Solo Swimmers

Hey, solo swimmers! :wave: Welcome to the thread for all of us who train solo. Whether you train on your own due to a lack of a Masters team in your area (or for any other reason), this is our virtual locker room. Please post training tips that you think would be helpful, or anything else you would like to share with the rest of us. Have a rant? Go ahead and vent here! :rantonoff: I'll start with a tip: The most frustrating thing for me training solo is not having a coach on deck to evaluate my stroke and keep me on track, so I bought a waterproof camera and enlisted the help of my husband to periodically shoot video of all four strokes. Shooting underwater video became a knee/back buster, so I bought a camera mount and attached it to PVC pipe, so my husband could stand up straight to shoot underwater video. The camera gets dunked underwater, and he twists the pipe to pan the camera as I swim by. Today, I bought a 2-pack of 12-inch "Gear Tie" reusable rubber twist ties (available at Home Depot), so I can tie the PVC pipe to the pool ladder (located in the corner of the pool) and shoot video myself. (If I angle the camera just right and keep it on wide angle, I can video me coming and going.) 10687 After each video session, I upload the videos to my desktop computer and compare my stroke to my favorite Go Swim stroke videos to see what I'm doing well (or not). I also post them on the Forums for feedback. Ok, solo swimmers, what's your tip?
Parents
  • As a former runner (and triathloner), I can tell you not all of them develop knee issues (or hip issues) but many do and go on to bike. First the doc could understand that there are paralympic swimmers who don't have an arm or arms, leg or legs, and still swim. It is possible. Some one needs to check out the Chinese Paralympic butterflyer who medals (and swims a 50 fly LCM faster than the vast majority of those I know or know of) and has no arms.
Reply
  • As a former runner (and triathloner), I can tell you not all of them develop knee issues (or hip issues) but many do and go on to bike. First the doc could understand that there are paralympic swimmers who don't have an arm or arms, leg or legs, and still swim. It is possible. Some one needs to check out the Chinese Paralympic butterflyer who medals (and swims a 50 fly LCM faster than the vast majority of those I know or know of) and has no arms.
Children
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