Showing posts with label molokai channel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label molokai channel. Show all posts

Monday, September 21, 2009

Linda Kaiser, Respecting And Conquering The Channels

One of Hawaii's most accomplished marathon swimmers and member of the Hawaii Swimming Hall of Fame, 58-year-old Linda Kaiser, notched another channel under her belt this month - her longest and most difficult channel swim to date.

Like Penny Palfrey in March this year and Harry Huffacker back in 1970, Kaiser crossed the 30-mile (48 km) Alenuihaha channel on September 12th in 17 hours from the Big Island of Hawaii to Maui.

Kaiser has also crossed the 26-mile (42 km) Kaiwi Channel (Molokai Channel) in 2007, the 9.3-mile (15 km) Kalohi Channel from Molokai Island to Lanai Island in 2001, the 7-mile (11 km) Alalakeiki Channel from Kahoolawe to Maui in 1991, the 8.5-mile (13.6 km) Pailolo Channel from Maui to Molokai in 1990, the 17-mile (27 km) Kaulakahi Channel from Kauai to Niihau in 2003, and the 17-mile (27 km) Kealaikahiki Channel from Kahoolawe to Lanai in 2005.

"You've got to respect the ocean. You've got to come prepared. If you're not serious, and you're not focused on what you're doing, you're bound to have trouble. The ocean doesn't put up with any wimps."

Kaiser should know. It was during her 1990 Pailolo Channel swim from Maui to Molokai when she noticed a dark shape in the water beneath her. According to her interview with Honolulu Magazine, the shape was "no larger than a fist at first, but was growing quickly and racing straight for her."

"All of sudden I thought, 'Oh, that's a shark.' He just kept coming straight up, and I said to myself, 'Ooh, this may not be good.'" After the 12-foot shark circled her a few times, the shark lost interest.

But that scare obviously has not slowed her down.

" It's a great feeling of accomplishment. I don't do it for anybody else. I do it for me."

Copyright © 2009 by World Open Water Swimming Association

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Mackenzie Miller's Memories Of Molokai

12 swimmers have successfully crossed the Molokai Channel: Keo Nakama (in 1961), Harry Huffaker (1967 and 1972), Johnathan Ezer (1974), Mike Miller and Ian Emberson (1979), Robin Isayama (1994), Forrest Nelson (twice) and Bill Goding (2006), Mike Spalding, Kelly Gleason and Linda Kaiser (2007) and Mackenzie Miller (2009, a few days ago).

We asked Mackenzie about her 26-mile (42 km) swim in 14 hours and 52 minutes:

Daily News of Open Water Swimming: You started at 3 am. Were you afraid swimming at night in the middle of the Pacific Ocean?
Mackenzie: Not at all, it was very calming and the water temperature was perfectly warm. It was actually very relaxing.

Daily News of Open Water Swimming: Did you see any marine life?
Mackenzie Miller: Yes, tiny weird jellyfish-looking things and bioluminescents.


Daily News of Open Water Swimming: Was it scary at all?
Mackenzie Miller: I had a fear I wouldn't be able to finish at Sandy's Beach and thought I would have had to swim even more to finish elsewhere...which would have been Makapu'u or Hanauma Bay. But I didn't have to and I was very happy when I finished. Something I really dreaded was swallowing a jellyfish. I know when a friend of our's swam Molokai in 2007, swallowed a box jellyfish and had to terminate her swim. Near the end when I was close to Sandy's, I started getting stung all over my body, about 5 times, including my face and I knew if i swallowed a jellyfish I most likely would not be able to finish the swim. I feared not finishing when I was already that close.

Daily News of Open Water Swimming: What did you feel like walking out of the water at Sandy's Beach?
Mackenzie Miller: After having to wait for three huge waves to pass before being able to walk out was not fun. But when I finally walked out, I couldn't believe it. I was in shock but SO HAPPY that I did it. I was also in shock with how many people were there to see me finish.

Daily News of Open Water Swimming: What was the hardest part of your swim?
Mackenzie Miller: When I only had three miles to go, the intersections of currents between Koko Head and Makapu'u kicked in hard. I felt like I wasn't moving anywhere. This was when the swim was entirely about my mental state. It literally takes over. My dad said at this point, "Mother Nature is going to test her."

Daily News of Open Water Swimming: How did you get over this part of the swim?
Mackenzie: I kept yelling at myself, "I gotta make this. I can see the beach, it's right there. So many people are here for you. You trained so hard you're not giving up now. You're so close." And I also kept praying and kept saying "Lord stay with me this is when I need you...help me get through this please..." and I did.

Daily News of Open Water Swimming: What did you eat and drink on the swim?
Mackenzie Miller: I was eating chocolate PowerBars, had an apple banana and Gatorade straight or watered down. When I got to my 12th hour, I was starving and my dad asked me, "Do you want Gatorade or PowerBar?" I asked, "Is there any grilled chicken sandwiches left?" He said, "Yup." I asked, "Can I please have that? I'm so hungry - I am sick of PowerBars and Gatorade" So he threw a grilled chicken sandwich to me. I got about half of it down with bread before the waves sogged the bread down. Then I just threw the bread in the ocean and downed the rest of that chicken. It tasted AMAZING.

