Open Water Swimming vs Soft Poolie Swimming

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I’ll state it now real swimming is Open Water Swimming.

Open Water swimmers:

• Don’t need a black line to guide them.
• Can justify a snag, egg and bacon washed down with a beer at 10am at the Pub.
• Realise that sledging is socially acceptable at the start of a race.
• Start in a crooked line not a perfectly neat line like the soft poolies.
• Love Vaseline.
• Manage to swim 2km in a 1500m race.
• Hate Chlorine.
• Don’t worry about times, they worry about who snuck in just ahead of them.
• Understand shrinkage.
• Are patriotic. They know Australia Day means swim between two jetties.
• Have heart. As you go around the last buoy with five others and still push yourself even though you are spent.
• Can party all night and still front up the next day and swim 5km.
• Hate drafting.
• Have one swimmer they always want to beat.
• Socialise after the race.
• Believe that seaweed down their cleavage is sensual.
• Love the smell of salt water in the morning.
• Are tough. They don’t need lane ropes to protect them from contact.
• Think racing 200m in a pool is soft and anything less is even softer.
• Love surf lifesavers.
• Are elite athletes on the inside.
• Love the variety of currents, waves and wind.
• Don’t tumbleturn in a race.
• Think that changerooms are a luxury.
• Love the dolphin.
• Realise that there is nothing more Aussie than mates and beach.
• Can change out of their togs balanced on one foot with a towel.
• Have something to talk about to impress their work colleagues on Monday.
• Love nature and its elements.
• Realise that zig zag swimming across the course is a skill and a story.
• Love food after the race.
• Know if the starting hooter doesn’t work you start by consensus.
• Love uncertainty and variety.
• Burping a gutful of salt water is socially acceptable after the race.
• Hate just getting pipped at the end.
• Love helicopters.
• Know that jellyfish don’t really hurt……….much.
• Thrive on the wave hitting you as you try to breathe.
• Love swimming stroke for stroke and looking their competitor in the eye.
• Love sunburn cream.
• Check that everything is in place as they get up after a rough race.
• Realise that “Girt by” means “designed to race in the” in our National Anthem.
• Are intelligent, good looking, modest and salt of the earth citizens.
• Don’t need warm water and if they do they make their own.
• Love the aussie battler that struggles in at the back of the field proud as punch that they have beaten the ocean.
• Realise they are a good chance to pick up a random prize during the season.
• Know there is nothing better than Open Water Swimming.

The soft poolies may s****** and scoff at this article. The swimmers that haven’t yet had the exhilaration and pleasure of Open Water swimming may doubt. But the Open Water Swimmers know it’s all true.

Replies

  • maggiewithfins
    maggiewithfins Posts: 75 Member
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    *get excited when they see a stingray on the sea floor
    *sometimes get a little seasick but keep going because they are hard core
    *love the first glimpse of the bottom when they've been on a long and deep water swim
    *like the skill of sighting
    *love it when it's so rough they almost miss the bouy
    *are at one with sea creatures
    *think snorkelling is for wimps
    *sometimes snorkel because they scare the fish when they are going flat out
  • SwimtotheEnd
    SwimtotheEnd Posts: 69 Member
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    Thanks aotea. I'll add those to my spiel
  • PhatAv8r
    PhatAv8r Posts: 153 Member
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    gotta say, this topic has been bugging me for 24 hours now... I liked all the cool things about open water swimming... i didn't like that the original poster had to go after people who swim in a pool like they are some kind of pond scum... I guess I'd say this...

    Come to China, do some open water swimming... I'll supply the anti-biotics...

    Not everyone has a choice or the luxury of living in Auz... it would be nice, but some of us live where the best we can find is a 50m pool with clear water... some still settle for murky little 25m pools that just had a grade school class finish their swimming lesson leaving lunch behind... IN THE POOL
  • SwimtotheEnd
    SwimtotheEnd Posts: 69 Member
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    No offence meant.

    Its the Aussie sense of humour. Tongue firmly planted in the cheek. Its not serious.

    You pick a side and stir up the other side. I swim in a pool as well.
  • maggiewithfins
    maggiewithfins Posts: 75 Member
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    I have to agree, it's the Aussie sense of humour, as a Kiwi I totally got it and loved it, so didn't see any cause for offence. I also swim in the pool.
  • tdhighfill
    tdhighfill Posts: 200 Member
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    As a "soft poolie" swimmer I didn't take offense, but seriously PhatAv8r had a point - you were a little bit mean to us. We don't have the choice...we just want to SWIM.
  • ethieman
    ethieman Posts: 99 Member
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    Am jealous that my only option is to be a "soft poolie" as I live in the very middle of the USA :-/ *sulks in corner*

    Tdhighfill is right though! I just want and need to swim, we are so many fewer than groups like runners, so we need to stick together :)
  • maggiewithfins
    maggiewithfins Posts: 75 Member
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    I think those of us who swim in the ocean tend to swim in the pool too... we are just embracing summer! I had a swim in the pool today to pay tribute to those who have to swim in pools because they are left with no choice.
    Who knew that it would be such a controversial topic!
  • SwimtotheEnd
    SwimtotheEnd Posts: 69 Member
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    As a famous Australian boxer (Jeff Fenech) once said:


    " I LUVS YOUS ALL"

    Í wil have to work on next months topic.
  • Patterson80
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    I really like the idea of open swimming but have a bit of a problem with not knowing what's underneath me and not being able to see the bottom. Do you get over this? I did lol at the seaweed in the cleavage thing though :)

    Chloe
  • SwimtotheEnd
    SwimtotheEnd Posts: 69 Member
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    Chloe,

    It is nicer if you can see the bottom.

    When you cant see the bottom you just keep swimming (not much alternative really) but thoughts do cross your mind. Especially in Australia. You just try and replace them with other thoughts.

    The other trick is to swim with others, improve your odds if something is down there it might get someone else.