (including time wasted at feeds). The more you deviate from that 34 minute mile average, the more you're gonna miss the cap which means a longer swim, because of the contours of the French coast. I'm sure I'm over simplifying it, but regardless a 34 minute mile is something that is definitely achievable especially in good conditions.
Chad picked me up on Wednesday night and we drove straight up to the marina. The crew consisted of myself, Sue Frehse, Sarah Jones and Chad's wife Chandra.
We got the boat loaded up and had a crew conference where Chad discussed his plan including feeds, direction of swim (which we decided at the time of arrival and referring to the weather forecast for the next 14 hours). We discussed the roles every had and safety. We then tied the kayak to the back of his boat and motored to the north end. We went towards lights that we thought were the marina, but once we got close the lights disappeared. They were on the other side of the north road which was confusing. We slowed down and saw the shoreline was covered with reeds and difficult to get to.
I turned on my handheld GPS and I could see Goody's track from a couple weeks earlier. The marina was a couple miles east of us. So we started heading east. But no lights. What happened. Once we got close to where we should be based on the GPS Sarah turned on a flashlight and BAM! The marina wall was right there! If we had gone a few seconds further we would have ran right into it. There were no lights whatsoever near the marina, no buoy lights, not even the lights along the ramp were on. Very dangerous situation. Good thing we slowed down when we did. Idaho State parks really needs to think about how safe it is to not have a single light on in that area.
We motored over to the end of the boat ramp and Chad started greasing up. He then waded over to the rocks at the end of the ramp and started walking back in and we started the clock. (12:45:10 am)
Here are my transcribed notes:
Start Time: 12:45:10am
Mile | Time | Elpased time this mile | Temp | Stroke rate | Feed * | Conditions | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1:18 am | 33 min | 62° F | 65 spm | None | Glassy | Sue learning to drive and doing well |
2 | 1:51 am | 33 min | 62° F | 65 spm | Liquid mix | Glassy | Sue is an awesome pilot! Chad looking smooth |
3 | 2:24 am | 33 min | 63° F | 63-64 spm | Liquid mix | Glassy | Chad is a machine! Gords concerned about the higher than desired water temps, but no reason to stop. |
4 | 2:58 am | 34 min | 65° F (two separate readings) | 64 spm | Liquid mix | Glassy | Water almost feels warm to the touch. Extending the thermometer to about 2 feet down. Same reading on thermometer |
5 | 3:33 am | 35 min | 63° F | 62 spm | Liquid mix + Swiss Roll | A little breeze from the north (tailwind) | |
6 | 4:10 am | 37 min | 64° F | 61 spm | Liquid mix | Air temp is 62°, water is warmer than air temp. | Chad says his back hurts. |
7 | 4:50 am | 40 min | 64° F (two separate readings) | 61 spm | Liquid mix and a Buzz Bite | Wind from the south, getting choppy. | Like a doofus I accidentally stepped on the mercury reading thermometer and it broke. I will submerge my watch to get a digital reading. I'm getting really sleepy. Asked Sarah to resume observing duties while I sleep for one hour and I should be good. |
8 | 5:29 am | 39 min | 65° F | 60 spm | Liquid mix | Still pretty choppy | Chad's stroke rate is dropping, but he is in good spirits. Doesn't say much. Feeds are very quick. |
9 | 6:15 am | 46 min | 64° F | 59 spm | Liquid mix | Less wind, chop turns to ripples now. | Light on the horizon. When I awoke from my 1 hour nap I feel very. Chad's stroke rate is slowing. Says his feet are cold, but his core feels fine. His speech isn't slurred. Will continue to monitor his condition at feeds for hypothermia. |
10 | 7:02 am | 43 min | 63° F | 59 spm | Liquid mix, Buzz Bite and Swiss Roll | Less wind, chop turns to ripples now. | Chad asked what the temp was. We told him and he seemed a little disappointed. I explained we still submit, and if it isn't accepted as a qualifier we try a different swim at the needed temp. He went right back to swimming. |
11 | 7:53 am | 51 min | 62° F | 59 spm | Liquid mix | Hardly a breeze now, just some ripples | The sun is up and it feels great. |
12.5 | 8:59 am | N/A | 61 spm | Liquid mix, Buzz Bite, Ibuprofen | No wind now, nice and smooth! | I ask if Sue wants to pace swim with him so I take over piloting the boat while she changes. The throttle has a little "click" that takes it into first gear and then after only a few seconds of steering throttle to neutral and coast. Chad is now at a point where he's never swam this far before. Chad tells Sue he is feeling a little cold. He puts on his tinted goggles. | |
