• Rip currents can often be seen from the beach as a cloudy stretch of water in between areas of high wave action.

    The other current is called a structural current. These currents occur along break walls and the many concrete piers along the shoreline. They form when high waves throw water against the structures. That water has no where to go but further out into the lake.

    “They can be pretty fast and some of the measurements that they’ve done recently have been twice faster than Michael Phelps can swim,” Dodson said.

    The best way to keep yourself and others safe from these currents is to stay dry when waves are high — and steer clear of the pier. But sometimes we don’t realize how dangerous a situation is until we’re in it.

    See WSBT

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  • Team Uganda won 6 medals in total most being bronze while one was a silver in the just concluded Cana Zone 4 swimming championship that were held in Angola. Nine countries participated in the championship South Africa emerged eventual winners, but Ugandans are happy by the performance they put up during the tournament. Team Uganda has acquired enough experience and exposure to enable them compete at a higher level.

  • She’s one of the most decorated Olympic athletes in United States history .. but Amy Van Dyken says the biggest accomplishment of her life is STANDING again … after severing her spinal cord last year.

  • Though acute otitis externa is often called “swimmer’s ear,” not everyone who jumps into the pool or lake this summer will get the infection.

    “Typically, swimming isn’t a problem,” said Dr. Gregory H. Esselman with Aiken Ear Nose and Throat.

    The phrase “swimmer’s ear” refers to a “swelling and pain in the skin of the ear canal,” he continued.

    The ear canal is “the narrow, tubelike passage through which sound enters the ear,” according to The American Heritage Stedman’s Medical Dictionary.

    “A common source of the infection is increased moisture trapped in the ear canal, from baths, showers, swimming or moist environments. When water is trapped in the ear canal, bacteria that normally inhabit the skin and ear canal multiply, causing infection of the ear canal,” as stated by the American Academy of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery.

    Other factors that the American Academy of Otolaryngology lists that could cause the infection include “excessive cleaning of the ear canal with cotton swabs or anything else,” “contact with certain chemicals such as hair spray or hair dye” or “a cut in the skin of the ear canal.”

    Esselman also recommends avoid “cleaning the wax out of your ear,” as the wax can help ward off infection.

    Read Aiken Standard

  • Cullen Jones, a two-time gold medalist who trains in Charlotte, talks about training for a third bid to make the U.S. Olympic team, his motivation and the lure of competing in front of the home crowd.

    https://youtu.be/g4fLdXGRYog

  • Spanish swimmer Miguel Ortiz joined a number of top sportsmen and women around the world who have looked to gain a competitive edge by having laser eye surgery at Optical Express. Miguel talks about his experience of Optical Express in Japan and the effect laser eye surgery has had on his performance in the pool as he strives for the next Olympics in Rio.

  • Craig Hummer and Rowdy Gaines interview Michael Phelps at the conclusion of the Arena Pro Swim Series at Charlotte.

  • An outbreak of a stomach bug that was tied to swimming in one Oregon lake highlights a perhaps less obvious hazard of summer fun.

    Last July, 70 people became ill with norovirus — a very contagious virus that causes vomiting and diarrhea — after visiting a lake near Portland, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than half of those who got sick were kids ages 4 to 10.

    The researchers determined that the lake was likely the source of the infection after they found that people who swam in the lake were about two times more likely to develop vomiting or diarrhea, compared to people who visited the park but didn’t swim, the report said. People typically developed symptoms about a day after they were exposed to the virus.

    Read LiveScience

    Photo by Jem Hologram.

  • The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) have acknowledged that a French television documentary which saw eight athletes undergo a month-long period of micro-dosing did “raise questions” about the ability of athletes to avoid testing positive by taking minimal amounts of performance enhancing substances.

    Athletes participating in the study, documented by France 2’s sports magazine show Stade 2, underwent a VO2 max test, a time trial on a static bike and a 3,000 metre run before repeating the tests after a month-long process of micro-dosing, using prohibited substances such as erythropoietin (EPO).

    The study attempted to demonstrate how athletes could avoid detection from the Athlete Biological Passport (ABP) through the process of micro-dosing, whilst they athletes displayed an average improvement of 6.1 per cent in the VO2 max test, as well as 2.3 and 2.8 per cent gains in the time trial and runs respectively.

    WADA have now confirmed that they are now aware of the five completed profiles produced by the study and in a statement outlined that the ABP would have flagged up the profiles as possible doping cases.

    “Of those five, two would have been considered “positive” cases under the ABP model if properly used, and three would have been “suspicious” cases leading to targeted testing,” the statement read.

    The ABP system has been credited as a key tool in the fight against doping, by developing a blood profile of athletes and flagging abnormalities but micro-dosing has been suggested as a way of bypassing the system and avoiding detection.

    Read Inside the Games

    Photo by CiclismoItalia