The story appears on

Page A11

August 15, 2015

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Feature

Outdoor swimming trend leads to dreams of splashing in the Thames

WORK to build an open-air pool on the River Thames in central London could start this year as more Britons dip their toes into the waters of outdoor swimming.

“Thousands of people would love to swim in central London,” said Caitlin Davies, author of “Downstream,” a book on the history of swimming in the Thames.

“What’s interesting today is that we’ve come back to the Thames — we’re actually doing the same things the Victorians used to do.”

An online campaign to raise 125,000 pounds (US$200,000) to build a pool in the Thames fed by filtered river water, down river from the Houses of Parliament and the London Eye, has already exceeded its target on funding platform Kickstarter.

Chris Romer-Lee, one of the brains behind the campaign, hopes this will be enough to submit the planning application on the heated pool, which will cost an estimated 11 million pounds overall, by the end of the year.

“Our generation was brought up thinking it was a poisonous waterway,” he said, referring to the river. “Our project is trying to change this perception.”

Romer-Lee added that the scheme, which has drawn support from over 1,200 people, “comes at the right time because there’s been a resurgence in outdoor swimming.”

Outdoor swimming has long been a niche hobby for some in the capital, who frequent cold, spartan pools on Hampstead Heath in north London or the Serpentine in Hyde Park.

But now the pastime is taking off more widely across Britain.

Artist Amy Sharrocks, who has spent a decade studying the relationship between people and water, wants to organize an annual swim in the Thames for around 100 people.

Jump on in

She is trying to secure an hour a year when the commercial and tourist vessels which normally chug up and down the river make way for humans.

“People need to have a relationship with the river. Other cities around the world have solved this question of people’s desire to jump in,” she said.

Sharrocks added that she believed this desire was a “reaction to the drier city life.”

Boosted by hundreds of e-mails of support, Sharrocks now hopes to raise the funds needed to draw up an evaluation of her proposal, which she will then present to the Port of London Authority.

It is not only in London where wild swimming has taken off.

The Outdoor Swimming Society is a nationwide organization that has increased its membership from 300 in 2006 to 25,000 today.

It claims to be the biggest such group in the world.

“When I founded the Outdoor Swimming Society in 2006, most people thought of swimming outdoors as cold, dirty and dangerous,” its founder Kate Rew said.

Now “the public image of wild swimming is that it’s a fantastic thing to do,” she said.

The improving quality of water in the Thames is one reason why Londoners can now dream of notching up lengths in one of the world’s iconic rivers.

Any danger these days comes more from heavy maritime traffic and high tides rather than from the quality of the water — although that was not always the case.

The Thames was declared biologically dead in 1957, while in 1858, the amount of raw sewage pouring directly into the river created what was known as the “Great Stink.”

A new natural swimming pond complete with reeds and water lilies in the regenerating area of King’s Cross, near the Eurostar rail terminal, also highlights the popularity of the pursuit in the capital.

Despite the trend for outdoor swimming, it is not a new hobby for landlocked Londoners.

Davies highlighted that people were swimming in the Thames as long ago as 1875, after sewers were built — albeit in special baths which floated on the surface of the water.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend