Cold Water swimming problems

when i swim in the lakes or ocean with water temperatures below 55F, with a wetsuit, my feet and toes are so cold they hurt the whole swim. anything you can do, with the exception of booties which are not legal and don't do a whole lot anyway?
Parents
  • My vote on that would be to stay on the shore or go to a pool. Cold water OW swimming is a great example of Survival of the Fittest. We humans were obviously not meant to swim in cold water. If we need to add 40/50lbs (as I saw a future Catalina Channel swimmer is doing) to be safe temp-wise in the water, that is a clear sign that staying out is the smarter choice. We don't see any eskimoes swimming in Alaska. I swam OW on my own up in Maine last summer in just a speedo and had similar pain/numbness issues for most of my 1+ mile swim as well. I didn't have a thermometer, but I imagine the temp was in the upper 50s. Going forward, I'm going to try to get a reading and stay out of the water if it is too cold for me. Find a temp you can handle, and my recommendation is to stay out if the temp is too cold for you.
Reply
  • My vote on that would be to stay on the shore or go to a pool. Cold water OW swimming is a great example of Survival of the Fittest. We humans were obviously not meant to swim in cold water. If we need to add 40/50lbs (as I saw a future Catalina Channel swimmer is doing) to be safe temp-wise in the water, that is a clear sign that staying out is the smarter choice. We don't see any eskimoes swimming in Alaska. I swam OW on my own up in Maine last summer in just a speedo and had similar pain/numbness issues for most of my 1+ mile swim as well. I didn't have a thermometer, but I imagine the temp was in the upper 50s. Going forward, I'm going to try to get a reading and stay out of the water if it is too cold for me. Find a temp you can handle, and my recommendation is to stay out if the temp is too cold for you.
Children
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