Holy bejeezus ...
Diana Nyad: I broke many records in my prime as a long-distance swimmer back in the 1970’s, in my twenties. For my world record—102.5 continuous miles from the Bahamas to Florida in 1979—and other swims, such as breaking the 50-year-old mark for circling Manhattan Island ... Yet my dream of swimming from Cuba to Florida was dashed in 1978, after fighting stiff winds and huge seas for 41hrs, 49 mins, and still not reaching the Florida coast ...
... Until a year ago, I hadn’t swum a stroke for 31 years. Swimmer’s burnout gripped me to the point that I could have sworn I would never, ever swim a lap again in my life. But approaching 60 last year threw me into the existential angst of wondering what I had done with my life ... I started swimming a few laps, just to take some pressure off the knees from all the other activities I enjoy.
My workouts escalated. My motivation started to burn like a fire in my soul. One day I was driving, after a long swim, and I stopped and looked hard in the rearview mirror. And I said to myself: This is one dream I actually could go back and achieve. At 60, I could swim from Cuba to Florida. This time, without a shark cage.
But first, a little warmup swim ...
AboutDiana: On July 10th, at the age of 60, legendary open-water swimmer Diana Nyad will attempt to complete her first marathon swim in over 30 years. Nyad's triumphant return to long-distance swimming till take her 50 miles off the Florida Coast to begin a consecutive 24-hour swim through the Gulf Stream's open-water and back to the Florida shoreline, without a shark cage.
CNN Health: Diana Nyad chases a dream
Diana's Website
Wow.
Former Member
When I swam the straits between Mainland Canada to Prince Edward Island the crew could see the Jelly fish from the boat. These patches were about 400 feet wide and 300 feet deep.
The crew tried to avoid them but we swam right through those little guys a few times. I was hallucinating after about 5 miles. I was red from head to toe with the stings. However I did finish the swim although it was only 9 miles it took 9 hours. Lots of rip tides and swam a few extra miles to get to the finish line.
It's all about the jellyfish.
espn.go.com/.../espnw-stinging-disappointment-diana-nyad
I guess I've never encountered box jellyfish. The kinds I've encountered have ranged from "mildly annoying" to "really annoying." Not "potentially deadly."
It's all about the jellyfish.
espn.go.com/.../espnw-stinging-disappointment-diana-nyad
I guess I've never encountered box jellyfish. The kinds I've encountered have ranged from "mildly annoying" to "really annoying." Not "potentially deadly."
"even with 35-mile-per-hour winds and the sharks ... the unpredictable Gulf Stream that turned 70-foot boats around backward."
Diana consumes the English with fireballs from her eyes, and bolts of lightning from her ***.
Another attempt ...
In case any of you East Coasters are heading to bed soon, the inside word is that that Diana will begin her swim tomorrow at 9am EST from Cuba ... follow us all weekend over FB and the www.diananyad.com site ...
She's off!
At 8:59:02am {EST today} Diana jumped in the water and began her swim. The conditions are perfectly clear, calm seas. Great conditions right now! She is swimming strong and making her way out of the marina and heading out to sea ...
Apparently she's still doing well physically. At this point she's farther than she's ever gone in her previous attempts.
I'm cheering for her! She's got tons of courage to attempt a swim like this; to humbly continue trying and retrying amazes me.
Go Diana!
Wow, 80.38 miles and still swimming...
Navigator’s Report from John Bartlett
9:30 p.m., 36:31 Swim time
Diana has now swum farther than anyone else who has attempted to swim from Cuba to Florida! As of 9:30 p.m., she has swum 80.38 miles! She has already traveled through the main flow of the Gulf Stream and is currently swimming though its outer fringes. She is getting a little northerly current on the edge on an eddy that is in her favor. She is still right on course and no adjustments have been made.
Conditions have remained steady throughout the afternoon and evening.