• Swimming has taught Javier Lopez and Douglas Nogueira how to set goals and achieve them. When you’re training to compete, your best friend is the black line, you count the tiles on the bottom of the pool, and your teammates become friends for life.

    http://youtu.be/0jcT0sc75Y8

  • Ocean is a competitive free diver who can hold her breath for over six minutes. A marine biologist and researcher, Ocean can get closer to nature. Ocean is also a dive instructor who empowers her students to experience the full beauty of the ocean’s ecosystem.

    http://youtu.be/QP935NJUEIA

  • Explore a world where working out is the furthest thing from work. Students Forrest Allison and Lisa Strong from Allyson Bailey’s deep water class remind us how aqua aerobics can transform bodies and minds with challenging, effective workouts.

    http://youtu.be/xGG3ODf9p4I

  • The water gives people from every walk of life a chance to reach their fitness goals. The UCLA Masters Swim Club is a supportive community that helps swimmers Shana Doronn and Dave Medina live in the moment and feel very much alive.

    http://youtu.be/EUlaHptN6bo

  • The Great Australia Day Swim will again be held in Brighton on January 26.

    The carnival raises tens of thousands of dollars for Brighton Rotary projects.

    Young gun Dean Wilson will try to retain his 5km title, which the Bonbeach 16-year-old superfish has held for the past two years.

    The ambassador for the swim spectacular is record-breaking marathon man John van Wisse, who has conquered long-distance challenges across the world.

    Great Australia Day Swim director Stuart McIntyre said while swimmers would have a lot of fun, it was also a great event to watch.

    “Over 1000 swimmers will participate in open water events around the pier, breakwater and marina, which will provide a spectacular vantage point for spectators,” he said.

    “There will be live entertainment and food stalls on the concourse in front of Middle Brighton Baths.

    “It is a great way to celebrate Australia Day.”

    Read Herald Sun

  • The 38-year-old Konrad’s escape was a testament to willpower and world-class athleticism.

    “It’s an incredible story,” the endurance swimmer Diana Nyad said. “Taking his life in his hands and deciding he was going to save himself.”

    Konrad, who played for the Miami Dolphins from 1999 to 2004, had been around boats since his childhood on Boston’s North Shore. So he knew what it meant when he fell off his 31-foot Grady-White while fishing alone nine miles from land.

    “A boater’s nightmare,” he said.

    He swam to Palm Beach, covering a distance of 27 miles before ringing the doorbell of an oceanfront home for help at 4:30 a.m. Thursday.

    The details of his survival were hard to believe, he and his wife, Tammy Konrad, agreed.

    “It was a miracle he made it home,” she said.

    Read The New York Times

    http://youtu.be/tzTNlg0Xzmo

    http://youtu.be/oemWHW6eQ40

  • Mike is a Los Angeles County Lifeguard Captain who has protected the beaches since 1980. LA lifeguards watch over 72 miles of coastline, from San Pedro to Malibu. When you’re a lifeguard, courage becomes instinct, and bravery is just part of the job description.

    http://youtu.be/CjcKE-UqsvE

  • In open water swimming, you have to develop the strength to go the distance. The Deep Enders members Jim McConica and Tamie Stewart work to find their forever pace. The Deep Enders embrace the freedom of the ocean as well as the power of friendship.

    http://youtu.be/btd8GmBKIV8

  • Olympic swimmer Emily Seebohm shows us how she has #SuperSeriousFun when she’s away from the pool ahead of the BHP Billiton Aquatic Super Series.