13 | 9:23 am | N/A | 63.1 | 62 spm | Liquid mix | Glassy | Sue pace swims. Chad's stroke is less efficient. Sue is making him increase his stroke rate though, so that is good. |
14 | 10:06 am | 43 min | 63 | 62 spm | Liquid mix | Glassy | Chad comments "What a beautiful day!" I think I saw him smile. That is extremely rare. Sue got out a while, ago but I continue to drive. It's kinda fun. Easy to observe him and pilot cause I gotta keep the boat right at his pace. |
15 | 10:53 am | 47 min | 63 | 64 spm | Liquid mix, Buzz Bite | Glassy | Chad's stroke rate is up. He asked how much further. Seemed to like the "3 1/2" response. In good spirits. Air temp is toasty! |
16 | 11:36 am | 40 min | 64 | 60 spm | Liquid mix, Swiss Roll | Slight ripple | Sarah gets in to pace swim. She has to slow down. Chad seems tired, but steady. Chad requests advil next feed. Beach is visible from here. Sue takes over piloting. |
17 | no reading | N/A | no reading | no reading | Liquid mix, Ibuprofen | Slight ripple | At this feed Sarah accidentally loses the pen and it floats away while Chad takes his liquid and advil. I untie the kayak and jump in to get the pen. We're close enough now that I can paddle and be ready to capture some video. |
18 | no reading | N/A | no reading | no reading | none | See Notes | Had a slight tailwind breeze, notice up ahead that the water has serious ripples, once we get there the wind completely shifts from southerly to northerly and we have some serious headwind. Very windy. Chad comments to me that he feels like he isn't going anywhere. Wind is directly at our 12 o'clock and we have white horses! |
19 (Finish) | 13:55:16 | N/A | no reading | no reading | none | See Notes | I paddled into shore and noticed a small black patch. When he arrived there he started walking and the black patch were a bunch of reeds that made it really hard for him to walk over, I noticed that the patch ended about 20 yards off to his left and encouraged him to walk around instead of straight in to avoid them. He fell a couple times cause they hurt to walk over and too thick to navigate through. When he arrived on the beach he sat down to soak it in. I let him soak in his success without smothering him. I gave him a high five and he got lots of cheers from the girls on the boat waiting about 200 yards off shore. |
Total time elapsed: 13:09:06
I'm so proud of Chad and how he was able to power through this. I could tell he was tired, yet he persisted and not once complained. Chad is the sixth person to have ever swam the length of Bear Lake! Pretty neat accomplishment.
I had a great time crewing on this swim and although mother nature didn't help us out with a 61 degree temperature, she sure was kind in the relatively smooth conditions, until the end. Those winds at the end were simply unreal! I thought of the prayer that Chad asked Sarah to offer at the start. Today's conditions were truly an appreciated answer to that prayer. The winds the last mile were an eye opener to me of how it could have been. Had it been like that starting half way into the swim, I don't think it would have been possible to finish. It was amazing enough that he pushed through that last mile. So proud of that guy!Here's a few pics and video I took.
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Chad joins a pretty exclusive group to have ever slain the Bear Lake Monster! (Image created by Josh Green) |
Some things to work on:
He does have some stroke techinique that'll we need to work through to help with his lower back pain. He needs to drive his head a little lower to get a more streamlined position, and we need to work on bilateral breathing. The goal on a long swim like this should be at least 34 minute miles. Why? Because in order to hit Cap Griz Nes in a tide cycle that lasts 6 hours, a 12 hour swim is ideal. Unless your Trent Grimsey and can swim it just under 6 hours.
The English Channel from the shortest distance (Cap Griz Nes to the coast in Dover), is 21 miles. If you're able to swim the English Channel in 12 hours, you're averaging 34 minute miles (including time wasted at feeds). The more you deviate from that 34 minute mile average, the more you're gonna miss the cap which means a longer swim, because of the contours of the French coast. I'm sure I'm over simplifying it, but regardless a 34 minute mile is something that is definitely achievable especially in good conditions.
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
What I consider the most inspiring clip from a swimming movie
The past few months I've been supporting several swimmers in fairly big swims. 2 out of 3 were pulled for hypothermia. It's a serious thing to be on a support crew where you need to measure safety and support and know when the scale is tipping and what kind of support to give.
