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Catalina Channel
A Swim across the Catalina Channel: A Portrait in Teamwork August 2005
By Marcia Cleveland
The short story: On Tuesday August 3rd, we swam the Catalina Channel in 8
hours, 56 minutes, 10 seconds. David Blanke, (Austin, TX, age 45), Liz
Fry, (Westport, CT, age 46), and Marcia Cleveland (Winnetka, IL, age 41),
left the island of Catalina, off the coast of Los Angeles, CA, and swam
to Palos Verdes, CA, just south of LA. We left from the island around
11:30pm on Monday and arrived on the very rough coast around 8:30am. This
is the first time 3 solo swimmers have done this swim together, and
thanks to lots of cooperation and patience from the swimmers, we swam
almost swam stroke for stroke the whole way. We were accompanied by our
faithful kayaker, Richard Clifford, and an armada of extremely capable
supporters, additional kayakers, and boat crew, all committed to being a
part of this selfless team. It was the culmination of lots of hard work
from several different people and everyone was grateful that the swim
worked out so well.
Here's the long story, if you're interested.
Say, in the dark, Here in the dark? Would you, could you, in the dark?
I would not, could not, in the dark.
Since the last time I did a marathon swim, I have had two children. Julia
was born in 1998 and Sam arrived in 2000. As a result of these joyful
arrivals, much has changed in my life since the mid-1990's when I was
able to put so much energy and focus into my swimming. But I've learned a
lot, things like the above lyrics from Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss,
which is one of Sam's favorite books, and they completely applied to my
thoughts upon approaching the Catalina Channel Swim.
In 1994, I swam the English Channel in 9 hours, 44 minutes. In the
surrounding years, I had done several other marathon swims, including
Manhattan Island. After the English Channel, I began to wonder: "What
next?" I did Manhattan a few more times, including establishing a women's
American record of 5 hours, 57 minutes in August 1996, and a couple of
other long swims.
During my time in England in 1994, I met Nora Toledano from Mexico. We
became good friends and I crewed for her when she did a two-way solo
English Channel swim the week after my one-way solo (that means to France
and back to England without stopping pretty amazing!) In 1995, she came
to New York and we both did Manhattan that year. We started talking
openly about "What next?" and thought Catalina Channel (from the island
of Catalina, California to the Los Angeles coast) would be a good,
challenging swim to do together. Since most of this swim is usually done
in the dark, any other live bodies in the water were going to be welcomed
by me.
We fast-forward to August 2003, somewhere off the southern coast of
England, near midnight. Aegean Blue is gently rocking in the waves after
having been afloat for close to 20-hours. Our six-person relay team doing
a two-way English Channel relay (the same thing Nora did by herself) is
nearing completion and it is becoming obvious that yours truly is going
to have to swim in to shore for the finish. I was still scared to swim in
the dark, even though I've done it countless times by now. The internal
conversation I was having went something like, "When you set the record
around Manhattan, you voluntarily jumped into the East River at 2:20am.
How many people do that?" "Yea, but
" "Please shut up and swim
" Ok,
without recounting any more internal whining, I did it, I hated it, we
got our certificates, and it's over.
My goal of Catalina still loomed on the future. What on earth was I going
to do? To optimize conditions in this swim, the start time is typically
at midnight because there are usually calmer seas, less boat traffic, and
probably less winds. The tide really isn't a factor, like it is in the
English Channel. Some subtle signs that Catalina was becoming part of my
life started popping up. Not one but two of my "mommy suits" (the bathing
suits I use when I swim with the kids) were manufactured by a company
called "Catalina." Next, I ran into Kris Rutford in September 2004 at a
race in Chicago. Kris and I have been friends for years and I told him
about my dream of doing Catalina next summer. He told me that David
Blanke, another long-time mutual swimmer friend, was thinking about
Catalina too so I gave David a call. David has several major swims to his
credit, including a successful crossing of the English Channel. When we
spoke, he was totally game for company in this swim and we agreed to swim
together. A few days later, another friend, Liz Fry, wanted in too,
agreeing to swim together. Liz is a remarkable athlete in many different
sports, including a recent English Channel swim. Since David had already
reserved the escort boat, he checked to make sure that having three
swimmers in the water at the same time would be ok. The boat captain said
yes, and we were set.
