Luckily since I'm still hobbling the campsite was quite close to the water just the other side of the sand dune.
JJ
Tuesday, 31 July 2012
Friday, 27 July 2012
Swyre, Friday 27 July 2012, 5pm
SW
Thursday, 26 July 2012
Wednesday, 25 July 2012
Yesterday, 24th July 2012
We are all horrified to hear of the landslide at Freshwater yesterday, and our thoughts are very much with the family of Charlotte Blackman, as well as those who were injured.
The Swimmer as Hero
Scolt Head Island 24th July
Arriving at the little harbour of Burnham Overy Staithe I felt the extreme bad temper caused by an injured ankle and too much time spent indoors melting away. Hobbling down to the marshy creek close to the ice cream van there are people basking in the sunshine despite the slightly fettered smell and kids covered head to toe in marsh mud climbing and sliding up and down the banks. We walk up the creek half in the water half on the muddy flats in the vague direction of the sea. People gradually thin out and we can only see other groups of ones twos tramping out in the same direction. As the tide is going out you could definitely swim or canoe out to the island. Once on the island (really it looks like a massive sand dune) there is some further walking/hobbling to the sea. Which is incredibly warm and clear not that deep but we float around and then bake on our own sand bank like seals. This is how summer is supposed to be! Because it is in every weekend supplements best beach guide recently+ school holidays there were quite a lot of people but it still felt empty and isolated. The added bonus of swimming in the creek I think makes it one of my favourite swims.
JJ
JJ
Cogden, Tuesday 24th July, 4pm and Hampstead Ladies Pond, 5pm
Enough beautiful beach shots recently - here are some sculptures which have appeared behind the beach, looking striking against a brilliant blue sky. A great sociable swim, for humans and dogs, thanks to C and J for the post swim melon. A few more jellyfish but all were avoided with ease.
SW
Hampstead Heath, 5pm MG
A long, lazy afternoon on the roasting hot heath, followed by a gentle plop into the ridiculously warm ponds. Absolute bliss. They're jam-packed but I can't resent it - it's just so good to see people using this incredible London treat.
Monday, 23 July 2012
Cogden, Monday 23rd July 2012
I still cant get over how blue the sky is... another hot and calm day. The sea is really warming up now. A beautiful swim at exceedingly quiet Cogden, marred only by the first appearance of a lone jellyfish - looks like a Compass Jellyfish which do sting but it wasn't very big.
SW
Sunday, 22 July 2012
Hive, Sunday 22nd July, 11am and 6pm
MG
Another two day swim; SW and I collide at Burton at 11am for a long swim in the water that is improving by the second - clear, still, perfect. We swim absolutely miles out and agree that were there a pier with which to measure our distance we would officially be beyond it. We then realise we have to get back to shore and so rather anxiously start the long haul in. It's infuriating that after 15 minutes or so we begin to get cold - there is even a hint of a teeth chatter - but with another swim later in the day in our sights it isn't too agonising to leave the water and the beach....
KH and I linger on the beach for a long gossip in the perfect evening sun, and marvel how just a few short weeks ago, she was cut off on the A35 by the Dorset floods of biblical levels. Things are suddenly very different, though who knows how long this is to last...
Saturday, 21 July 2012
Hive, Saturday 21st July, 10am and various
Special entry from our top guest blogger, RL
Burton Bradstock 21st July or
"The day when RL crammed in several months worth of swimming into a single day"
9.15 Sydling St Nicholas
MG arrives to pick me up. Surprisingly, the sun is out in full force which bodes well for our day of swimming. I arrive furnished with large green apples which we eat in misguided attempt to prepare us for our morning swim. Drive passes with much hilarity, Tim Minchin and reminiscences of previous delightful swims. Cannot believe that this is the first time I have swam ALL YEAR, except for very brief immersion at Greenhill in May. Rather wish I had not shared this fact with MG and SW shortly after his arrival. They are smug, and boast of many many respective swims in the icy depths. In order to persuade them that I am in fact, hardy swimmer, I cast off all garments with reckless abandonment, and encourage immediate entry into the sea, which does look very inviting (although I know from experience that appearances can be misleading...). They seem reluctant, but woman appears who is swimmer known to MG from previous expeditions. She describes MG as "beacon for Bridport swimmers", and refers to her many brave marine endeavours with evident admiration . MG looks highly pleased and I kindly do not remind her of previous incidences when her reluctance to enter the sea has not been quite akin to this description (I don't know WHAT you are refering to - if it's the time when I said it was too rough to swim THOSE CHILDREN SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN IN! Ed). After this episode, woman looks hopefully at us from along the beach, and there seems nothing for it but to go in. After the water (11 degrees) has frozen off several layers of my skin, I'm really quite enjoying myself, and we all agree how lovely it is. The sun is already rising high in the sky, and I look forward to my return.
