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1 Very Big Happy Lap
Manhattan is an Island!
1 Very Big Happy Lap
By Terry Laughlin
Well,
I can now report, definitively
Manhattan is an island! Having
circumnavigated it, I can confirm that it is completely surrounded by
water and can be reached only by bridge, tunnel or ferry
or by
swimming. Id never have thought of reaching Manhattan from Queens
by stroking across the East River, rather than by, say, the Triborough
Bridge,, but now the thought is conceivable, because on June 23rd, I
swam 28.5 miles up the East and Harlem Rivers and down the Hudson in
8 hours and 53 minutes, and enjoyed almost every stroke.
In my final pre-MIMS chronicle, I expressed some uneasiness about swimming
through Hell Gate, after having quite a few people warn me, in the final
week, how treacherous (the word everyone chose to describe
it) this juncture of the East River, Long Island Sound and Harlem River
could be.
I must have been pretty convincing: When I arrived home post-MIMS, on
Sunday evening, this message from Lynn Rhue, a TI coach in Colorado
Springs, was waiting:
Terry--My whole family has been thinking about you all day--even
prayed for your safety in church this morning--and that Hell Gate not
be too rough! LYNN
Well, Hell Gate was actually fun one of the highlights of the
day, but more on that later. After climbing out at South Cove in Battery
Park and standing a bit wobbly-legged on shore, my first comment to
TI Coach Rich Barkan was Well I can check that off my life-goals
list; no need to do it again. But within an hour, Id changed
my mind and decided to swim around Manhattan at least one more time.
Heres how the day went and why Im drawn to repeat the experience:
I drove to Manhattan on Saturday with my crew and supporters. Dave Sides
a friend from New Paltz, was my kayaker. Dave went early Saturday with
Jenny Bahnsen and Kim Innes, TI coaches from Australia, who were visiting
NY for several weeks of TI teacher training. I was planning to drive
down later with my wife Alice and Shane Gould, who were to be my boat
crew responsible for my care and feeding and keeping a log of
the swim. Dave, Jenny and Kim were going to scope out the course Saturday
morning on a 3-hour Circle Line cruise.
Before leaving, I decided on one last tuneup a 2000-meter lake
swim, with Shane, at Lake
Minnewaska State Park. After we unloaded mountain bikes for a trail
ride to the lake, Shane took off a bit ahead of me and, hurrying to
catch her, (while riding an unfamiliar bike) I lost control on a rocky
downhill, careened into a trailside boulder, glanced off and fell to
the dirt. Anxious about possible injuries but not really wanting
to take inventory I immediately resumed riding the final 5 minutes
to the lake. My whole right side hand, shoulder, leg were
hurting, but I just wanted to get in soothing cold water and see how
I felt while swimming.
I swam gingerly for 20 minutes and was relieved to find that while I
hurt in various places, I could swim without inhibition. After swimming,
I checked myself more carefully and found minor abrasions on my right
shoulder, chest and arm, one nasty patch of road rash on my right leg,
below the knee, and a rapidly swelling and bruising finger. I knew Id
be able to do the swim, but just one thing worried me: Id skipped
the recommended shots hepatitis and tetanus and I now
would be swimming for 9 hours in waters not considered pristine, with
an open wound. Oh, well. No turning back now.
Saturday afternoon, Shane, Alice and I met Dave at Pier 40 on the Hudson
for the pre-race briefing. Race director Morty Berger spent a good 20
minutes warning us how difficult the race start could be. For the first
half mile, wed swim against the incoming tide before rounding
the ferry terminals at the southern tip of Manhattan and heading up
the East River. Morty told us repeatedly that it was possible some of
us might not make it and that all of us would very likely spend a long
time looking at the Jewish Heritage Museum, a distinctive hexagonal
building just behind the seawall in Battery Park. Is it possible wed
be caught between Heaven and Hell
Gate?
After checking in to our hotel, we walked along the seawall to check
out this treacherous stretch it did look potentially difficult;
there was a strong current and the river was very choppy. Later we went
back to the hotel where Dave described what he saw from the Circle Liner.
Better news here. Dave said the left side of Hell Gate looked more hospitable
than the center and offered a good route to the calm of the Harlem River.
He also said it would be a good idea to swim straight out to the center
of the broad Hudson River when we exited Spuyten Duyvil (Dutch for Spitting
Devil) and aim to swim straight under the center of the George Washington
Bridge, to catch favorable currents and avoid drifting into the sewage
treatment plant, docks and cruise ship piers on the West Side.
