First draft of the calendar from Carol Cashell is here. Will be updated monthly. Thanks, Carol.
munster_open_water_event_calendar_2017_version1jan17

RNLI Myrtleville-Church Bay swim, 2016.
First draft of the calendar from Carol Cashell is here. Will be updated monthly. Thanks, Carol.
munster_open_water_event_calendar_2017_version1jan17

RNLI Myrtleville-Church Bay swim, 2016.
A mere five months and it’ll be time for the RNLI Myrtleville to Church Bay Swim, 2017 – at 5pm on Saturday, June 10th.
Here’s a lovely bit of work by Denis Condon and Anne Sheehy, to remind you why it’s worth training for this highlight of the swimming calendar.
Lots of info and reporting of previous events here:
https://myrtlevilleswimmers.com/rnli-swim/
Entries will open in late March. Keep training – it’s worth it.

Fantastic morning at the beach with about forty swimmers in the water. Lots of regulars and visitors from Spain and France – via Dublin and Kinsale – as well. Not forgetting Barnsley, of course. A very happy Christmas to all 😁




Congratulations to Steve Redmond on the news that he’s going to be inducted into the prestigious International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame next April. It’s hard to imagine a more worthy recipient.
Of course, we will now shamelessly claim his success for Myrtleville. We have the pictures to prove it.

Steve with the Hat – to which he attributes all his success.****

Steve with his most devoted fan. Mad about him, she is.
**** Note : Steve didn’t have the Hat until long after his Oceans 7 heroics. A mere detail and timeline blip we’re ignoring here.
Congratulations, Mr. Redmond 🙂

Big crowd going on Saturday night to the Oar in Crosshaven. 8.00 start and excellent tunes promised from Brendan O’Brien. €10 on the night for anyone who hasn’t paid already – to Breda Maguire.
Of course, a night out is nothing without lots of planning ahead for what to wear. Frank Hallissey is ahead of the posse on this one and has clearly identified a slinky Ralph Lauren number for himself, which he inadvertently shared online. Lots of leg waxing needed for that one, Frank.

In fairness to Frank, he’s never shy about showing he’s in touch with his feminine side. He refuses to give up his lovely pink, fluffy towel to that other softie, K. Murphy.

Going to be a great night and be sure to dress up well – Frank has set that bar high 🙂
Following on from the very high-profile Myrtle Turtles channel relay this year, another group of Myrtlevillians – known as the Secret Six – are believed to be focused on that bit of dirty stuff between England and France for next Summer.
I say “believed” but “rumoured” might be a better word. Unlike the constant media bombardment undertaken by the Turtles (OK, OK, some pictures and made-up stuff on this site), the Secret Six are so far below the radar, they might be using the Chunnel to get to France, rather than swimming there. Nobody’s even sure who they are. Much searching on d’interweb has thrown up some possible candidates, but all images are hard to make out and clearly being adapted to avoid identification.

Secret Sixer 1.

Secret Sixer 2.

Secret Sixer 3.
Of course what the Six have to understand is that nature (i.e. de meedja, i.e. me) abhors a vacuum – so we’ll just have to make stuff up.
Accordingly, we are delighted to announce that the Secret Six are, in fact, doing a nineteen-way Channel swim, via Myrtleville. This will be a world first, in case you didn’t know.
The team will be piloted by Denis Condon, aboard a boat which he plans to “borrow” from a moorings in Crosshaven – possibly after a feed of drink at the Christmas party night next Saturday. He intends to hide the craft in the “fresh-water” camp in North Cork/Korea – because nobody in their right mind goes there, so the boat will be safe until it’s needed next Summer.
In the meantime, the Secret Six are loitering around the beach and various pools, denying they are doing any training and practicing secret hand-signals known only to the team members.

Secret Sixer Signalling. Is that Denis with the boat outside?
Rumour has it there are female Sixers, but no sightings have been reported as yet and at least one has been heard to have taken up some alternative training. According to sources, she has “gone mad altogether for de dancing – no stopping her”.
We will monitor (or make up, as required) developments with interest. Go Secret Six!
Yes, we are officially the best non-existent club in the whole world. H2Open magazine say so. It must be true 😁

Thanks very much to Mr. Finbarr for the nomination and Rob The Bull for seconding it 😁

A timely reminder to be careful swimming through the Winter.
From: Editor’s Blog | Simon Griffiths | H2Open Editor |
“If you have spent any time hanging around open water swimmers you may have heard the term “after-drop”. If you’ve done any swimming in cool water, you may have experienced it. For the uninitiated, after-drop refers to the decline in your core body temperature after you have got out of the water.
When you swim in cool water the body cleverly tries to protect vital organs by reducing blood flow to the skin and limbs. Thus the core stays warm while the skin, arms and legs cool down. The process is known as peripheral vasoconstriction. Shortly after you exit the water, peripheral vasoconstriction ends. Cold blood from your limbs and skin returns to your core where it mixes with warmer blood thereby causing your deep body temperature to drop, even if you’re warmly dressed and move into a warm environment. This is why you often only start shivering 10 to 15 minutes after leaving the water.
It’s a good theory, but can it really be true that your core temperature keeps falling for quite some time after finishing swimming? Last week I had the chance to find out when I took part in a study at the Extreme Environments Laboratory at Portsmouth University. For the experiment I had to swim in cool water (16 degrees and 18 degrees) for two hours while the researchers monitored (among other things) my deep body temperature. After two hours at 18 degrees my body temperature had dropped by about half a degree. I towelled off, dressed, put on a coat and hat and drank a hot tea. I was then able to watch my temperature fall to just over 36 degrees before it stabilised and then started climbing back up. The same thing happened at 16 degrees but the effect was greater, the minimum temperature lower and the time taken to stabilise longer. After-drop is real. While your average body temperature may be increasing, your core will be cooling.
What to do about it
If you want to learn more – and if you’re swimming in the Winter, you should learn more – get a coffee and spend some time on Donal Buckley’s blog www.loneswimmer.com – the bible of cold water swimming.