It made me think about my favorite scene from my favorite swimming movie. If the swimmer is not in danger, the thought of being the crew member that convinces the swimmer to not give up and continue on until they actually finish. That gives me goose bumps! Now THAT is inspiring!
This clip is from "On A Clear Day". If you're training to swim the English Channel, BUY IT!
This clip is from "On A Clear Day". If you're training to swim the English Channel, BUY IT!
Monday, September 1, 2014
Sarah Jones' Bear Lake Double aborted due to extreme hypothermia
When: Monday, September 1st, 2014
Start time: @3:40am
Course: Cisco Beach boat ramp to Bear Lake Marina and back.
Distance: 13.5 miles
Swimmer: Sarah Jones - Sarah is a frequent swimmer with SLOW and member of South Davis Masters. She swam the Utah Triple Crown summer of 2014. She is an experienced and successful open water swimmer.
Report written by: Gordon Gridley
Crew:
Steve Jones - Support Kayaker for the first width
Gordon Gridley - Support Kayaker for the second width
I drove to the marina to witness Lisa Gentile and Sarah finish their first leg of their double width crossing. Lisa exited the water north of the marina by the pavilion at approximately 7:40 am and within just a few seconds reentered the water to go back east. The sun had risen over the eastern mountains about 30 minutes prior to that. Using my binoculars I could see Sarah arriving about 10 minutes behind.
I walked down to the water’s edge when Steve paddled up with Sarah right next to him. I quickly transitioned and got in the boat, yelled back to Steve to throw me his kayak which I put on. The sun was warm and the breeze was slight. It was the perfect morning for a swim. No threat of rain or storms whatsoever. Her time for the first leg: 4:10
When she stopped briefly at the shore, I could tell she was shivering a little and complained that she was a little cold. I told her we’d need to increase her stroke rate to get her warmed up and that the sun would also feel good as she’d just swam many hours in the darkness.
She took feeds every 30 minutes like clockwork. Consisted of two different bottles one with a white cap, another with a black cap. I don’t know exactly what was in them, just that she has special homemade mixes that she swears by. She had buzz bites, fig newtowns and a banana for a solid food.
The first two feeds were uneventful and relatively quick, she didn’t say much but just kept swimming. But at about the third feed she asked me how far she went. I didn’t have my GPS with me since Goody still had it from his length swim a couple days before. I estimated based on the time of 30 minute miles (which she’s probably much faster than that), that we were three miles into the return leg. She complained, “is that all?” After this she started to get really moody. She stopped only about 20 minutes after that one to complain that she was tired. She looked desperate for the swim to be over. She stretched and I asked if she wanted an early feed which she declined. She swam another 10 minutes and I gave her a feed.
I saw that her stroke still had good form and that she was at 60 spm. Her feet were high in the water and she had a good two beat kick. About 5 minutes after that again she stopped and said, “I want Steve!” I reached for my phone, and realized, well he was on the east shore without a boat to get out to us. She shortly went back to swimming. Steve had taken my car from the marina back to the east side to get his kids up at camp and to watch over them. He had my cell number and I was hoping he’d call so I could at least have his number should I need him.
This cycle continued for several rounds of swimming for 5 minutes and stopping. I asked her if she wanted to stop and get on the boat, she yelled out “No!” and that her seven year old daughter was expecting her to finish. I told her she should swim for 20 minutes without stopping. However she only continued for about 10 minutes and then stopped again. She again complained of being tired, and I could tell her speech was starting to slur. I asked her what her youngest daughter’s name was, She yelled out “What?” (She was wearing ear plugs) I yelled back, “What is your youngest daughter’s name? Your 7 year old!” She yelled back at me “Lauren! And she’s not my youngest daughter. That’s Clair!” And she gave me some daggers with her eyes that I’ll never forget. Like she wanted me to die right there and then. I figured if she could remember their names so clearly, and with such emotion that she was OK. But then again, to freak over something like that seemed quite odd to me, but I let it pass.
But at the next feed I noticed her hand was shaking as she was pouring the liquid from her bottle into her mouth. Her eyes just seemed off to me. She kept asking how much further and was wasting so much time treading water complaining, that I didn’t feel right about it. I knew she was going to put up a huge fight about quitting, even if she was completely mentally with it, which she was not. I yelled back at her, “If you don’t get your head in and give me one straight hour of solid swimming, I’m gonna get you in those boat right here!” She was so fatigued she moaned “NO!” I started to count like a mean parent, “20!” “15!” All the while she just stayed there moaning “No! Stop! I can keep going!” But she wasn’t swimming.