I awoke Sunday at 4 am and immediately ate a bagel and some fruit salad,
hoping to give my stomach a chance to settle before plunging into the
rolling Hudson at 6:30. Dave reported to Downtown Boat House to pick
up his kayak at 4:30. Shane and Alice met Captain Mike Richmond on our
crew boat, the Irish Mist II, at North Cove at 5:30. Jenny, Kim and
I walked half-a-mile farther on to the race start at South Cove. There,
Jenny applied Vaseline under my arms and, quite thickly, over the ragged
patch of road pizza on my leg. After small talk and a few
group shots of the 21 competitors (15 individuals and 6 relays), an
advance group of slower swimmers leapt into the water at 6:10 and received
the starting horn at 6:15, receiving a 15-minute head start on the main
body of swimmers.
Taking
the plunge
Next it was our turn. South Cove was less than inviting. All sorts
of debris had collected in it. I hoped this wasnt a foretaste
of what wed find outside the cove. It was actually a bit difficult
to find a clear space to jump from the dock. When I jumped, I was surprised
to find the water completely pleasant and just a bit salty. We stroked
to the south end of the cove and huddled near the exit waiting for the
countdown and starting horn. At 6:28, it came and off we went.
We swam around a barge tied to the seawall just outside the cove in
a close, pack. I brushed against other swimmers twice. According to
race rules, touching another swimmer was grounds for immediate disqualification.
But the officials were in a forgiving mood as no one stopped me.
We went by the barge with surprising ease and soon saw the notorious
Jewish Heritage Museum on our left side. That passed to the rear fairly
quickly too. Maybe this upcurrent swim wouldnt be that bad. After
a few minutes I began looking for Dave, my kayaker, and almost immediately
saw him to my right. Next I took a bead on the ferry terminals and was
relieved to see that no boats were pulling out or in.
While walking that stretch the night before, I had planned to aim for
the northeast corner of Governors Island and a tall building on
the Brooklyn shore to guide me past the terminals
and perhaps even
to admire the Statue of Liberty to the southwest. But once in the water,
all I could see unless I stopped swimming and sat up high in
a beginners breaststroke was green swells all around and
Dave in his kayak when I breathed to my right. It would be that way
for the next 28 miles. While theres spectacular scenery all around,
you never see it unless you stop swimming to admire it.
The Brooklyn Bridge and Feelin Groovy
Happily, we made it into the East River without much ado and I could
immediately feel the current moving us along. I had no idea how fast
it was, but after a few minutes, Dave warned that I should move toward
midriver as I was drifting too close to some docks on the Manhattan
shore. I looked up and saw a pier and those docks a fair distance ahead
on my left and put my head back down, taking about ten more strokes
and making a small course correction to my right.
When I lifted my head again to see how I was doing I was stunned to
see that I was about to hit the pier --a group of about 10 telephone
poles, sunk in the river bottom and wound tightly about with heavy marine
rope. I grabbed the pier with both hands and it took all my strength
to haul myself around to the right side and avoid being swept to the
left and into the docks. Now I knew how strong the current was.
Following Daves lead, I angled toward mid-channel and within minutes
was passing the South Street Seaport, a group of beautifully-renovated
18th century warehouses (now containing an entertainment-and-shopping
mall like those at Baltimores Harbor Place and Bostons Faneuil
Hall) and a collection of graceful antique vessels, which I paused to
admire. Ahead I saw the familiar lines of the Brooklyn Bridge. Within
10 minutes I was under the bridge the first of 12 bridges wed
swim, paddle or drift under today. It was 6:58. Perfect! Time for my
first water break and an opportunity to enjoy the rare experience of
seeing the worlds most historic and beloved bridge from its underside.
I drifted there for four or five minutes, sipping water, posing for
pictures from the crew boat and chatting with Dave about what memorable
experience this was. And after taking in water, I released some at the
other end (sorry, I know, polluting the river isnt good form,
but couldnt help it) and began swimming again. The Manhattan and
Williamsburg bridges were just ahead.