To begin turning this dream into a reality, I realized better start to
take my own advice, namely in the form of Dover Solo. In 1999, I
published this book, describing the preparation and actual swim of my
English Channel crossing. Anyone preparing for a long swim needs to put
some serious yardage in the bank and in the Fall of 2004 my current
yardage account wasn't going to get me too far.
A build-up plan was established. Most swimmers talk about their training
in terms of yardage, either weekly or daily, and I am no different. In
the Fall of 2004, I was swimming about 15-20,000 yards a week. (There are
1,760 yards in a mile.) During January and February, I increased this
yardage to 20-25,000 yards a week. In March/April, my weekly yardage
total was 25-30,000 yards a week. In the May/June phase, I swam 30-35,000
yards/week, and continued this schedule during the first three weeks of
July. During the last week of July, I swam a little less, in order to
rest. This stair-step plan made the yardage increases more feasible, both
mentally and physically. I also did stretching and core exercises several
times a week, plus a weight lifting program twice a week.
On a weekly basis, from January until school let out in early June, I
would make my heavy swim days Monday through Thursday but it depended on
our family's schedule (Mark's travel for work and the kids' activities.)
When I could, after dropping Julia and Sam at school, I would swum 6000
to 7000 yards by myself at a health club two to three mornings a week,
followed immediately by weight lifting. Then when I needed to, I swam
more in the evenings at Northwestern University with our masters' team,
NASA.
When school let out, my time wasn't my own anymore so much of my swimming
was done before the kids woke up, and on the weekend mornings. When Lake
Michigan warmed up to over 55F consistently in early June, I swam 3-4
mornings a week at Tower Beach in Winnetka for about an hour-and-a-half
with my training partner, Blair Johnson. On Saturday mornings, I went to
Ohio Street Beach in Chicago for longer, 2+ hour, swims. A few times a
week, I swam in the pool with NASA in the evenings. Throughout this time,
there was a garden-variety of lake conditions, ranging from completely
flat and still to 5 foot rolling seas. We swam in any and all conditions;
all of this was good practice. When I swam in California just before
Catalina and my legs felt buoyed up by the salt water I realized that the
recent training I had done in the fresh water of Lake Michigan had been
harder than swimming in the salt water of Connecticut that I was used to;
our family had moved to Illinois from Connecticut in 2003.
I also started to think about the sensory deprivation of swimming in the
dark. Over the summer, I became more and more comfortable with the idea
and convinced myself to approach the swim calmly, regardless of the
available light.
Next, I needed to fix this shoulder and back problem that had been
nagging me for a long, long time (I stopped counting in specific numbers
once the kiddies arrived.) In steps Brian Cunningham, a Physical
Therapist who is also a fellow swimmer. His custom program began with
rehabilitation then graduated up to strength and stamina training, which
included a specialized weight training program. He devised most of the
exercises to be done at home and I followed this plan religiously week-in
and week-out. He constantly mixed up the program, to work different
muscle groups and alleviate boredom. My kids loved to roll around on the
big exercise ball and to lift the weights lying around, "just like
Mommy." It also gave me hope in the fact that he was really thinking
about HOW I would be swimming and for how long. At one point, he said,
"So if you're going to be in this horizontal position for at least 10
hours, you really need to make sure your hip flexors are strong." It was
a good revelation because, yes, his entire statement was correct, and
yes, he was thinking about the entire situation, not just how long I was
able to hold the Plank position today. (Note to Brian: Now I only
strongly dislike doing dips and chin-ups.) I consider my shoulder and
back problems under control, just as long as I continue to do my
exercises.
During all this training, my body and particularly my shoulders felt
miraculously feeling fine. I tried to build in a day every week of no
swimming. Was I tired? Yes, all the time, and especially more tired on
some days than others, and I had no real time to rest. This training was
a lot different on my 40/41-year old, mother-of-two body than on the
29/30-year old, happy-go-lucky machine that I was 11 years ago. (The
latter refers to my English Channel training days when I was swimming
45,000 yards per week for almost a year.) Coupled with all this training
was the fact that we did some major renovating on our house this year. I
saw all the furniture lifting and rearranging as supplemental weight
training!
