Where can we train swimming with clothes on?

Former Member
Former Member
For emergency situations, it's necessary to be able to swim with your regular clothes on. It must be much harder. Is open water the only place where this can be trained?
Parents
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    I guess since you were totally proven a fool on the other thread you've come to this one to continue your uneducated rant. What do you mean by tech suit craze? It's been going on since at least 1988 making it neither new nor a craze. Do you honestly know a single thing about competitive swimming at all? I remember having to swim in jeans and a sweatshirt and then inflating your jeans to make an ad-hoc life vest for WSI back in the 1980s. Hey Aquageek Smoking pot has been going on for over 40 years now -and it's still considered a craze. By the way since you are so intent about condemning me for my purported lack of knowledge about competitive swimming, what is so "competitive" about using a tech suit? Anyone can go out and buy one, put it on, and swim in it. It doesn't take any extraordinary athletic skill to do that. :blah: Dolphin 2
Reply
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    I guess since you were totally proven a fool on the other thread you've come to this one to continue your uneducated rant. What do you mean by tech suit craze? It's been going on since at least 1988 making it neither new nor a craze. Do you honestly know a single thing about competitive swimming at all? I remember having to swim in jeans and a sweatshirt and then inflating your jeans to make an ad-hoc life vest for WSI back in the 1980s. Hey Aquageek Smoking pot has been going on for over 40 years now -and it's still considered a craze. By the way since you are so intent about condemning me for my purported lack of knowledge about competitive swimming, what is so "competitive" about using a tech suit? Anyone can go out and buy one, put it on, and swim in it. It doesn't take any extraordinary athletic skill to do that. :blah: Dolphin 2
Children
No Data