The
East River went by with remarkable speed and ease. I passed under the
Williamsburg bridge at 7:12, under the 59th Street Bridge (celebrated
in Paul Simons Feelin Groovy refrain) and the
Roosevelt Island tramway just before 8:00 am and made it all the way
to Hell Gate by about 8:30. During the previous 90 minutes I had stopped
frequently to admire familiar sights, to pause for pictures with landmarks
such as the Empire State Building and the United Nations in the background
and paused at something like 10 minute intervals for pee
breaks. I was learning what happens when youre a 51-year
old male in cold water. I was also drinking less and less water, hoping
to stem the flood passing so rapidly through me. Several times I tried
to figure out a way to relieve myself without stopping, but couldnt
master that. I hoped my crew wouldnt think I was stopping because
of fatigue, because I felt great.
Surfing Hell Gate, Plodding the Harlem
And so to Hell Gate. At about 8:30,Dave said Were here.
Thus far, Id been swimming at a very leisurely pace but I picked
it up a notch here I felt strong and coordinated. All those pool
sessions where Id practiced raising my stroke count from 11 or
12 spl to 14 were now paying off. I kept it up for three or four minutes.
It felt like body-surfing: The water was turbulent, but the current
was moving mostly in my direction, so I felt as if it was bubbling me
up and forward as I swam. Before I knew it, Dave said Thats
it; youre in the Harlem River now. Well, it was actually
a bit anticlimactic after all the anticipation. Alice called over from
the power boat Did you hear the people cheering? and pointed
to the seawall. I hadnt heard anything, but I looked up and indeed
saw a dozen or so people clustered above. We waved to each other and
I began swimming up the Harlem River.
At my second feeding in the Harlem River, I was feeling incredibly happy
to be in the midst of this swim, Id anticipated and prepared for
for months. I asked my crew Is a feeling of euphoria one of the
undescribed symptoms of hypothermia? (The crew information had
described such symptoms at length, along with instructions to pull the
swimmer from the water if any were seen.) Not only had Hell Gate been
fun, but the first 3 and a half hours were an undilutedly joyful experience.
I was approaching the duration (and had exceeded the distance) of my
previous long swim a 9-mile, 3-hour 35-minute crossing of Long
Island Sound at age 21 and was feeling MUCH better at that point than
I had after a similar amount of swim-time 30 years earlier.
Well euphoria didnt last. The Harlem River is long and much of
it is fairly boring. A long, narrow channel with extended stretches
of uninspiring landscape bordered by razor wire. Except for Yankee Stadium
midway and the graceful arches of a bridge that looks like a Roman aqueduct
near the Cross Bronx Expressway crossing, theres not much to see
other than gritty industrial stretches and public-housing high rises.
I was surprised at how long it took to follow the Harlem River Drive
from the Triborough Bridge to the GW Bridge approach a journey
that takes all of 10 minutes in the car (or 90 minutes in bad traffic.)
And for a time, the river became crowded. After several hours of swimming
alone with my crew, we were suddenly among a crowd of swimmers and their
crews in tight quarters. I had to pick my way carefully through the
crowd to avoid coming too close to another swimmer and his or her entourage.
I asked my crew about the traffic and they said You were swimming
in last place for quite a while but now you're passing the people who
started at 6:15. We passed under (I think) five mostly utilitarian
bridges in the Harlem River, unlike the earlier landmarks in the East
River. And finally, just before noon, we came to a wide place in the
river with the Columbia University boathouse on the Manhattan side and
a big blue Columbia C painted on the rocks on the Bronx
side. The Spuyten Duyvil and Amtrak Bridge that marks the passage into
the Hudson were just ahead.
Dave said The Hudson will be pretty rough and feedings will be
difficult; I think you want to take a good one before we head out there.
So I lay on my back like a sea otter sucking on my Endurox bottle for
quite a while and ate a whole banana. While I was lazing there, a relay
team that Id passed an hour earlier came along and passed me.
Finally someone to race! I handed Dave the bottle, adjusted my cap and
goggles and set off in pursuit. I passed them back as we were heading
under the Amtrak bridge and enjoyed the urgency of racing after 5 and
a half hours of just swimming. Not a good idea to get too excited though.
The finish line still lay another 13 or 14 miles ahead.
Swimming in a washing machine
Out in the Hudson, we swam straight toward Jersey, heading for the
center, and the Hudson is a wide river. I stayed close to the relay
for 45 minutes or so keeping track of them by looking for the kayaker
and crew boat. I could never really see their swimmer because the swells
were so high. And that defined the whole Hudson River experience. A
15 to 20 knot headwind blowing from the south was whipping up 3-foot
swells. Plus, there were wakes from fast-moving river traffic of all
sizes and a Palisades Park Police boat trying to keep things under control.