I saw a boat speed past us about 300 yards north of us, and I raised my paddle up high vertically in the air waving it back and forth and whistled as loud as I could, but with the sound of their engine they never heard me, and didn’t look south in my direction apparently. All the while Sarah is moaning “No! Gordon No! What are you doing!!!”
I started to collect all my electronics, my wallet, anything else I cared about and put them in my waterproof container. I took a small pillow that I had stowed for my back and placed it in front of me. Even though there wasn’t a seat there, there would be room enough for one more person in front of me. I paddled up right next to her and yelled, “Grab the boat! You’re done!” Again the eye daggers of death were delivered, but I didn’t care, she was in never ever land. I was prepared in case she did something completely nutty like tipping me.
She attempted to climb on board while I leaned far to the right to counter her weight. But we were taking on water. Even with my weight on the boat we only had about 3-4 inches of clearance to the surface of the water. She wasn’t even able to climb on board with the lack of strength anyway. So I jumped out and with the kayak between us, grabbed her hand and helped pull her on top of the kayak. She was able to get her left leg up on the kayak near the bow and I encouraged her to keep edging up on top. She was able to, but was off center. I went around to the other side and started to push her up more towards the centerline of the kayak to keep it from rolling. I covered her with a thin blanket I brought with me and her upper body with a jacket.
I went back to the waterproof container and then realized I didn’t have Steve’s number. He hadn’t called me yet and I wasn’t about to call 911 yet. I asked Sarah what Steve’s number was, thinking there was no way she would remember. But about 20 seconds later she blurted it out. Thankfully I had the keypad up on my phone ready to dial so I quickly dialed it in. He answered and I explained to Steve that the swim was off and the she was in severe hypothermia and we needed his help getting a boat out to us. I said we were about 1.5 miles due east of Cisco beach, but realize now I meant due west.”
Within approximately 10-15 minutes I heard a boat, but couldn’t see it up ahead and realized that it was coming from the west behind us. During that time I was breast stroke kicking behind the kayak trying to stabilize it at the same time. I took some video right after the call with Steve to capture her state of mind in case she wanted to see how bad she was gone. She did say a few things about how sad and disappointed she was, nothing to demonstrate her mental deterioration, but could still hear how slurred her speech was.
When the boat motored up Daniel (the Utah State Park ranger) encouraged her to sit up in the kayak while he steadied her to step up onto the boat from the starboard side. I held onto the kayak pressing it into the rescue boat to ensure she didn’t fall back into the water. She was unable to climb into the boat with her own strength and Daniel had to lift her up. He got her to the front of the boat and covered with coats. I moved the kayak to the back of the rescue boat, climbed in and after Daniel had her wrapped up helped me lift it over the port side into the boat.
I went to the front of the cabin and helped secure the coats around Sarah as we motored towards Cisco beach. She wasn’t talking, but shivering which was a good sign. When we arrived I could see an ambulance backed up and Steve and Richard (the Bear Lake Marina ranger) on the boat ramp. We asked Sarah if she could stand up, but we Daniel and I had to help her stand and walk slowly to the edge of the boat and up on to the ramp where Steve and Richard helped her up. We wrapped a blanket around her waist and asked the Ambulance operator to fully back up completely to the ramp so she didn’t have to walk on the rocks.
We got her up into the ambulance where Steve and the EMT took over.
About 45 minutes later, Steve came out and said that the EMT reported that her initial temperature was 78 degrees but had climbed up to 94 within 20 minutes. Oh my gosh, she was much worse off than I thought. I should have pulled her probably half an hour before that. She was in really bad shape, but thankfully we got her out no later than that and we had a quick rescue.
Video of Sarah’s condition shortly after getting on the kayak: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8I2mvBXJMM
Sunday, August 10, 2014
2014 Season wrap up with Deer Creek
Yesterday the Deer Creek Open Water Marathon took place and it was fun. Even though I wasn't able to swim, I paddled for Sarah while her husband Steve paddled for their daughter, Sophia, who swam the one mile course.
When the 10 mile swimmers began they stayed relatively close together for the first half mile, but then spread out a little. At that point Sarah was right on my starboard side about 3 feet out. She did some drafting for a few minutes off various people, but I found that most of the other kayakers were doing a terrible job in guiding their swimmers. I knew that if I could get her to follow my line closely, that we could swim a shorter path and "swim faster" than those who were having to sight every 5 strokes.