I also needed to ask around for advice from the community of marathon
swimmers I knew who had previously done Catalina. Alison Streeter, Karen
Burton Reeder, Nick Olmos-Lau, Kathleen Wilson, and Carol all provided
full recaps of their stories and I was able to glean tidbits and guidance
from each and every one of them. The general consensus was that this was
a lovely swim and the phosphoresces in the water were beautiful at night.
However, you absolutely must be in good shape for the distance, the
weather and water temperature could change dramatically, and the finish
is as rough as you'll ever see anywhere in the world. From what I heard,
I started to embrace the positives. When the swim was over and we were
safely on the boat heading back to the dock in Long Beach, I was apparent
to me that all this counsel proved true.
Nora continued to be game for this swim for several years but then her
son, Max Dilan, arrived in 2000, and she became more involved in the
organization of marathon swimming in Mexico. She told me if she could not
actually do the swim she would crew for me. Rearranging the heavens and
the moons, Nora kept her word and showed up to crew.
Fast-forward to 5:45am on Wednesday July 27, 2005. My mother, Carolyn,
Julia, Sam, and me all wave good-bye to my husband, Mark Green, and we
pull out of our driveway in suburban Chicago, Illinois, headed for
California. He will join us on Friday August 5th after the swim for a
family vacation. At 10:30pm CST on Friday July 29th, we pulled into Carol
Sing's driveway in San Diego. Carol is one of the grand dames of open
water swimming, having become to oldest women (and sometimes person) to
complete many swims, including the both the English and Catalina
Channels. I had known her for several years and it was extremely generous
of her to have us stay with her during our time in San Diego. Nora also
stayed with Carol, giving all of us time to catch up. Living in this
comfortable, relaxed atmosphere allowed Carol to fill us in on some of
the Catalina details that would be helpful for both Nora and me. Having
my mom along was nice because of the time she was able to spend time with
all of us, especially her grandchildren, and she understood of the needs
of my swimming.
Sunday July 31st, a day-and-and-half before the swim, we headed up to the
LA area to stay with David's family. His aunt and uncle have a home in
Huntington Beach and since they were away, they generously allowed us to
stay there: David and his wife, Leslie; Liz; our kayaker, Richard
Clifford, from Larchmont, NY; David's sister and her husband, Mary
McSweeney and Jon Ketzler, from Madison, Wisconsin; Nora, my mom, my
kids, and me. The usual pre-swim planning and strategizing ensued on
Sunday evening and Monday. Nora and I went over where all the various
equipment was packed in my bags so she could get to whatever she needed
quickly when she was crewing for me.
We went over the feeding plan too. Sixty minutes into the swim, and every
30 minutes thereafter, at Richard's prompt, we would all stop, tread
water and receive our feeding from the kayakers. My feeds would comprise
of a water bottle filled with 8 ounces of water mixed with Maxim, plus
one Hammergel. At the 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th, etc. hour, I would get the same
mixture but with one scoop of protein powder mixed into the Maxim. Motrin
would be given upon my request. Each feeding would end with a quick
gargle of mouthwash, giving relief to the effects of the saltwater in the
mouth. Then after this one minute break, we would all resume swimming.
Official Channel swimming rules dictate that you can't touch the boat,
kayak, or another swimmer to gain assistance or an advantage.
For all three of us, Leslie and Nora would mix a few feed bottles at a
time, a kayaker would paddle over to the boat to receive them. After we
had used up all the feeds, the kayaker would deliver the bottles back to
the boat and the process would be repeated. Leslie mentioned afterwards
that it would have been very helpful if our names had been written on
each bottle so when the "load" was delivered, she and Nora could sort it
out more easily.
Before we got to California, I had told Liz that I wanted to wear a suit
that didn't make me look like shark bait. At our meeting on Sunday, she
presented David and me with florescent pink custom-made bathing suits and
matching swim caps. Across the front was a line drawing of a shark
chasing a swimmer. Across the backside, was written YIKES! She even had a
set for Julia! Great stuff! Heck, with that huge boat, 2 kayaks, and a
big guy in a pink bathing suit, all the smart fish stayed out of our way.
What fish in their right mind would want to take a bite out of a big guy
in a pink suit?
