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FIND FARAWAY

sun bursts through the grey

Curlews on the breeze frog spawn glistens at the waters edge the world returns to green and as the equinox marks the season change

Faraway is found nearby

Cold water - how do you get in?

Why do you do it? Is there any way to make it easier? Alpkiteer Kate Rew eases us in.

I am either monumentally rubbish at getting into very cold water, or monumentally good, depending on which way you look at it. ‘Rubbish’ because I experience very little high from the whole experience, and every type of regret before I take off my clothes. ‘Good’, because I do it anyway, even though it isn’t easy for me, because it makes me feel (variously) alive, stoic, awake (there’s always that shot of adrenaline) and pleased to be part of this beautiful rain-lashed wind-whipped planet.

What is considered cold water swimming?

Perhaps the first thing to do is understand temperatures in bands of experience: 17 degrees C plus is summer swimming, lazy hazy and idyllic; 12 to 16 degrees is fresh (a little gaspy getting in perhaps, but not too bad); 6 to 11 degrees C is freezing (swims become shorter and more therapeutic as the thermometer goes down); and below 6 degrees is Baltic, and for most not about swimming at all, more about dealing with a brutal experience.

How to get into cold water

One: the gasp reflex that you will experience getting in mutes very quickly – as few as five or six three-minute immersions where the whole body (not the head) are immersed in cold water will halve the ‘cold shock response’. So however dramatic things feel for you, bear in mind they will get better.

I recommend calming things down further by splashing water over yourself when your feet are still on the ground which helps bring breathing under control. I like to stand in the water and dab it in my pulse points – wrists, neck, chest, back –before lunging forward. A physiologist has told me it’s irrelevant where the water goes, it’s just how much skin you cover, but it’s a ritual.

Two: find your own method of breath control. I like to exhale through my mouth, a long slow full exhale, just before I step in. That long slow exhale is a letting go, a decisive moment, a point of no return. (I am not a fan of hyperventilation myself: give me a long, slow exhale any time. Part of what I love about swimming is the prana, how it engenders deep, calm, rhythmic breathing, an opportunity to reverse the shallow, fast breathing a lot of us fall into).

Three: keep it short! And purposeful. For that first little bit nudge any drama aside in favour of counting strokes (10 may be enough), swimming to a close rock or a tree, focusing on your breathing. Those internal questions like: how much does this hurt? How much do I not want to be doing this? Have no place here. Give your body time to regulate its breathing, and light its internal fire, where you can feel your skin burning. Let the cold annihilate all thought.

How to warm up after cold water swimming

Get out and get changed as quickly as you changed getting in (in winter you can lose a lot of warmth on the banks). Reward yourself with a warm drink and a warm coat, and a pat on the back.

Why go cold water swimming

Cold water has had fans for hundreds of years, and is inspiring a cultish devotion at the moment, with wild and insistent claims about its health benefits. I don’t engage with any of it, not just because of the lack of science, and excess of prescriptive instruction, but because I suspect that giving swimming a utility, turning it into something that we consume for our own material benefit, is missing the point.

I suspect the real richness of swimming comes from doing it not because it’s good for you, but because you love it. And the real transformation it offers us is that of sinking down and becoming part of the planet again, skin to skin with the elements.

Kate Rew is an Alpkiteer, founder of The Outdoor Swimming Society and author. Buy Kate’s new book The Outdoor Swimmers’ Handbook £19.79

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