Last year, the conditions were awful. Worse waves then I typically see in Puget Sound. My time was long- 1:14 for the 1.4 ish miles of the swim.
This year I didn't think much about the swim. I joined at the last moment possible. I didn't do any special training other than skipping the long swim I usually do the day before.
I joined up with some of my friends from the Notorious Alki Swimmers. I love these folks. They are strong, powerful, funny, smart people. I'm always excited to see them and am so glad they have become friends.
My goal for this swim was pretty much "fun and finish." I have been working on my freestyle (crawl) and thought I'd try to add more free into the swim. To achieve that goal, I was wearing my motion sickness wrist bands.
The swim was chip timed. This is also new in the last few years. It means they KNOW that everyone who entered the water also got out. It also means we get to take a "prison chic" photo. (that's me with the aqua sock on!)
The swim has moved to a mass start in recent years, away from the wave start in the past, with slow waves going first. The advantage of this is that slower swimmers don't have the constant experience of being passed by faster swimmers, and the mental head-game that brings. The downside is that it means that the mass start is chaotic, and one has to try to seed themselves appropriately.
A challenge for me at the start can be going out too fast and therefore loosing breath control, hyperventilating and having to work hard to calm down. As I've become more experienced at these events I've gotten better at seeding myself, and at knowing I need to swim my own event. Sometimes a warm up that helps to get over the cold shock can help, but this time I decided the water was warm enough to not need that. I was right.
I started near the rear, figuring I could avoid the "washing machine" feeling at the beginning, and that passing people later would feel good. I started out with free, and quickly realized that was a mistake. I needed to warm up and get a rhythm in breast, then could switch over. Part of how I knew it was a mistake is that I couldn't focus on anything except swimming. I wasn't able to sing a song, or work on bi-lateral breathing. I was just swimming, and expending a lot of energy. So I switched back to breast for a while.
The course had large numbered buoys to show the way. They started at 5 and worked their way down to 1, so you always had a sense of where you were. I actually found this a bit annoying. It took away some of the challenge of an OWS. I like having to pay attention and sight.
I did make it to buoy 3 with only free-- except for the time to watch and make sure the other swimmer was safe. It is very hard to tread water and take a selfie when you want a specific background, but some how I was able to commemorate the occasion.
The buoys counted down pretty quickly. My shoulder got a bit tired of the free, so I switched back and forth with more regularity after that one long push. I never got to the "I need to finish now" point. I felt strong. The finish came up pretty quickly. I was still surrounded by swimmers. I never got that "i'm alone on the course" feeling.
They used a bright light (seen in the photo above) to make finding the finish easier. It helped, but again, took some of the fun out of the adventure.
After the swim I met back up with my friends and we all compared notes. Everyone had a great time, and was happy. The food was OK, bagels etc and the Greek yogurt folks were there giving out some AMAZING yogurt! I got the bus back to the cars, and chatted with a friend the whole way.
When I got home, I checked my time. 1:07. A whole 7 minutes faster than last year!! That's about 13% faster!