Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Wed Pier Swim: Cold Water, Dolphins, Glassy Ocean, Less Red Tide








I had a nice swim after work today.  In the water I'm still in trunks and I'm cold. I'm holding off on the wet suit for the time being.  Before I went in I saw a few dolphins playing aroung in the water.  I entered where they were but they didn't stay around; I didn't see them at all while I was in.  The water was glassy and had some warm spots mixed in with the cold water.  The red ted has eased up; the brown water is light brown far out and clearer closer in to the beach.  We still have a good ways to go before we are back to normal though.  I took some pictures today.  My swim was 34 minutes and I felt good.  My stroke felt good; my breathing felt very good;  I was very comfortable.  It was a good swim today.

"The first time you quit is the last time you try."

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Quick Swim After Work - Lose Weight While Swimming & Keeping Cool









I did a quick 34 minute swim around the pier in the brown water this afternoon about 5 PM.  The water was calm outside but cold. About 60 or 61 degrees.  Uneventful.  My eyes are stinging from the red tide.  It's really getting old, but my pants are getting looser.

"The first time you quit is the last time you try."

Monday 5 PM Swim Oceanside Pier










Well, the red tide is lingering around.  The water is still a light brown-it was all over today-not in patches.  The water far out was a lighter brown and had a few warmer spots.  I got there late afternoon, and there were about 2 dozen surfers on the south side of the pier.  No waves breaking on the north side.  I swam north to south-with the current these last two days.  The water past the breakers was pretty flat for swimming.  There was just a small chop.  It got foggy at the end of the pier and thicker fog coming back in.  I was cold and it was a slow-motion slog swimming back in with the cold draining the energy. 
I see the big pelicans all over and they are something else; they fly above the water at 30-40 feet and just drop straight in when they see a fish, I suppose.  They just nose-dive in there.  Wonder how much they catch-or how often their dives come up with a fish?
My swim was forty minutes today (Monday).  Water temp about 61.

"The first time you quit is the last time you try."

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Red Tide Returns This Afternoon. Ughhh...

When I pulled up to park at the beach this afternoon, I was extremely disappointed to see that the brown ocean-the red tide-is back!  Maybe last night it was still there, but light enough to give one the impression that it was dying off.  The brown was not covering the entire ocean today, but lay in patches and streaks over most of the water.  There were some blue areas mixed in-so at least the situation is improving.
I swam the pier from north to south this afternoon.  The water was a bit warmer than yesterday, but still cold.  The wind was blowing southward; there was a mild south movement to the surface water, and the choppiness was blowing southeast. 
I swam a long route and it took 38 minutes.  Two strong waves threw me around as if I were a baby as I came in through the surf. 












A good swim.

"The first time you quit is the last time you try."

Sat Oct 8 Pier Swim at Sunset & North County Times Link to Article

North County Times & Is Red Tide Leaving?

The brown water is gone! Last night I heard that the beach was beautiful and the red tide had taken leave, so I rushed down and got in just before the sunset.  It had been seven days without salt water for me and I was suffering from severe withdrawal symptoms.
There was an event at the pier wrapping up-having something to do with cycling and selling things at the amphitheater.  There were 2 motorized hangliders cruising around the area at about 250 feet.  I haven't seen that before and it looked inviting.
I jumped in fast, expecting colder water than last week, and it was cold.  Not head-hurting cold yet, but probably 60 degrees.  I wore my thick swim cap and it kept my noggin' warm and helped slow down the heat loss from my body.  I didn't get warmed up until I had been home afterward for about 45 minutes.  The ocean was choppy-but it was a wider chop-one to two foot mini-swells every ten feet or so.  I scurried out quickly through the surf, so as not to have to go through lines of waves twice.  After clearing the surf zone I was dizzy and exhausted.  I felt like I had lost my conditioning from where I was a week ago. I had to concentrate and tell my arms and hands what to do; I had to figure out how to breathe again; my legs had forgotten how to kick.
A neat aspect of the outgoing part of the swim, departing on the south side, was that I could see the two hangliders a bunch, which took me back to the old parachuting days 30 years ago in my mind.  Briefly, one hanglider collapsed half of his canopy and I wondered if he would be in the water alongside me in thirty seconds.  He recovered quickly and then they were out of my line of sight five minutes later.
Before I reached the end of the pier, my olfactory sense was tempted with the smell of burgers and fries from Ruby's Restaurant on the end of the pier.  I don't recall smelling that before, but I must have. 
The sun began to set before I rounded the pier, so on my left side breaths I had a lovely view of the orange sun with a brown haze at the horizon around it.  The water was more stirred up off the end of the pier and all the way into the beach.  Since I was swimming during the gloaming-that period of time after sunset and before darkness-I was able to have a right-side view of a 3/4 moon, which was cool.  I saw a flash from a person taking a picture from the pier.  I just had lots to see and feel on this swim.  Two big waves threw me around coming in and lots of white water to swim through hard to hit the sand.  No watch on my wrist but it seemed like a long time.  A brief jog to the pier to say "Hi" to my wife and daughter, and I jogged up to my car.  It was a hard, brisk wake-up call for mind and body-just what I needed.  Wish I could have taken pictures but no time.

"The first time you quit is the last time you try."