On Monday, all swimmers and crew seriously rested. One of my major
concerns was staying up all night, something I'm not particularly good
at. My mom took Sam and Julia out in the afternoon so the house was
fairly quiet. We left for the boat around 6pm on Monday evening and
arrived at the Bottom Scratcher around 7pm. This fifty-foot boat has 27
berths (bunks) and is outfitted for overnight scuba diving outings. It
calls Long Beach Harbor home port. The swimmers and crew quickly moved
all the gear onto the boat and then we waited while the captain and boat
crew showed up.
Our swim crew was comprised of Leslie Blanke, David's very-capable wife;
Nora Toledano, my very-capable friend; and Tom Stanton, Liz's friend from
LA who proved himself to be incredibly capable even though this was his
first swim. A swimmer's crew is responsible for the swimmer's equipment
and food, preparing feedings for the swimmer in the water, watching the
swimmer for any signs of fatigue or change from normal', and general
moral support. It's similar to taking care of an infant. Our
kayakers/paddlers were Richard Clifford who remained on the water the
entire swim, and Steve Dockstader and Kevin Eslinger, both of San Diego.
The official observers were Carol Sing, David Clark, and Rich Henry, all
of San Diego. The observers make sure that the official rules are adhered
to, timing the entire swim, keeping an official log of the swim. Kevin,
David Clark, Steve, and Tom rotated kayaking shifts every in 2 hour. We
had an experienced, excellent crew and everyone proved themselves to be
worthy of all-star status.
Also on board were Mary and Jon, David's sister and brother-in-law. They
are physicians and monitored all of us, swimmers and crew alike. Jon also
took some AMAZING photos of the event and gave us a nice slide show the
evening after our swim.
My mom was going to take Sam back to the house in Huntington for the
evening and for the first time ever, Julia would be allowed to be on the
boat. During the swim, Nora was going to be Julia's "mamacita" and Carol
would be her surrogate grandma. Julia was great during the entire trip
and won over the hearts of the boat crew.
Captain Greg Elliott is a bagpipe-playing, competent, stern, yet
agreeable salty seaman. During his pre-swim speech, he told us up front
that he was very concerned about our trio arrangement. He made it
perfectly clear that if we were unable to stay together, he would make no
hesitation of hauling one, two, or all three of us out of the water. The
three first mates on board were also just as competent and pleasantly
in-control as Greg. I felt like I was in very safe hands.
Everyone around us: crew, boat captain, kayakers, innocent by-standers,
etc., were VERY concerned about our ability to swim together, defined as
swimming stroke for stroke. However, from the moment that David, Liz, and
I agreed to do this as a group, I never had a doubt that we would stay
together. The right personalities were involved here. The slowest swimmer
would set the pace and this position might vary as the swim progressed.
As it turned out, from nearly the get-go, I was the slowest swimmer by
just a little, but David and Liz honored their word. I was very
comfortable swimming with them even though they would probably have gone
10-15 minutes faster without me.
We left the dock in Long Beach around 8:15pm as the sun was setting. I
immediately headed for a bunk in the back of the boat and was quickly
followed by David, Liz, and Leslie. These bunks were more out in the air
than the ones up front; I wanted to minimize the potential for
seasickness. Although I never actually slept, I rested and just kept
thinking about good things. I was really relaxed and ready to go when the
boat arrived at Catalina.
It was dark, really really dark. The outline of the island was barely
visible and there was no moon. The kayaks and the boat would have some
lights for us to follow, but not enough for us to see much in the water
around us. Usually you can see some sort of lights from the land but
right now darkness prevailed. I simply didn't worry. It was going to be
whatever it was going to be. Nora applied Vaseline to the chafe points
along my suit lines and neck, I put on my cap and goggles, wrapped a
towel around me, and waited in the 60F cool night air. Channel rules
stipulate that a swimmer may wear a bathing suit, one cap, goggles, and
grease. When it was time to get into the dinghy from the boat, there was
no hesitation. We motored about 200 yards over to the island and jumped
into the 68F water.
The start point for Catalina Channel swims is a small beach at Doctor's
Cove on the northeast side of the island. All of us were reaching the
island for the first time. On the cliffs about this beach is a Boy Scout
camp. In order to begin any open water swim, you must "clear the water,"
that is, get to a starting point where there is no water behind you.
