Dear fellow swimmers
The time a more experienced swimmer told me a cold truth
About this time of year, during my first winter of outdoor swimming, I was feeling smug as I’d just swum in water of about 12 degrees, and I
wasn’t cold. The sun was shining, mist was hanging over the water. The trees along the bank blazed in glorious autumn colours. I turned to a fellow swimmer and said:
“This winter swimming business isn’t as bad as I thought it would be.”
Another more experienced swimmer
standing nearby grunted and said:
“I hate to tell you this, but it isn’t winter yet.”
And he was right, of course. Swimming in 3-degree water, with -5-degree air temperature, as we did the following January, was a totally different prospect
and experience to that delightfully mild November morning.
But I doubt I would have dared to dip in January if I hadn’t swum in November. And if I hadn’t swum in the coldest, darkest months of the year, I wouldn’t have appreciated the following spring in quite the same way.
For some of you reading this, outdoor swimming in winter is a natural and obvious thing to do. Others will be sceptical, as I was before I started. I now love how my regular winter river dips keep me connected to the changing seasons. I pay attention to sunrise times like never before. And I’m convinced cold water plunges help me recover from hard training sessions in the pool.
If you’re still sitting on the fence about winter swimming this season, take the plunge, and do it soon. Autumn is a beautiful time to swim outdoors, and swimming now will make it easier when it’s properly cold.
If you’re unsure where to start, we have plenty of resources on our website to help, including:
Simon Griffiths
Founder and
publisher, Outdoor Swimmer
p.s. Thank you to Zone3 for sponsoring The Dip this week. If you would like to put your brand in front of 35,000 swimmers, please get in touch.
*All print subscribers have free access to digital content, including all our back issues, on Pocket Mags. See how to activate your account.