At the end of Wallsburg bay she moved into 5th position. Once she got around that buoy she quickly moved into 3rd position. Then by the time we got to the mouth of Wallsburg bay again, she was only 25 yards behind Lisa and George. By the time we got about 2.5 miles into the race she had passed Lisa and George and was continuing to lengthen that lead. When I told her at mile 2 at her first feed she could win this thing, she splashed me and didn't believe me. I told her I was serious and that if she maintained this pace she would definitely win it. They were slowing down and she was speeding up. Their kayakers were all over the place and I noticed they both were sighting frequently. Sarah didn't sight more than a couple times the entire time I was with her.
I was expecting Steve to catch me around mile 2, but he was no where to be seen so I stayed right with her. I'd occassionally give her a sign of "You're doing really well", but holding a fist up. I'd give her a two minute warning before her 30 minute feeds which went really fast. They were about 30 seconds or so. She'd drink and go.
When we got to the 5K turnaround buoy at the Rainbow bay she was doing very well. We made it all the way to the 4.25 miles into it when Steve paddled up behind me. I told him she was due for a feed in one minute and that if she kept going at this pace she would win.
At this point I had to go to the bathroom really bad. The whole experience made me much more appreciative of Tom Reilly and Terry O'Malley my paddlers for Catalina and MIMS. That sure is a long way to paddle and I was only paddling for 3 hours. They both did way more than that.
Today was a special day for me as it's my "Channelversary". What a dream it was two years ago when I was able to tour Dover and England having just swum the channel! I'm excited to go back and experience that all over again as a coach for Chad. Here's a video that still gives me chills!
It's my ultimate goal to share that experience with him. At yesterday's race he had an incident where a kayaker got too close to him and he ended up breaking and dislocating a couple fingers on his hand. That was about a mile into the race so he swam the remaining portion in terrible pain, but he finished! I can only imagine the frustration, disappointment and worry he must have gone through during the race.
He is taking a couple days off to let the swelling go down and to heal, but he is very determined to continue his training and get his qualifier done in September. I'm praying for him that it heals quickly. Fortunately you don't have a ton of pressure on your fingers so the strain on them should be relatively small. It's a significant amount of pressure if they're in pain I'm sure, but once they've even partially healed, it should be just a matter of keeping that pain under control.
I'm so proud of my two close swimming friends Sarah and Chad for their performances on Saturday. There were 5 swimmers total this year that swam the Utah Triple Crown during race day. Pretty impressive!
Thursday, August 7, 2014
Paying the price for pushing
Shoulder pain continues. Went to see my surgeon this morning with the MRI images and he told me of three issues. He said I have arthritis and tendonitis in my shoulder. First off, I'm wearing down the tendons around the AC joint, instead of cartilage, there is none, it's bone rubbing bone which is the source of the pain. He said it can be fixed fairly easily and without much impact on my training. It's like a 4-5 week recover is all. You cut down the bone and it fills in with scar tissue. That part alone isn't a big deal.
But he noticed a couple things, a cyst near where my rotator cuff attaches to the bone. There was a good amount of liquid in the tendon and in the bone around that cyst meaning that its been irritating that joint and its inflamed. The amount of tendon that attaches to the bone concerned him. Instead of it attaching along the full length, it was only attached at a fraction of the length, which implies there could be a partial rotator cuff tear there.
He seemed more concerned about another image which meant there could be a partial Labrum tear going into my bicep. It would mean going in under my armpit, severing my bicep tendon and reattaching it to my bone instead of my shoulder.
There was a lot of information to take in and I hope I got it all right. He gave me several options like doing one surgery for the AC joint, or additionally having him go in with a scope and get a good look at things at the time of the AC joint surgery to see how bad it is and fix it.
It's got me thinking about my future and where I really want to go with this. Do I want to keep pushing my body with training 8-10K yards a day several times a week in preparation for a ultra marathon swim? I worry when I see my mother who doesn't have full range of motion in her shoulder due to her body breaking down and having surgery, but never back to full range. If I get this surgery now, do I risk needing another surgical procedure later on, cause I've "worn out" that fix? Do I take this as a sign to move on to a different sport? My shoulder still needs some rest. I tried swimming with it a little this morning while working with the kids. Still pretty painful. Makes me really sad.
