Treading water, once and for all, can someone solve this for me?

Former Member
Former Member
I apologize for having three active threads. This is the last one. I promise. =) I'm *REALLY* confused about treading water. I've seen all the videos. I understand what sculling is. I've tried numerous things in the water. I've heard all kinds of conflicting information. As I understand it, there are various kinds of kicks you can use to varying degrees of efficiency including: - an 'upright' breastroke kick - a scissor kick - a bicycle kick - a 'frog' kick? - an egg-beater kick I don't fully understand the difference between all these kicks nor do I know which one is most efficient. What I do know is that I'm so frustrated with treading water, *I don't care* which one I learn. I just want to be able to stay upright in the deep end without assistance. I asked my instructor if I could just try a scissor kick, and she said "no, it's most definitely not a scissor kick, it's a a bicycle kick" -- implying, I suppose, up and down motion of the legs like you would have on a bike. But I've watched TI and GoSwim videos all of which show people successfully treading with a scissor kick. And if I understand correctly, a scissor kick is what I would do normally on backstroke or freestyle. So... is there any reason in the world that I shouldn't just stick with the scissor kick and hand-sculling for treading water? I need to pick one thing and focus on it, because I'm haphazardly trying all these different kicks and getting nowhere fast. Thanks.
Parents
  • Flutterkick goes back and forth - so each leg travels in front of and behind the body. In competitive swimming (ie., travelling horizontally, not treading water) this should be a small tight motion. Scissorkick - think like a scissor - one leg goes forward, one goes back, and they meet at the middle. Open/close - like a scissor would. Don't think about making your legs straight. They are loosely straight, just like they're loosely straight in flutter kick. Different methods work better for different folks in terms of treading water. I'd go with whatever seems to hold you up best. I do an eggbeater kick, but can't do it for long because my knees start to hurt. Good luck!
Reply
  • Flutterkick goes back and forth - so each leg travels in front of and behind the body. In competitive swimming (ie., travelling horizontally, not treading water) this should be a small tight motion. Scissorkick - think like a scissor - one leg goes forward, one goes back, and they meet at the middle. Open/close - like a scissor would. Don't think about making your legs straight. They are loosely straight, just like they're loosely straight in flutter kick. Different methods work better for different folks in terms of treading water. I'd go with whatever seems to hold you up best. I do an eggbeater kick, but can't do it for long because my knees start to hurt. Good luck!
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