(Subsequently, to finish, you must also "clear the water," getting to
where there is no water in front of you.) As we left the water and walked
up onto the beach, we noticed some post-curfew scouts on the cliffs
above, watching us swim in. They ran down to the beach and asked us where
we were swimming to. "Long Beach," I replied.
11:36pm Monday August 1, 2005: David Blanke, Liz Fry, and Marcia
Cleveland enter the Catalina Channel and each begin their solo swim
crossings.
This swim started out calmly and smoothly. The water (68F) and air (low
60sF) temperatures felt fine and the wind was blowing from the west at 10
knots. As I mentally checked myself out from head to toe, everything was
coming up in the "good" zone and I felt like butter. For the first mile
we were in the lee of the island and had nice flat water. Then the open
waters of the Pacific Ocean welcomed us whole-heartedly with 5-8 foot
northwestern swells and western winds of 15 knots. Our crew told us that
had any of us known just how difficult these swells were to swim in, we
all would have gotten out. This is the time that I was really glad that I
was swimming with others. If they could do it, so could I and I'm sure
they were thinking the same thing. For the first two hours, it was all
the three of us could do not to sandwich on top of one another.
I kept reminding myself that I was swimming with really good people. When
it was all over, we would be able to reminisce these first few hours but
for right now, when things are a little crunched, hold on and relax.
Patience, patience, patience: There must be a reason why he/she is doing
that. Remain calm and you'll find out later what's happening to everyone
else right now.
We had arranged our order ahead of time: Richard would be on the outside
in the kayak the whole time, David would swim next to him, I would swim
in the middle, and Liz would swim on the right side. To her right would
be the other kayak then the boat. The total distance from Richard to the
boat was about 50 feet or less, so we were comfortably bundled. David and
I would feed from Richard's kayak and Liz would feed from the other one.
One of the other rules of open water swimming, along with "clearing the
water", is that the swimmer cannot touch anything to gain assistance. You
can have things handed to you such as cups for feeds but you can't touch
the boat, kayak, or other swimmers unless it is accidental. Miraculously,
we managed to adhere to this rule even in these bunched up, swelly seas.
I volunteered to swim in the middle because I breathe bi-laterally (on
both sides) and heck, with two young children, I'm used to having no
personal space. As we were being "swelled" into one other, I envisioned a
large Oreo cookie with David and Liz as the cookie part and me as the
crĀme. Hey, if this is where my mind was now, I'm doing pretty well. If I
needed something else to think about, I always knew I could think about
the fact that we were swimming in 3000 feet of water, or that there were
things with teeth around, or how DARK it was. As it turned out, I really
didn't worry about any of these things. (Liz, sorry I almost bumped you
again and again.) Swimming in the Pacific at night in high seas with very
little light gave me an appreciation for people in shipwrecks. Whenever I
would lift my head up so that my eyes were at water level and look
forward alligator-style, I could see only a black horizon line.
Now, I like stomach-dropping roller coasters just as much as the next
person. After about 2 hours of these seas, I felt as if I may get sick
from Mother Nature's roller coaster. I asked Richard to get some
seasickness medicine to have on hand. As it turned out, I didn't take it
and I didn't get sick but it was nice to know it was right there if I
needed it. Leslie, Carol, and Nora thought I had taken it because in the
darkness they couldn't see our immediate actions and they were concerned
that I was getting sick. If a swimmer gets sick in the water there is
always the concern that they will become dehydrated and have to abort the
swim. Fortunately, none of us were sick.
Around 3AM, I was tired. Not tired from the swimming but tired from being
up all night. My brain felt like it was rattling around in my scull and I
hoped that I could stay awake. It really helped when the sun came up.
Staying up all night is just one of those things that you do for this
swim and really can't do anything more than rest up in the few days
before. There was no point in complaining about it either since we were
all in the same "boat." By this point, I had hunkered down to a
sustainable pace that I knew I could continue all night and kept
thinking, "rotate, rotate, rotate", which make me concentrate on rolling
my hips and moving more easily through the water. My stroke rate, number
of arm pulls taken in a minute, held consistent at 64, (although down
from 71 at the start.) Liz and David were also holding consistent SRs of
65 and 58, respectively.