Daily News of Open Water Swimming: Looking back, did you think you were adequately prepared for your swim?
Mackenzie Miller: Yes, I believed I was ready, physically and mentally.

Daily News of Open Water Swimming: Did you have a stand-up paddler?
Mackenzie Miller: No, I didn't, the conditions that I had would have been very hard for a stand-up paddler. Ian Emberson, who swam the Molokai Channel with my dad 30 years ago, actually paddled on a surfboard with me all night.

A post-swim interview with Miller can be seen here.

Copyright © 2009 by World Open Water Swimming Association

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Mackenzie Miller Makes Molokai

19-year-old Mackenzie Miller of Kailua, Hawaii became the youngest person to successfully cross the 26-mile (42K) Molokai Channel (Kaiwi Channel) in the Hawaiian islands today.

Departing at 3 am from Molokai Island, Mackenzie enjoyed reasonable conditions until she was past halfway in the Molokai Channel. Towards the second half of her solo effort, she faced the Hawaiian trade winds towards the late afternoon, but finished in 14 hours and 45 minutes on Sandy's Beach on Oahu.

Mackenzie became the youngest person to cross the Molokai Channel, a challenging stretch of water in the middle of the Pacific. In an interesting note, her father, Michael Miller, completed the same swim in 1979.

Photos demonstrate Mackenzie as she fought the surf to complete her swim on Oahu. A post-swim interview with Mackenzie can be seen here.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Five Oceans of Lewis Gordon Pugh

Open water swimming adventurers like Lynne Cox and Lewis Gordon Pugh are very special people.

Lynne, an inductee in the International Swimming Hall of Fame has an incredible and well-known record of open water swimming success. Similarly, Pugh is another pioneer and great promoter of open water swimming.

Colorfully and uniquely, swims by Pugh can be found at here.

Pugh came up with the 5 Oceans concept - which is a bit different from the Oceans Seven concept.*

Meeting the criteria of 5 Oceans concept means one completes a long-distance swim in the five oceans of the world: the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Southern (also known as the Antarctic) and Arctic Oceans.

Well-known for his 0°C water swims in the North Pole, Pugh also swam in the Atlantic Ocean (1992 English Channel, 1992), the Arctic Ocean (2003 North Cape in Norway), the Southern Ocean (2005 Deception Island in sub-Antarctica, 2005), the Indian Ocean (2006 Nelson Mandela Bay in South Africa) and Pacific Ocean (2006 15K Manly Beach to the Sydney Opera House in Australia).

The "5 Oceans" concept is modeled on the "Seven Summits" concept where mountaineers climb the highest mountain on each of the 7 continents of the world. Lewis said, "There’s something magical about swimming in all five oceans of the world. Already nearly 100 mountaineers have done the Seven Summits, and it’ll be fascinating to see how many swimmers take up this, the ultimate of challenges."

* The Oceans Seven include (1) the Irish Channel between Ireland and Scotland, (2) the Cook Strait between the North and South Islands of New Zealand, (3) the Molokai Channel between Oahu and Molokai Islands in Hawaii, (4) the English Channel between England and France, (5) the Catalina Channel near Los Angeles, California, (6) the Tsugaru Channel between Honshu and Hokkaido in Japan, and (7) the Strait of Gibraltar between Europe and Africa.

Monday, June 23, 2008

Oceans Seven - Scaling The Heights Of Open Water

The Seven Summits are the highest mountains in each of the seven continents.

Successfully scaling these mountains is a mountaineering challenge attained by only the strongest. As of 2007, 198 climbers have achieved this expensive and physically demanding goal.

Open water swimming’s version of the Seven Summits is the Oceans Seven.

The Oceans Seven include (1) the North Channel between Ireland and Scotland, (2) the Cook Strait between the North and South Islands of New Zealand, (3) the Moloka’i Channel between O’ahu and Moloka’i Islands in Hawaii, (4) the English Channel between England and France, (5) the Catalina Channel in Southern California, (6) the Tsugaru Channel between the islands of Honshu and Hokkaido in Japan, and (7) the Strait of Gibraltar between Europe (Spain) and Africa (Morocco).

No human has yet to complete the Oceans Seven.

Achieving the Oceans Seven requires an ability to swim in both very cold and very warm seas. It also demands the swimmer is physically and mentally prepared to overcome every condition known to defeat open water swimmers, from strong currents to stiff winds.

Like its mountaineering cousin, the Oceans Seven requires a tremendous amount of planning, time, financial resources and multi-national support teams of knowledgeable local experts.

A description of the Oceans Seven follows. Note the distances listed are the shortest straight-line distances from point-to-point, but the actual distance covered by swimmers is significantly greater due to the tidal movements and currents.

