An escort is the best solution!
Bill Reger-Nash, EdD
 
Walk 30 to 60 minutes daily. 
Feel the Power of Half an Hour.
 
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Room 3812 E, Health Sciences South
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From: clear-bounces@cheat.org [clear-bounces@cheat.org] On Behalf Of Dee Fulton [dfvet@aol.com]
Sent: Sunday, June 03, 2012 2:55 PM
To: clozier@gmail.com; freesource@cheat.org
Cc: CLEAR@cheat.org
Subject: Re: [CLEAR] Swimming group incident

The idea of an escort craft is great!  Thanks Jonathan and Kitty.  I'll pass that idea along to the swimmers and arrange a meeting between reps of the swim group and the head of the security detail to explore an official sanction of an escorted swim along the shoreline.  
dee





-----Original Message-----
From: Kitty Lozier <clozier@gmail.com>
To: Jonathan Rosenbaum <freesource@cheat.org>
Cc: Dee Fulton <dfvet@aol.com>; CLEAR <CLEAR@cheat.org>
Sent: Sun, Jun 3, 2012 2:18 pm
Subject: Re: [CLEAR] Swimming group incident

Dee,  I went to a swimming camp in Canada as a camper and a counselor when i was young.  We had long open swims occasionally out into the lake, but always had canoes along with us.  When we trained  we were along the shore in the early morning, back and forth in a particular path.  Kitty

On Sat, Jun 2, 2012 at 12:21 AM, Jonathan Rosenbaum <freesource@cheat.org> wrote:
Being an open water swimmer myself, I can confirm that danger from heavy boat traffic is a valid concern especially if you are swimming across a lake.  There are a few solutions.  The swimmers could train early in the morning before significant boats traffic begin, and they could have a person sitting on an escort boat performing look-out duty.

If neither isn't possible, they should swim close to the shoreline.   However, even experienced open water swimmers can loose their bearings and unknowingly stray farther out.  This is why having some kind of lookout is prudent, even if that lookout is walking along the trail shouting out to the swimmers.

-Jonathan


On 5/31/2012 11:30 PM, Dee Fulton wrote:

Hi all.  On Wednesday evenings, a small group of swimmers have been meeting at Millstone Point Beach and swimming distances in the lake as part of their training for triathlons.   I know of this group because I made the acquaintance of one of the swimmers while we were both doing physical therapy at Healthworks. 

Anyway, last Wednesday I was at the park and trail prepping for the nature walk and I spoke with the guard, Tom.  Tom told me that he had encountered this group and told them that they could not be swimming where they were, which was toward the dam on the east side of the lake. 

Any comments?  Suggestions?  I'd like this group to be able to continue their training, but there is a concern for their safety amongst boat traffic.

Deb/Dee




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