It was the way I imagined it might be swimming in a washing machine.
For the first hour or so, after the tedium of the Harlem, it was an
interesting change of pace. It became somewhat more difficult to keep
track of Dave in the kayak and feedings were an art, as Dave maneuvered
delicately to pass my water bottle while trying to avoid being dumped
on top of me by a looming wave.
The imposing GW Bridge drew me forward. It took exactly an hour from
the Spuyten Duyvil. I paused again while under the bridge, checking
out the Little Red Lighthouse Id heard of it, but you cant
see it while crossing the bridge and goggling at the span far
overhead. The next visible landmark was the huge sewage treatment plant
on Manhattans West Side.
At about 1:30, after 90 minutes of battling the waves, I finally admitted
to my crew that I was tiring. Not from the time or distance, but the
unremitting chop. Shane, who had been printing my stroke rate (49)
and stroke tips (Fishlike and Silent) on a greaseboard on
the crew boat, now switched to encouraging messages, some in Ozzie slang
(Onya!) I asked where I was and Shane wrote 105th
Street. Not that that intelligence meant much. The next visible
landmark was the 79th Street Boat Basin. And so the Hudson unfolded
Trump City, the Sanitation Pier, the cruise boat piers and the
Intrepid. Interesting to see these sights from the backside, wearying
to be sloshing around so much.
Home Stretch
I had a period of premature excitement when I thought I saw Pier
40 ahead. I knew that was just over a mile from the finish. I picked
up my pace for a strong finish. After five minutes or so, I passed the
warehouse and read the deflating legend Pier 96. Oops, another 56 streets
to go before the home stretch. So I settled into an unhurried pace again.
And finally, I saw the real Pier 40 and accelerated again for the final
push. Passing the seawall in Hudson River Park, I could see quite a
few spectators watching from above, just 30 yards away the first
time I had a sense of swimming before an audience. But they looked mainly
curious; I didnt get a sense of enthused encouragement. We passed
North Cove, where the crew boats had started from and the final half-mile
went quickly. Into South Cove, over to the dock, where volunteers helped
hoist me up, then steadied me as I climbed the ladder to the top of
the seawall. And how did I feel? Just relieved to be done. I hadnt
the energy to be exhilirated by the enormity of swimming around Manhattan.
No particular pain or soreness. Jenny was waiting to greet me and Rich
Barkin snapping pictures for his website metrotri.com.
I sat for a while, drinking a bottle of cold water and eating a plain
bagel and banana and simply luxuriated in doing nothing for a bit. Then
Jenny, Kim and I began walking to North Cove, meeting Shane and Alice
on the way. We met up with Dave back at the hotel, had a snack and asked
for our cars to be brought from the valet parking.
An hour after finishing, I suddenly was overcome by a feeling of illness,
overwhelming fatigue and a sense that I could faint at any moment. I
collapsed in a chair in the hotel lobby for 20 minutes before I could
summon the strength to begin driving home. (There was a post-event party
at 6pm, but we decided to skip it because I was so tired and I doubted
Id have the strength to drive home if I waited another couple
of hours to leave.) However, once behind the wheel, I began sipping
from a 32-oz bottle of dilute Endurox and by the time we pulled into
my driveway about 90 minutes later, I felt completely renewed. The next
day I had a bit of post-race soreness, mainly in my neck, but Tuesday
I felt fully recovered. And halfway home, on the New York State Thruway,
feeling much better already, I turned to Alice and Shane and said Im
definitely going to do swim Manhattan again
but better next time.
Long Distance Lessons
I knew I would want to swim MIMS again because I had learned so
much the first time and didnt want to let those lessons go to
waste
and because Im an instinctive competitor.
Heres what I learned:
As I wrote in Total Swim in early March, my goal in entering MIMS was
to not simply to swim farther nor to survive a 28.5 mile swim. I embarked
on this, inspired by the example of TI Coach Don Walsh having swum around
Manhattan twice with the fewest strokes of anyone in the field, and
having felt great at the finish. I wanted to explore the idea of training
myself to swim 28.5 miles with flow and ease. I wanted to complete the
circuit in fewer than Dons 27,000 strokes and to be able to do
a LOT of swimming with an injured shoulder (Ive had a complete
tear of the rotator cuff in my left shoulder since April of 2001) and
yet without pain. I also wanted to prove that one could train for a
marathon swim with not a moment of boredom or monotony. And I accomplished
that.
