La Jolla Cove Swim Club… much like LOST!

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I got this from a friend’s (Anne Cleveland) facebook page as she is one of the core group that runs the La Jolla Cove Swim Club… and they are having one of their big races soon too… check it out!  This is one of the clubs that I have been modeling LOST after… they’ve produced lots of great open water swimmers that have swum the English Channel, Catalina Channel and the Manhattan Island Marathon Swim, amongst others!

Cheers,

Rob

Tour of Buoys action set

by Amberly Dressler
2 days 22 hrs ago | 171 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Swimmers take off into La Jolla Cove during last year’s Tour of Buoys Ocean Swim. La Jolla Swim Club’s 12th annual event will be held Sunday, Aug. 1. 	Courtesy photo
Swimmers take off into La Jolla Cove during last year’s Tour of Buoys Ocean Swim. La Jolla Swim Club’s 12th annual event will be held Sunday, Aug. 1. Courtesy photo

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Hundreds of swimmers will hit the open water Sunday, Aug. 1 as part of the La Jolla Cove Swim Club’s 12th annual Tour of Buoys Ocean Swim, beginning near the boat launch at La Jolla Shores Beach.

The event offers a 1.5- and 5-mile race. More than distance separates the two swims.

“The nice thing about swimming the mile-and-a-half is that people can wear wetsuits if they are intimidated by the cold,” said event board member Bob West. “The longer is a regulation swim. It’s a hardcore, open-water swimming contest.”

West is quite familiar with the latter. He’s among an elite group of people in the world to complete the Triple Crown of Marathon Swimming — swimming the English Channel, the Catalina Channel and the Manhattan Channel. Along with nearly 40 others, he logged enough miles from mid-November to Cinco De Mayo — mainly at La Jolla Cove — to technically have reached Tahiti.

At the Tour of Buoys, West will play a different role, including starting the 200 swimmers who are expected to participate, 50 of whom plan to compete in the 5-mile race. The entrants will do two laps around yellow buoys that surround the La Jolla Ecological Reserve.

Awards will be given to the top swimmer (both male and female) in each age group, in increments of five years. The majority of participants will follow the 1.5-mile setup. The mile-and-a-half participants can select either a regulation division or non-regulation division.

Swimmers of many ages will compete in the race categories. Teenagers are expected to be among the youngest swimmers, with the oldest in their late 60s. All swimmers will have one thing in common — they’ll all be club members before the start of the race.

“If you are not a club member, we charge a fee of $10; and you can be a member until January,” West said.

The club requires participants to be part of the club for liability reasons. There are also additional fees for the event itself. On the day of the event, entries cost $60 for the 1.5-mile race and $70 for the 5-mile race. The fee includes lunch and T-shirts on an availability basis. In addition, each 5-mile challenger must have a kayak escort for safety precautions.

The La Jolla Cove Swim Club holds many ocean swims throughout the year, most notably the New Year’s Day ritual known as the annual Polar Bear Swim. Other social, noncompetitive club events coming up are the Halloween Spookfest Swim and the Thanksgiving Turkey Splash and Dash Swim.

For information or club registration, visit www.lajollacoveswimclub.org.

Read more: San Diego Community News Group – Tour of Buoys action set

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I founded LOST Swimming because I like open water swimming and would like to see it grow and thrive in Lake Ontario. I started as a competitive swimmer as a kid and ended up getting as far as a silver medal at Nationals and going to the Olympic Trials in 1988. But I retired after that, I was sick of swimming. So I got into running marathons and have run over 35 to date, as well as a few ultra marathons, including the Marathon des Sables (7 day, ultra across the Sahara Desert). I also kind of fell into triathlons and have done a handful of Ironman tri's too. This gradually got me back in the water and in 2006 I took the plunge and attempted swimming the English Channel. I didn't quite make it across, but the circle was now complete and after 17 years I was a swimmer again! Although I still do plenty of pool swimming, I now much prefer open water swimming and like to say that open water swimming is to pool swimming, what trail running is to treadmill running! As a result I hope to encourage more people to join me for a dip in Lake Ontario as often as we can!