Open water swim route has lots of sandbars

Hi all, A while back I mentioned a swim I want to do in August--a 5.25 mile swim across the Great South Bay. (For more info, here's the link: www.greatsouthbayswim.com.) One thing I'm curious about: In looking at a map of the course (with depth notations), I notice that it goes through some pretty shallow water. Most sections are maybe 8-12 feet deep, but there were some sandbars where the depth seems to be maybe 2-3 feet. I assume swimmers are guided around these, but what happens if you're swimming in an event like this and you "run aground" as it were? As a runner, I jokingly tell friends that's when it turns into a footrace. ;) But I assume there are other strategies more acceptable to swimmers so I just was wondering what you hit some really shallow water. Go to walking/running mode until you can reach deeper area? Swim as much as possible until you hit deeper water? To be honest, I'd like to know I could swim the whole thing, since that's what I'm setting out for, and seems as if anything else isn't quite as "real." Thanks for your input!
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  • Hmm... I've seen seaweed in the bay but never thought to hitch a ride.... Usu. find it's a barrier, but hey the triathlete guy took a creative approach... gotta give him credit for that. ;) I think there won't be too much of a problem w/ shallow water, despite my referring to "lots of" sandbars. The Great South Bay veers toward the shallow side, though, so I do have to keep that in mind. When I was a kid, I used to go to Fire Island w/ my family, and some of the activities while there included sailing, which meant at various times learning to get the boat off sandbars. Also we derived a great deal of entertainment watching coast guard boats run aground.
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  • Hmm... I've seen seaweed in the bay but never thought to hitch a ride.... Usu. find it's a barrier, but hey the triathlete guy took a creative approach... gotta give him credit for that. ;) I think there won't be too much of a problem w/ shallow water, despite my referring to "lots of" sandbars. The Great South Bay veers toward the shallow side, though, so I do have to keep that in mind. When I was a kid, I used to go to Fire Island w/ my family, and some of the activities while there included sailing, which meant at various times learning to get the boat off sandbars. Also we derived a great deal of entertainment watching coast guard boats run aground.
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