(hearty swimmers breakfast RL has neglected to mention.... Ed)
14.30, BB
My second trip to BB is without my fellow swimmers. I pass a lovely afternoon reading on the beach, and it really does feel quite hot, so in I go again. Am much cheered by squealing of two men as they go in. A warning comes from a lady in a floral swimsuit who tells me that it is quite cold in there, really, and I had better be careful. Oh no I say breezily, I've been in once this morning and it's really quite warm (Question why I feel that I have to exert superiority over her, when in all reality I was not having the time of my life, temperature wise - think must be down to the floral swimsuit). Actually, the sea has warmed up quite considerably, and it's really very pleasant swimming in the afternoon in the hot sun.
18.30 Return of MG and SW.
Very pleased to have some company in the sea once more. Most of the other people swimming and sunbathing have gone home, and we sit on the beach and chat. The beach looks beautiful in the early evening sun, and it is one of those precious moments in life when you are in good company and have had a quiet day of enjoyment. The sea is still fairly warm, and very clear, with the occasional fish. We swim out quite far, and SW chooses this moment to remind me of the shark washed up on the beach on Boxing Day which I had hitherto managed to forget.
We swim back to shore, I feel that the day has made up for a week of horrible Dorset weather. On BB beach in the sunshine, there's nowhere I'd rather be.
Burton Bradstock 21st July or
"The day when RL crammed in several months worth of swimming into a single day"
9.15 Sydling St Nicholas
MG arrives to pick me up. Surprisingly, the sun is out in full force which bodes well for our day of swimming. I arrive furnished with large green apples which we eat in misguided attempt to prepare us for our morning swim. Drive passes with much hilarity, Tim Minchin and reminiscences of previous delightful swims. Cannot believe that this is the first time I have swam ALL YEAR, except for very brief immersion at Greenhill in May. Rather wish I had not shared this fact with MG and SW shortly after his arrival. They are smug, and boast of many many respective swims in the icy depths. In order to persuade them that I am in fact, hardy swimmer, I cast off all garments with reckless abandonment, and encourage immediate entry into the sea, which does look very inviting (although I know from experience that appearances can be misleading...). They seem reluctant, but woman appears who is swimmer known to MG from previous expeditions. She describes MG as "beacon for Bridport swimmers", and refers to her many brave marine endeavours with evident admiration . MG looks highly pleased and I kindly do not remind her of previous incidences when her reluctance to enter the sea has not been quite akin to this description (I don't know WHAT you are refering to - if it's the time when I said it was too rough to swim THOSE CHILDREN SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN IN! Ed). After this episode, woman looks hopefully at us from along the beach, and there seems nothing for it but to go in. After the water (11 degrees) has frozen off several layers of my skin, I'm really quite enjoying myself, and we all agree how lovely it is. The sun is already rising high in the sky, and I look forward to my return.
(hearty swimmers breakfast RL has neglected to mention.... Ed)
14.30, BB
My second trip to BB is without my fellow swimmers. I pass a lovely afternoon reading on the beach, and it really does feel quite hot, so in I go again. Am much cheered by squealing of two men as they go in. A warning comes from a lady in a floral swimsuit who tells me that it is quite cold in there, really, and I had better be careful. Oh no I say breezily, I've been in once this morning and it's really quite warm (Question why I feel that I have to exert superiority over her, when in all reality I was not having the time of my life, temperature wise - think must be down to the floral swimsuit). Actually, the sea has warmed up quite considerably, and it's really very pleasant swimming in the afternoon in the hot sun.
