Is your pool too hot !

Former Member
Former Member
My local pool has just raised the water temp to 30 ' C ( 86 ' F ) ! At this temp I am exhausted after 4 lengths. A full workout of 60 to 90 mins is impossible without suffering heat exhaustion. They have already had 1 swimmer collapse on poolside after swimming hard for 40 mins. This has happened because a ' disabled swim group ' who use the pool for 45 mins once a week keep complaining about how cold the pool is. The pool management can't figure out the pool temp software so the temp is set that high for 24/7. It used to be 27' C ( 80.6' F ) and was then raised to 28'C (82.4 ' F ) 1 year ago. I can't set workouts for my club that cause heat distress if carried out so it is a nightmare. My training is on hold until i can change this and I will have to move my masters club to another pool if not changed. Maybe ' Shaky's ' pool has space for us ? Emmet Hines in his book says that 82 ' F ( 27.7' C ) is ideal for training, and that anything over 84' F ( 28.4 ' C ) is too hot. Does anyone else suffer through hot water temperatures ? Can anyone recommend online research that I can use to prove the dangers of excercising in hot water ?
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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 21 years ago
    Originally posted by jdut I, too, swim/coach at a pool which is utilized by many different groups (all of which seem to have more weight than the Masters Group, but that's another story)... I've made the same observation, but doesn't that seem bass ackwards? I mean, in nature, warm-blooded animals that swim in cold water develop a layer of fat to insulate them from the cold. Shouldn't those bloated water aerobes have plenty of insulation? Shouldn't the little skinny swimmers be shivering their 5% body fat glutes off? Shouldn't it be the manatee-like water aerobes crying for colder water? Lap swimmers must be working a LOT harder than the manatees.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 21 years ago
    Originally posted by jdut I, too, swim/coach at a pool which is utilized by many different groups (all of which seem to have more weight than the Masters Group, but that's another story)... I've made the same observation, but doesn't that seem bass ackwards? I mean, in nature, warm-blooded animals that swim in cold water develop a layer of fat to insulate them from the cold. Shouldn't those bloated water aerobes have plenty of insulation? Shouldn't the little skinny swimmers be shivering their 5% body fat glutes off? Shouldn't it be the manatee-like water aerobes crying for colder water? Lap swimmers must be working a LOT harder than the manatees.
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