I mentioned this idea to Dr. Gardiner and he said that there wasn't anything that required surgery for day to day functionality, but that if I wanted to train for big swims, that it would be a good idea to proceed. So I'm leaning towards letting it all just rest and move on, then reassess in a year. It's like I'm closing a chapter in my life that has brought me so much joy and purpose. I have to be happy and extremely satisfied with what I've accomplished. I know there are other activities I enjoy that will keep me young and fit.
I'll still be involved in coaching and participating in my friends adventures, but as for me training superhuman distances and planning long swims, that is postponed for at least a year.
But he noticed a couple things, a cyst near where my rotator cuff attaches to the bone. There was a good amount of liquid in the tendon and in the bone around that cyst meaning that its been irritating that joint and its inflamed. The amount of tendon that attaches to the bone concerned him. Instead of it attaching along the full length, it was only attached at a fraction of the length, which implies there could be a partial rotator cuff tear there.
He seemed more concerned about another image which meant there could be a partial Labrum tear going into my bicep. It would mean going in under my armpit, severing my bicep tendon and reattaching it to my bone instead of my shoulder.
There was a lot of information to take in and I hope I got it all right. He gave me several options like doing one surgery for the AC joint, or additionally having him go in with a scope and get a good look at things at the time of the AC joint surgery to see how bad it is and fix it.
It's got me thinking about my future and where I really want to go with this. Do I want to keep pushing my body with training 8-10K yards a day several times a week in preparation for a ultra marathon swim? I worry when I see my mother who doesn't have full range of motion in her shoulder due to her body breaking down and having surgery, but never back to full range. If I get this surgery now, do I risk needing another surgical procedure later on, cause I've "worn out" that fix? Do I take this as a sign to move on to a different sport? My shoulder still needs some rest. I tried swimming with it a little this morning while working with the kids. Still pretty painful. Makes me really sad.
I mentioned this idea to Dr. Gardiner and he said that there wasn't anything that required surgery for day to day functionality, but that if I wanted to train for big swims, that it would be a good idea to proceed. So I'm leaning towards letting it all just rest and move on, then reassess in a year. It's like I'm closing a chapter in my life that has brought me so much joy and purpose. I have to be happy and extremely satisfied with what I've accomplished. I know there are other activities I enjoy that will keep me young and fit.
I'll still be involved in coaching and participating in my friends adventures, but as for me training superhuman distances and planning long swims, that is postponed for at least a year.
Saturday, August 2, 2014
Jonas does it! One mile straight swimming
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Cathi observed and Jonas swam one mile |
He did it and I was so proud as I saw him really sprint that last lap. He still had ton left in the tank. What a proud moment for me to see that kid make it. Cool thing is he now gets his Mile Swim patch for scouts. Probably the youngest scout to get it in our troop.
Nice job Joey!
Monday, July 28, 2014
1000 miles swam in open water
This morning I woke up with some shoulder pain just by lifting it. This is new. Not the typical ache at my ac joint. Seems like it's my deltoid muscle itself and not the joint. Who knows. If it doesn't get better by tomorrow afternoon, I'll schedule an appointment with Dr. Gardiner like I should have done in the first place a few weeks ago.
So I hurried to hook up the trailer and got out to Pineview to paddle for Chad, Goody, and Sarah. I stopped at Walmart
and picked up a nice headlamp and some glow sticks. Met at the marina and got all ready to go. We were in the water at 0440 and Sarah went at a slightly faster pace and had to stop a few times to let the boys catch up.
We got to the buoy line and I encouraged them to sprint the distance which is about 300 yards or so. Then we made our way up the south side and then the sun started to show a little bit of light on the horizon. When we got to the "Cigarette Buoys" as Goody calls them, I saw that Emily and Michelle's car was at the parking lot. We were about 15 minutes past due so we had to hurry.
When we arrived they were on the beach preparing to get in. Took a bit of coaxing, but we got them in. Goody escorted Emily along the buoy line (1 mile), while Sarah and I escorted Michelle. They did great. They still are new to open water swimming and are a little apprehensive about it, but with more practice and confidence they'll do just fine. They're strokes look good, it's just a matter of practice and persistence.
Looking forward to another session. Chad's big Dam to Dam swim is this Friday. He's planning to do one more big workout this week, and then taper down for a fully energized day in Idaho on the water. Good luck Chad, you're gonna do awesome.
Oh, I hit a pretty big milestone this past weekend at the swim camp. 1000 miles swam in open water in my lifetime. Doesn't sound like a lot, considering I also just hit over 5000 miles total (both pool and open water swimming).