18.30 Return of MG and SW.
Very pleased to have some company in the sea once more. Most of the other people swimming and sunbathing have gone home, and we sit on the beach and chat. The beach looks beautiful in the early evening sun, and it is one of those precious moments in life when you are in good company and have had a quiet day of enjoyment. The sea is still fairly warm, and very clear, with the occasional fish. We swim out quite far, and SW chooses this moment to remind me of the shark washed up on the beach on Boxing Day which I had hitherto managed to forget.
We swim back to shore, I feel that the day has made up for a week of horrible Dorset weather. On BB beach in the sunshine, there's nowhere I'd rather be.
Thursday, 19 July 2012
Shingle Street, Suffolk, 17th July 2012
An amazing, isolated spot. Huge banks of shingle covered in a riot of colourful plants. Exposed, windy, desolate, beautiful. The grey sea when you eventually reach it laps at the steep shingle banks, calm but almost creepy; like it could rise up and flood all the land at a minutes notice.
The shingle is as steep as Abbotsbury but with the added complication of a major river mouth (The Alde) so the warning signs everywhere against swimming are not without good reason. I did some research before travelling and read that it was safe to swim so long as the water was clam and you went in at the southern end of the beach... and I was so lucky - woke up on the 17th to blue skies and a flat sea.
I was expecting the worst from the water after 2 weeks in sunny Portugal but was amazed that the temperature felt hardly any different to Albufiera and after a few seconds reticence I was in and swimming. I was feeling a little nervous of the NO SWIMMING signs (there were three in a short stretch) so I kept near the bank but had a beautiful swim and a great reaclimatization to UK waters.
The shingle is as steep as Abbotsbury but with the added complication of a major river mouth (The Alde) so the warning signs everywhere against swimming are not without good reason. I did some research before travelling and read that it was safe to swim so long as the water was clam and you went in at the southern end of the beach... and I was so lucky - woke up on the 17th to blue skies and a flat sea.
I was expecting the worst from the water after 2 weeks in sunny Portugal but was amazed that the temperature felt hardly any different to Albufiera and after a few seconds reticence I was in and swimming. I was feeling a little nervous of the NO SWIMMING signs (there were three in a short stretch) so I kept near the bank but had a beautiful swim and a great reaclimatization to UK waters.
Now all we need is some calm weather in the SW...
Wednesday, 18 July 2012
50 Shades of Grey
MG
After SW's disgusting splurge of sick-making swim porn below, let me retaliate by illustrating what the West Dorset beaches currently look like in some sort of defence for having now been out of the water for who knows how long, maybe 6 weeks....
By my reckoning, in something like the last 30 months I have missed two months. December 2011. And June 2012. Smell the irony. That includes the month in which I broke my arm.
But rumours that something better this way comes.....
Sunday, 15 July 2012
a reminder...
...of a real summer. I was lucky enough to escape the deluge for two weeks in Portugal... Blisteringly hot and beautiful. Planned to spend most time in quiet Eastern Algarve but a seaweed attack made the water un-swimable for a week so we headed along to the main touristy stretch near Albufeira. Expected tourist hell but found quiet cove heaven... Even had one beach all to ourselves for an afternoon. Prejudices overturned.
Guadiana river swim near Alcoutim
Praia do Barill, Tavira
Praia do Duarte and Pria do Balbina, Albufeira
Praia do Duarte, Albufeira
Praia do Duarte, Albufeira
(trying to wave) Praia do Evaristo, Albufeira
Ilha da Armona
Praia da Marinha, Lagoa
Quinta Da Largo, Faro
Meanwhile in Dorset, Chesil beach remains stormy and rarely swimmable and the official water temp in mid July is an embarrassing 11.8 degrees... Thats the normal December temp..
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