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Lithuanian Olympic gold medallist Ruta Meilutyte can become the greatest female breaststroke swimmer of all time, according to her coach Jon Rudd.
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Lithuanian Olympic gold medallist Ruta Meilutyte can become the greatest female breaststroke swimmer of all time, according to her coach Jon Rudd.
A photo from the LEN 2011 European Short Course Championships in Szczecin, Poland. Faroe Island’s Pál Joensen racing past the Szczecin Project 2050 ad during warmup on the last day of the meet.
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The former Australian free-style swimmer Ian Thorpe is heading to one of the world’s greatest open water swimming competitions – the Bosphorus Cross-Continental Swim.
Thorpedo, who has set numerous world records throughout his glittering swimming career, stated his excitement at being involved in the event via Twitter.
Excited about heading to #Istanbul next week to celebrate the 25th Bosphorus Cross-Continental Swim @2kita1yaris #NOTC
— Ian Thorpe (@IanThorpe) June 28, 2013
Image courtesy of xiaming, CC BY-SA 3.0
Sweden’s Jennie Johansson focusing before the women’s 100 meter breaststroke final at the LEN 2012 European Swimming Championships in Debrecen, Hungary. She won silver behind Germany’s Sarah Poewe, see the result list here.
See story on KSTP.com and wahoosms.com
It looks like a headband and if a child that’s wearing one gets in trouble- parents and lifeguards will know.
If a child is submerged for 20 seconds, a light flashes on a tower. If a child is under for 30 seconds or more, an alarm goes off.
A YMCA in Connecticut paid $30,000 to install the system at their swimming pond. The makers of the technology say it’s especially helpful in murky water.
Physicists intrigued by the story that 29-year-old Harrison Okene survived being trapped in a 4 feet high air pocket for 60 hours underwater off the Nigerian coast, see phys.org and StackExchange
Okene was trapped in a capsized boat with an air bubble described as only 4 feet high. Normally, a person would need about 1,000 cubic feet of atmospheric air to survive 60 hours. At a depth of 100 feet, this volume would be compressed by a factor of about 4 by the water pressure, so theoretically an air pocket with dimensions 6x6x6 feet would contain enough oxygen to survive for that time.
It’s not the lack of oxygen but poisoning by the exhaled carbon dioxide that would first kill the person in this situation. However, the physics of interaction of atmospheric gases with water could make a critical difference in this case. Carbon dioxide is very soluble in water (much more so than nitrogen and oxygen), and its absorption by the water could have been the reason why carbon dioxide did not build up to the lethal concentration of about 5 percent.
“This man was lucky to survive mainly because a sufficiently large amount of trapped air was in his air pocket,” Umansky said. “He was not poisoned by the CO2 after 60 hours spent there, because it stayed at safe levels, and we can speculate that it was helped by the ocean water sealing his enclosure.”
36 Hour Charity Swim – A great feat achieved by these two young gentleman (Rich Hill and Greg Kyd) raising over £4000 for two brilliant charities. 36 hours of swimming whittled down into just 3 minutes of footage that is well worth a watch.
From the article on avalonleisure.co.uk:
By the end of their mammoth challenge they had covered a staggering 109.692 meters in the pool, the equivalent to crossing the English Channel over 3 times.
A ‘honorable mention’ addition to that post the other day, Five of my favorite Swim Good covers. Misfits Dance Crew interpreting ebrahim‘s cover of Frank Ocean’s song “Swim Good“.