Richard was performing magnificently. When we're in the water, he is the
BOSS and treats us like little children. Not abusive, just authoritative,
telling us what to do. When it's all over, everyone is again on equal
footing. During this swim, he was managing to stay afloat, not take on
water in his kayak, navigate in the dark, keep the other kayaker in line,
feed David and me on regular 30 minute intervals, and stay pretty
cheerful. Because he's so in control, it puts me at ease and lets me do
my job: just swim. At one feeding I said to him, "It's soooo dark,
Richard. Can you see anything?" He told me, "I can't see anything, not
even the lights on the coast." In a moment of levity, I inquired, "Do you
think they're playing a cruel joke on us and leading us in a big circle
back to the island?"
Around 5 hours into the swim, my left shoulder started to hurt. Had I not
done all the PT work with Brian, this pain would have most likely begun
earlier and been worse. I asked Richard for 1 Motrin. Two hours later,
the pain was worsening. At that feeding, Richard had 3 Motrins ready for
me to take, barking, "Take these because the first one obviously isn't
doing the job." (I took 2, and they worked.) Other swiftly delivered
commands from the kayak included, "Marcia, keep you head down and stop
looking around. Let me do the sighting. There's nothing to see anyway.
Don't be a tourist." (It was really foggy.) At one point, because Liz and
her kayaker were working their way about 10 yards forward, Richard gave
her a "time out." He rearranged the swimmer order, had Liz swim right
next to him, put David in the middle, and had me swim on the right, next
to the other kayak. If Liz got ahead of Richard's kayak, he barked at her
to stay back.
Before the swim, I was concerned about potential encounters with sea life
in this Channel. While in the water, I barely thought of it at all. Liz
did report to Richard at one point that she was being attacked by
"thousands of flying fish." David and I saw and felt nothing even though
we were all in the same water, giving Richard license to tease Liz after
the swim. The only encounter I did have with any sort of sea life was a
few stings from random jellyfish tentacles at arbitrary points in the
swim. Yes, it hurt but by the time I would have stopped to complain about
it, the sting would have subsided so I adhered to the "No complaining"
rule.
Around 6am, it finally became light. It seemed to go quickly from DARK to
light and with this light came calmer water, which we would have for the
next two-and-a-half hours into the finish. One of the benefits about
swimming for 6 hours in the dark was that when it was finally light, much
of the work had been done. At 6:10am a super tanker crossed about 200
yards in front of our bow, creating major swells, then our boat crew saw
dolphins! None of us swimmers saw them, but apparently they got pretty
close. Big exciting half hour for everyone!
At 7am, with the booming sound of Captain Greg's bag pipes resonating
across the water, I knew everything was going well and that we were going
to make it as long as we avoided a disaster. We could see land, the
temperature had dropped (to 63F) as it usually does in the final 3 miles,
and all three swimmers were in good shape. Leslie and Nora even joined us
in the water, making it a five-some! From the pictures taken at this
time, we look like some military formation: three swimmers bracketed by 2
kayakers in one line and two swimmers (Leslie and Nora) comfortably
trailing the outside swimmers.
In a way, I was almost sad that this was almost over since I thought it
would be a 10-12 hour swim but all three of us were cranking towards a
strong finish. Mark called the boat then and the crew relayed, "Mark is
very proud of you." This added to my pure happiness at the moment and
energized me. Nora woke Julia up and she appeared on deck bleary-eyed,
barely responding to my chipper, "Good Morning, Julia." The next thing I
know she has disappeared only to re-appear in the launch (boat dinghy)
that is speeding towards shore in preparation for our landing. She would
witness our finish up close and be one of the first ones to greet us
after the swim!
The skies remained overcast but we could clearly see the shore now.
Thanks to the Motrin Richard had insisted I take, my shoulder felt fine
and I could comfortably keep up the increased pace offered by David and
Liz. Everyone wanted to finish so when a feeding was presented at 8 ½
hours, I bluntly said, "NO." David told me later that he was glad I made
such a quick, firm decision because he didn't want it either. We were in
"Let's Go!" mode.