Given the 10,000 hour rule for being a master in your field of choice, which actually Malcolm Gladwell, the inventor of the 10,000 hour rule, clarifies as not being completely relevant to sport. Anyhow, given a 30 minute mile, I've only achieved 2,500 hours of swimming. In order to get the 10,000 hours, I'll need to quadruple my total so far. At the rate of swimming 500 miles/year till I'm 80, I'll finally achieve that distance of swimming the circumference of the earth at the equator. Woah! I wonder how many miles someone like Phelps has swam in his lifetime.
So I hurried to hook up the trailer and got out to Pineview to paddle for Chad, Goody, and Sarah. I stopped at Walmart
and picked up a nice headlamp and some glow sticks. Met at the marina and got all ready to go. We were in the water at 0440 and Sarah went at a slightly faster pace and had to stop a few times to let the boys catch up.
We got to the buoy line and I encouraged them to sprint the distance which is about 300 yards or so. Then we made our way up the south side and then the sun started to show a little bit of light on the horizon. When we got to the "Cigarette Buoys" as Goody calls them, I saw that Emily and Michelle's car was at the parking lot. We were about 15 minutes past due so we had to hurry.
When we arrived they were on the beach preparing to get in. Took a bit of coaxing, but we got them in. Goody escorted Emily along the buoy line (1 mile), while Sarah and I escorted Michelle. They did great. They still are new to open water swimming and are a little apprehensive about it, but with more practice and confidence they'll do just fine. They're strokes look good, it's just a matter of practice and persistence.
Looking forward to another session. Chad's big Dam to Dam swim is this Friday. He's planning to do one more big workout this week, and then taper down for a fully energized day in Idaho on the water. Good luck Chad, you're gonna do awesome.
Oh, I hit a pretty big milestone this past weekend at the swim camp. 1000 miles swam in open water in my lifetime. Doesn't sound like a lot, considering I also just hit over 5000 miles total (both pool and open water swimming).
Given the 10,000 hour rule for being a master in your field of choice, which actually Malcolm Gladwell, the inventor of the 10,000 hour rule, clarifies as not being completely relevant to sport. Anyhow, given a 30 minute mile, I've only achieved 2,500 hours of swimming. In order to get the 10,000 hours, I'll need to quadruple my total so far. At the rate of swimming 500 miles/year till I'm 80, I'll finally achieve that distance of swimming the circumference of the earth at the equator. Woah! I wonder how many miles someone like Phelps has swam in his lifetime.
Sunday, July 27, 2014
Day 2 of 2014 Swim Camp
This morning we all slept in a little because of last night's night swim. We started our swim after breakfast and decided to swim across the reservoir to the other side.
Last night Gary arrived and this morning swam with Cathi. Cathi hasn't swam more than a mile in open water before and this would be a new PR for her. She's a backstroker so she swam the whole thing backstroke. She didn't even wear goggles. Problem is she could sight very well unless the kayaker was at her 7 oclock almost behind her so she could see her out of the bottom of her eye, as she was looking up. She would keep her eyes closed rather than use goggles to keep the sun out. Made for a very wavy course to say the least. Karl's wife Char paddled for them.
Sarah, Joelle, Sue and myself all stayed right together with Renee Beard as the kayaker. Sarah experimented with drafting off different people along the say. She found that drafting off a big person (me), was more effective and could tell the difference than drafting off someone smaller, Sue or Joelle. Makes sense. A bigger boat will create a bigger wave and displace more water than a smaller one. I suggested that for deer creek we work together and swim as a pack, taking turns drafting. I think I may get a couple takers on that idea. That would be fun.
After we got back Joelle and I turned back around and swam out to Cathi while Sarah paddled. She had never paddled before and wanted to see what she was asking Steve, her husband to do. When we got back to Cathi we swam backstroke together back to the finish. I was glad for the change of stroke, it was fun.
After this swim we had lunch, broke camp and said our goodbyes. It was such a fun weekend!
Total for the day: 3.25 miles
Last night Gary arrived and this morning swam with Cathi. Cathi hasn't swam more than a mile in open water before and this would be a new PR for her. She's a backstroker so she swam the whole thing backstroke. She didn't even wear goggles. Problem is she could sight very well unless the kayaker was at her 7 oclock almost behind her so she could see her out of the bottom of her eye, as she was looking up. She would keep her eyes closed rather than use goggles to keep the sun out. Made for a very wavy course to say the least. Karl's wife Char paddled for them.