I swam twice as much as I usually do, for over three months and enjoyed
every moment. When people learned that I was training solo (I did one
session with a friend and three sessions with Masters teams, but probably
50+ pool sessions by myself) they commented that I must be going out
of my mind swimming that much by myself. But I enjoyed and was engaged
by literally every stroke.
By maintaining an average of 49 strokes per minute for 8 hours and 53
minutes, I completed my Manhattan circuit in about 26,000 strokes. To
put this in perspective, Emily Watts, the winner stroked at 80 spm for
7 hours, 46 minutes for a total of over 37,000 strokes. Ron Collins
finished second in 8 hours @ 60 spm for a total of 29,000 strokes. Gilles
Chalandon finished third in 8:04 @ 70 spm for a total of about 34,000
strokes. With the 11,000 strokes I saved on Emilys total I could
have swum most of the way to the top of Manhattan again. At age 51 and
with a weak shoulder, being fluent and economical was more important
than being fast on my first attempt.
I also know I can improve significantly on my speed. For one thing,
my crew calculated my food and fluids intake over 9 hours at 60 oz of
water and Endurox plus two bananas and one pack of energy gel. I should
have sipped at least 20 oz. per hour, meaning I was massively dehydrated
for the last half of the swim. Thats why I had such a dramatic
physical slump soon after finishing and why I recovered so quickly after
drinking a large bottle of fluids on the way home. Why didnt I
drink more even though I knew I should? My fluid bottles got
hot on the deck of Daves kayak and werent very refreshing
the Endurox which was pleasant tasting in the car driving home,
tasted awful in the river. And I was leery of having to make pee
stops even more frequently than I had been. And it was simply
difficult in the pitching Hudson. Nevertheless, next time Ill
calculate in advance exactly how much fluid I should drink each hour
and stick to the schedule.
And before doing it again, Ill get my shoulder fixed, so I dont
have to train and race quite so gingerly. Finally, this time I went
as a tourist, anxious to soak in and enjoy the whole experience. My
crew estimated that I spent 30 minutes chatting and posing for photos
during the event. Next time, I plan to swim it more as a competitor
and to see how fast I can finish.
In the end though, my first MIMS was a complete success. I enjoyed it
as I had wished and I learned an enormous amount. Next Ill get
to work on a book about how to enjoy marathon swimming and make it a
valuable learning experience.
OFFICIAL RESULTS
INDIVIDUAL COMPETITORS
1. Emily Watts, 34, Manchester, MD, 7:46:10
2. Ron Collins, 40, Clearwater, FL, 8:00:26
3. Gilles Chalandon, 45, New York, NY, 8:04.44
4. Rachel Luch, 20, Chester, NY, 8:06.48
5. Thomas Schwartz, 42, Sarasota, FL, 8:07:00
6. Andrew Johnson, 37, Arlington, VA, 8:09:36
7. Scott Zornig, 42, Rancho Santa Margarita, CA, 8:15:02
8. Maddalena Mustillo, 22, Union, NJ, 8:21:08
9. Michael Maier, 40, Ellington, CT, 8:21:48
10. Becky Jackman, 38, La Mesa, CA, 8:29:09
11. Bonnie Schwartz, 23, New York, NY, 8:53:03
12. Terry Laughlin, 51, New Paltz, NY, 8:53:31
13. Henry Eckstein, 54, New York, NY, 9:05:00
14. Chris Solarz, 23, New York, NY, 9:13:31
6-PERSON RELAY TEAMS:
1. Asphalt Green "Fish Gang", 7:53:16
2. Team Sufferfest, 8:39:20
3. Holy Cross Alumni, 8:48:28
4. Jelly Fish, 9:02:22
4-PERSON RELAY TEAMS:
1. Tri-State Trout, 8:13:16
2. Team Whatever, 8:32:05
3. Team Himajin, 8:34:25
This article Copyright © 2002 by
Total Immersion, Inc. All rights reserved. No portion of this website
may be reproduced or transmitted in any form without permission in writing
from Total Immersion, Inc. For information, contact: Total Immersion,
Inc. 246 Main St., Suite 15A, New Paltz, NY 12561
1-800-609-7946 Or e-mail Terry at totalswimm@aol.com.


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