There is a lighthouse that overlooks Palos Verdes and on the next cliff
just south of the lighthouse, there was a large screen; we would land in
the small bay between these two points. The screen turned out to be part
of the fort scene in the movie "Pirates of the Caribbean" and several
movie workers cheered on our finish from overhead. When we were about a
mile from shore, Kevin Eslinger got in the water on his paddleboard and
it was evident that he was there to guide us to a safe landing. We headed
straight towards the movie screen then made a sharp left into the bay. I
wondered why we weren't landing straight ahead and knew this answer could
wait: right now, the unspoken deal was to follow Kevin.
The water was getting shallower and rockier with every stroke. Ok, I'd
heard about this finish, it didn't look so bad. Then we hit the rocky
beach. The three of us each crawled in on all fours because we instantly
realized that the combination of the rapidly pounding surf against the
nasty little sharp, slippery rocks right at the surf line made for a
dangerous landing. When everyone was able, we stood up together and TA
DA! Our swim was complete! It was 8:31am and we had just swum the
Catalina Channel in 8 hours, 56 minutes, 10 seconds. I was joyful that
everything worked out. This had been such a team effort on the parts of
everyone: swimmers, kayakers, and crew. It amazed a lot of people that we
successfully completed this swim in such a fast time and it produced a
deep sense of satisfaction for everyone involved.
Kevin told us to pick up a few rocks and put them in our suit if we
wanted any because we weren't coming back to this beach. Then we
carefully negotiated a re-entry into the water (I dog-paddled) and swam
to the waiting dinghy. I was really happy to see everyone, especially
Julia. She was able to experience the raw emotion we were sharing and to
see our bodies in their present condition. Except for my aching shoulder,
I felt and looked fine. Liz and David were in a similar state.
When we arrived back at Bottom Scratcher, everyone on board was ecstatic;
they all had played a major role in our success. The boat headed back to
the dock in Long Beach and dolphins jumped in the aft wake, giving us a
real show. My brother, Bill, told me long ago that the reason dolphins
always look like they're smiling is, "If you could do the things dolphins
can do in the water, you'd smile too."
On the boat Kevin told us about the reason for our sharp left turn at the
finish. If we land under the movie screen it would have resulted in three
immediate visits to a plastic surgeon. The rocks there were much sharper
than the sharp, nasty, slippery ones we landed on. OUCH! Kevin also
massaged my shoulder on the boat which enabled me to recuperate in just a
few days. (THANK YOU KEVIN!)
The day after the swim, we recovered and reminisced in LA at David's
family's home. Sam nearly gave Gram heart failure by jumping off the dock
"just like those big boys over there" (fortunately, he's water-safe.)
Eventually we said our good-byes, knowing there would be a next time.
Then we went back to Carol's and relaxed some more. The extent of our San
Diego adventures included taking a short afternoon trip on the Amtrak
California (giving Sam eternal joy), visiting the San Diego Zoo, hanging
out at La Jolla Cove, and lounging in Carol's pool. Mark arrived on
Friday night, ready for his full two-week vacation. Gram headed back to
Connecticut on Saturday morning, and our family foursome headed off to
the Grand Canyon on Sunday, following a brief 5-mile swim race in La
Jolla Cove.
When I shared my initial results with family and friends, many people
told me how inspired they were by this feat. It makes me happy to know
that this swim accomplished by a couple of 40-something-year-olds can
help to prompt others to dream and then fulfill these dreams. Please
continue to pass it along, with the hope that someone somewhere will set
in motion the steps to achieve a dream. Simply to get moving may be
enough of a goal.
People ask me if I had a good time on Catalina Island. Based on the 30
seconds we spent there, it was very nice. Someday, I'd like to return to
explore more.
I can never say it enough: Thank you to everyone who helped with this
swim, both near and far. Thank you to David and Liz, Leslie, Nora, Carol,
Richard, Kevin, Steve, Tom, David, Rich, and the crew of Bottom
Scratcher. Thanks especially to my mom who gave me the support I needed
in California, and to Mark who has given me oh-so-much support for the
past 15 years!
I do so like green eggs and ham! Thank you! Thank you, Sam-I-am!
And swimming in the dark is a darn great experience.
Onwards and upwards to the next challenges!
Swimcerely,
Marcia Cleveland August 31, 2005
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