Thunderstorms, indoor pools and workouts interrupted

Hey gang, I'm being watchful of the weather (and a free-lance deadline)--so I'm hoping that I don't run into the same problem as I did about a week ago. At that time, I had set out to do a pretty long workout (need the yards for my open water swim!). Unfortunately, the lifeguards chased us out of the pool b/c of hearing thunder. They told me that they'd wait a half hour, but that the clock would be reset if there was more thunder. Won't even get started on why this should be the case, but more important for my purposes is to get a sense of what you do if your schedule is tight and the time you set up for swimming a specific workout is thrown out due to something like this (heck, you can substitute other events that close pools, if you want, as the t-storm is just one way such a thing can happen). Do you wait until who knows how long and hope the pool will reopen? Do something dry-land that will at least use the swimming muscles? Bag it and decide it's not your day? (As it happened, it was last Friday and although I'm not superstitious, mostly, it seemed as if that day was full of things that went wrong. Won't go into all that.) I want--no, NEED, to make sure I'm staying abreast of the training and I hate missing time for something like that--and probably just need to plan better to go early in the morning when there are fewer thunderstorms--but that said, stuff happens (even early in the morning), so I want to have a good back-up plan--or be all Zen about it and know that over the long haul, I'll be ready. Thanks for any thoughts!
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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 10 years ago
    But whether or not it's sound policy, if it is indeed the policy at the indoor pool where you swim and they do hear thunder and close the pool, you're not going to get them to change their minds that day no matter how much you argue about it. So the original question still stands: what approach do you take to your workout? I pretty much have to just bag it for the day in that situation since I usually pack my gym bag for either a swim or a dryland, not both and there's not much wiggle room in my schedule for me to wait it out. It's not ideal, though, and end up all grumbly when that happens.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 10 years ago
    But whether or not it's sound policy, if it is indeed the policy at the indoor pool where you swim and they do hear thunder and close the pool, you're not going to get them to change their minds that day no matter how much you argue about it. So the original question still stands: what approach do you take to your workout? I pretty much have to just bag it for the day in that situation since I usually pack my gym bag for either a swim or a dryland, not both and there's not much wiggle room in my schedule for me to wait it out. It's not ideal, though, and end up all grumbly when that happens.
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