The day after in Dover

Two hours sleep, interviewed on the KC Show and his phone hasn’t stopped going.  He’s a rock star now.  Arriving back on Ryanair flight from Stansted at 10.00 tonight.

The morning after the day and night before - Rob Bohane, Siobhan Russell, Bernard Lynch and Carol Cashell. Super crew and swimmer. Nice T-Shirts (the blue ones) too.

The morning after the day and night before – Rob Bohane, Siobhan Russell, Bernard Lynch and Carol Cashell. Super crew and swimmer. Nice T-Shirts (the blue ones) too.

The Tide 2 (just when you thought it was safe…)

Thanks to Donal Buckley for giving me the real facts, rather than my guesses:

“Regardless of Dover tide times (it’s dropping there now), Bernard’s track is that of a flood tide swim.

He is currently in the North East shipping lane, for all marine traffic in the Channel, and he is travelling north being pushed by the tide. He has also crossed the Ferry Lane between Dover & Calais.

He looks to be on target, and should enter the Separation Zone at about 6 hours. The Separation Zone divides the two north-south shipping lanes. The Separation Zone has a higher concentration of jellyfish and rubbish. 

Then he will be pulled back South East toward the Cap. His speed will increase even as he tires, getting the benefit of the flow. How far he travels SE will determine where he turns into the Cap Griz Nez. He will have a second turn into France somewhere off the Cap. 

The current off the Cap on a Spring tide flows at up to 7 knots, where a world class elite swimmer can swim about 3 knots.

Which side the C2V buoy he passes will give an indicator if he will land on the Cap or on the beach.”

Cap-Griz-Nez

The Tide

This is today’s tide table for Dover.  Big, BIG, Spring tides.  

Low Tide 05:43 (1.46m)
High Tide 10:44 (6.23m)
Low Tide 18:04 (1.25m)
High Tide 23:14 (6.33m)

Bernard set off at 08.52, so had under two hours of incoming tide before it turned at 10.44.  It’s now headed out – hard – and taking him with it: parallel to France  and NE in the shipping channel rather than SE towards France (thanks Donal Buckley for that info).

Track

The track will look lovely on his channel swim chart when he swings back – but it must be hard going now!!   The tide won’t turn fully back into his favour until 6pm but he should start to get some benefit by about 4pm and we should see his turn beginning on the tracker. Hopefully the tide will ease his path and pull him SE into France from then on!  

“Ease” is a relative term – there’s nothing easy about this day out.