Sarah, Joelle, Sue and myself all stayed right together with Renee Beard as the kayaker. Sarah experimented with drafting off different people along the say. She found that drafting off a big person (me), was more effective and could tell the difference than drafting off someone smaller, Sue or Joelle. Makes sense. A bigger boat will create a bigger wave and displace more water than a smaller one. I suggested that for deer creek we work together and swim as a pack, taking turns drafting. I think I may get a couple takers on that idea. That would be fun.
After we got back Joelle and I turned back around and swam out to Cathi while Sarah paddled. She had never paddled before and wanted to see what she was asking Steve, her husband to do. When we got back to Cathi we swam backstroke together back to the finish. I was glad for the change of stroke, it was fun.
After this swim we had lunch, broke camp and said our goodbyes. It was such a fun weekend!
Total for the day: 3.25 miles
Friday, July 25, 2014
Day 1 of 2014 Swim Camp
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This morning's sunrise swim oute. |
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Sarah, Sue and me enjoying the sun rise. |
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Lovely views from the water! |
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Steve was the camp chow champion! |
The campsite we had was awesome. It was plenty spacious, and we didn't have any neighboring campers besides our group. We had our own water entry which wasn't very hospitable to swimmers, but doable. We had a fairly steep and narrow path to the water which we were able to get the kayaks down to, but the rocks getting in were sharp and slippery which made for
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Kids clinic about to start |
After breakfast we had our kids clinic. Sophia, Ryan, Lucy, Jonas and Isaac started out planning to swim one mile. Jonas quickly got cold and started to cry. We were only 100 yards into it and he was already shivering. I tried to encourage him, but he was done. I told him to climb into the front of the boat and we continued to escort Isaac and Lucy, while Sophia and Ryan stayed with Cathi in her boat (which was also accompanied by Sue swimming alongside).
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Me and my kids "Got Salt?" Austin and Jacob had to work and weren't able to join us at camp. |
He started crying at about .6 miles into it. He kept asking me up to that point, "Do you think I can do it Dad?" and I also heard him mutter to himself, "You can do this Issac, you can do this!" It made me laugh, he's such a determined kid. He never touched the boat or asked if he could quit, he was gonna do this. (Forget the fact that I gave him a financial incentive)
When we got around the point coming back, Lucy was already done. Isaac continued on despite crying and exclaiming, "This was so much harder than I thought it was going to be", or "I'm so tired! I
feel sick." It made me realize why they don't let kids under 16 swim the English Channel anymore. It's just too much to ask a kid to do. But this was one mile and were almost done. When we finished there was still a good sized group of kids and adults there and everyone cheered for him. He was so proud of himself. Quite an accomplishment for a 10 year old kid who really is still very much a beginner. Next time, we'll get him to do the whole distance front crawl without stopping.

The afternoon we had our main swim with Joelle, Karl, Sue, Sarah and myself. We all drove to "Swimmer's Beach", a short 5 minute drive from camp where there was a beach that was quite long and much more friendly to kids and swimmers entering/exiting the water. We decided to swim along the shoreline back to camp and back. We had two kayaks, one for Joelle, Sue Sarah and myself and Karl had his wife Char with him.
Sue and Joelle were going at a faster pace than I like to cruise at, but I decided to just stay with them. The water was fairly calm unless a boater sped by and then we'd get a brief moment of wake, but it wasn't bad. Joelle's Mom, Renee, paddled for us. We stopped for a minute at our camp beach and then swam back to the start at swimmer's beach. When I got there, Isaac asked me if I wanted to accompany him for a swim out to the no wake buoys and back. A distance of about 300 yards round trip. We did. He did mostly breaststroke this time. I swam alongside him and continued to encourage him. This time he didn't cry and enjoyed it. It's so fun to watch him get excited about his potential and discover what really cool things he is capable of.
We let the kids play a little longer and then took of to return to camp, where Steve and I cooked hamburgers. The potluck dinner was outstanding. Lots of good food and we enjoyed it. I attempted to get the movie put together, but realized I failed to install the right software for playing a movie. I had to reinstall Windows on my machine and forgot to get everything I needed on it. It wasn't a big deal, the kids enjoyed playing games and swinging the glow sticks around.

We stopped at the turnaround point and floated while watching the stars. There were no external lights out and they were brilliant. I suggested floating and then sculling in a circle while looking up. It was unreal how beautiful the sky was!
Today was the perfect day. Lots of swimming, fun and food!
Total for the day: 5.4 miles
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