• Kids, don’t do this. It is crazy.

    70+ foot jump into a 5 foot deep pool

    http://youtu.be/unvi9k8_SX0

  • While diving, this diver suddenly counters a whale shark that nearly eats her! Luckily a fellow diver is nearby to quickly pull her out of the way.

  • Three Americans hope to make history by becoming the first trio of siblings to swim across the English Channel at the same time.

    As Linh Bui reports, there’s a Baltimore connection.

    Devin, Dustin, and Danielle Wahl will face extreme conditions — from jellyfish, to cold temperatures, to rough ocean currents.

    See CBS Baltimore

  • Montreal, Canada will stage the 15th FINA World Masters Championships, the last stand-alone edition of the event. The picturesque city, which already hosted the championships exactly 20 years ago, will welcome a total 7’794 participants, representing 101 nations, for the 12-day colourful bash.

    The Parc Jean-Drapeau Aquatic Complex on St. Helene island, regarded as the fastest pool in Canada, will be the main venue of the competition. This is where the 1976 Summer Olympics were held and quite likely, this year’s championships may include medallists from those Games.

    Aquatics aficionados, aged 25 to more than 100 years old, will make the trip to Montreal – whether it is for fun, meet friends from other corners of the world or keep in shape – to compete in one of the five FINA disciplines on the programme: swimming, diving, water polo, synchronised swimming and open water swimming.

    Source: FINA

  • On the pool deck, Alicia Coutts is realistic about defending her five gold medals from Delhi 2010 but behind-the-scenes she’s enjoying her last Commonwealth Games bonding with her teammates over a bowl of whipped cream.

    See Brisbane Times

  • Hannah Miley raised the roof at Tollcross Thursday night when she won Gold in the 400m individual medley. Defending her title from Delhi 2010, Hannah describes just how important the crowd were in bringing her home to victory.

    In other news, Hannah’s dad and coach Patrick had to skip a large queue in order to see the win, and was embarrassed about that. See the video interview on BBC.

  • The craziest thing is that there was no actual accident. A simple waist-level dive into the water—no collision with any object, no previous injuries—changed Young’s life forever. He was lucky enough to survive and recover from the near-fatal injury, eventually returning to his normal life. But the love and support he received and the way he used photography as therapy to get through the hardest times will stay with him forever.

    The story is beyond incredible. Young spent 11 days in ICU, the first six of which the doctors didn’t even know if he would live. But, he stayed strong, and soon his movement began to come back. First, he had a little movement in his right arm, then his leg, and eventually his toes.

    He was then transferred to a rehab home where he had to basically relearn every simple everyday function, like swallowing on his own and tying his shoelaces. He had to relearn how to walk. For about a month and a half, he had physical and occupational therapy every day and this, coupled with the mental focus of getting better, left him exhausted all the time. But he met his goal—he walked out of rehab.

  • Drowning is the number one cause of accidental death for children under 5-years-old, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    In order to combat this statistic, British Swim School has taken to the waves, teaching children through their Montgomery County locations not just how to swim, just how to survive.

    MyMCMedia’s Valerie Bonk has more on how the school is bringing life-saving skills to local children.

  • Many Central American and Mexican migrants get to the U.S. by swimming across the Rio Grande River. Many don’t survive the river’s strong undercurrent, and if they do, many then fall victim to dehydration navigating the scorching hot desert in search of a border town. To get a feel for the treacherous conditions thousands of migrants face, Fusion’s Jorge Ramos decided to swim the river.

    http://youtu.be/F9JqTIkNH5g