Wet suit or not for open water swimming?

Former Member
Former Member
Do most people wear wet suit when swimming in lakes, rivers, oceans?
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    That's one of the problems that swimming has right now, which is hampering growth and creating bad feelings. If people continue to hold these attitudes, we will shut-out the very people that we need to bring in (ie, triathletes and fitness swimmers). Take a quick look at annual memberships for a second: USA-Triathlon: >115,000 annual members (not including 1-day memberships) US Masters Swimming: ~48,000 members (not including 1-day memberships) Note: USA-T annual membership never exceeded 21,000 until after 2000... What would those numbers be if USA-T said "real athletes don't need wetsuits" and banned them from their events? Think about it for a moment... If we want to make masters swimming more attractive to new people, we should get rid of bad attitudes about wetsuits and the people who wear them. NOTE: I do not own a wetsuit and have competed in open water swims in the Atlantic Ocean without one. Growth for the sake of growth is both soulless and likely unsustainable (just ask the mortgage industry, they relaxed the rules to grow). The reality is that most open water events I participate in, have divisions that allow wetsuits, who is telling them no? Or is it that USMS is jealous that many of the major open water events are not sanctioned by USMS or USAT for that matter.. No you don't need to be a member of USMS or USAT to swim the La Jolla Roughwater swim, or many of my local openwater race series. FYI, my masters swim club has plenty of triathletes and fitness swimmers most have no need to be USMS members as they don't plan to compete in USMS sanctioned races.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    That's one of the problems that swimming has right now, which is hampering growth and creating bad feelings. If people continue to hold these attitudes, we will shut-out the very people that we need to bring in (ie, triathletes and fitness swimmers). Take a quick look at annual memberships for a second: USA-Triathlon: >115,000 annual members (not including 1-day memberships) US Masters Swimming: ~48,000 members (not including 1-day memberships) Note: USA-T annual membership never exceeded 21,000 until after 2000... What would those numbers be if USA-T said "real athletes don't need wetsuits" and banned them from their events? Think about it for a moment... If we want to make masters swimming more attractive to new people, we should get rid of bad attitudes about wetsuits and the people who wear them. NOTE: I do not own a wetsuit and have competed in open water swims in the Atlantic Ocean without one. Growth for the sake of growth is both soulless and likely unsustainable (just ask the mortgage industry, they relaxed the rules to grow). The reality is that most open water events I participate in, have divisions that allow wetsuits, who is telling them no? Or is it that USMS is jealous that many of the major open water events are not sanctioned by USMS or USAT for that matter.. No you don't need to be a member of USMS or USAT to swim the La Jolla Roughwater swim, or many of my local openwater race series. FYI, my masters swim club has plenty of triathletes and fitness swimmers most have no need to be USMS members as they don't plan to compete in USMS sanctioned races.
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