1. North Channel
• Location: Channel between Ireland and Scotland.
• Reasons for Difficulty: Heavy seas, cold water, thunderstorms and strong currents are among the natural elements that must be overcome in the 33.7K (21 miles) channel.
• Window of Opportunity: July through September.
• Hazards: Considered to be the most difficult channel swim in the world with the water temperature 54ºF (12ºC), normally overcast days, and tremendous difficulty in accurately predicting weather and water conditions. Swimmers face large pods of jellyfish if conditions are calm.
• Description: Has been attempted at least 73 times since 1924, but only 8 successful solo swims and 5 relays have been achieved to date. Most of the attempts have been abandoned due to difficult conditions and hypothermia.
• Additional Information: Swim crossings are governed by the rules set by the Irish Long Distance Swimming Association. First attempt was made in 1924 and the first success was 1947.

2. Cook Strait
• Location: Channel between the North and South Islands of New Zealand.
• Reasons for Difficulty: 16 nautical miles (26K) across immense tidal flows in icy water conditions among jellyfish and sharks are extremely stiff challenges for only the most capable and adventurous swimmers.
• Window of Opportunity: November through May.
• Hazards: 1 in 6 swimmers encounter sharks on their crossings. Sharks only come around to be nosey. No one has ever been attached during a swim. Both sides of the strait have rock cliffs. Cold water (14ºC-19ºC or 57ºC-66ºF) over 26 kilometers and heavy chop.
• Additional Information: To date, only 71 successful crossings have been made by 61 individuals from 8 countries. Hypothermia and change in weather conditions during a race are the most common reasons attempts fail.

3. Moloka’i Channel (or the Kaiwi Channel)
• Location: Channel between the western coast of Moloka’i Island and the eastern coast of O’ahu in Hawaii
• Reasons for Difficulty: 26 miles (41.8K) across a deep-water (701 meters) channel with extraordinarily strong currents in the middle of the Pacific Ocean and aggressive marine life.
• Window of Opportunity: As conditions permit.
• Hazards: Extremely large rolling swells, strong winds and tropical heat and very warm salty water offset the incredibly beautiful views of the Hawaiian Islands and deep-blue underwater scenery.
• Additional Information: Deep-water channel with beautiful views of the Hawaiian Islands was first crossed in 1961 by Keo Nakama in 15 hours and 30 minutes and has only been crossed by 8 individuals to date.

4. English Channel (Channel Swimming or Channel Swimming Association)
• Location: Channel between England and France with the narrowest point being in the Strait of Dover between Shakespeare Beach, Dover, England and Calais, France.
• Reasons for Difficulty: An international waterway of 34K (21 miles) at its narrowest point, cold water temperatures, strong currents and ever-shifting water and weather conditions.
• Window of Opportunity: June to September.
• Hazards: The world’s most famous channel crossing with nearly 1,000 successful swimmers to date, but thousands of failed attempts due to strong currents and tidal flows, strong winds and whitecaps caused by changing conditions and hypothermia.
• Additional Information: Considered to be the standard for channel crossing with the rules and traditions significantly influencing the worldwide open water swimming community.

5. Catalina Channel
• Location: Channel between Santa Catalina Island and Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
• Reasons for Difficulty: Cold water (especially near coast), strong currents, potential for strong winds, marine life and distance. Shortest point-to-point course is 33.7K (21 miles) from Emerald Bay on Santa Catalina Island to the San Pedro Peninsula.
• Window of Opportunity: June to September.
• Hazards: A deep-water channel that is comparable to the English Channel in terms of water conditions, difficulty, distance and the physical and mental challenges to the swimmer, although the water temperature is a bit warmer (mid-60°F water). Marine life seen on occasion, including migrating whales and large pods of dolphins.
• Additional Information: First successful swim was in January, 1927 when Canadian George Young won $25,000 in the Wrigley Ocean Marathon Swim in 15 hours and 44 minutes.

6. Tsugaru Channel
• Location: Deep-water channel between Honshu, the main island of Japan where Tokyo is located, and Hokkaido, the northernmost island of Japan. Closest points are Tappi Misaki in Honshu and Shirakami Misaki in Hokkaido.
• Reasons for Difficulty: An international waterway, 19.5K (12 miles) at its narrowest point. Swimmers must cross an extremely strong current between the Sea of Japan and the Pacific Ocean, large swells and abundant marine life ranging from sharks to deadly sea snakes. English and other western languages are not spoken in area. Water can be between 62-68ºF (16-20ºC).
• Window of Opportunity: July and August.
• Hazards: Swimmers are swept long distances due to the extraordinarily strong currents flowing from the Sea of Japan to the Pacific Ocean. Swimmers face large blooms of squid during the night. Swimmers are challenged by occasional patches of cold water that flow up from the depths and are caused by the screws of the large oil tankers from the Middle East travel through to the West Coast of the U.S. Only four confirmed solo crossings and one confirmed double-crossing have been achieved to date.

7. Strait of Gibraltar
• Location: Strait between Spain and Morocco that connects the Atlantic Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea. Shortest point is between Punta Oliveros in Spain and Punta Cires in Morocco.
• Reasons for Difficulty: 14.4K (8 miles) across an eastern flow of water from the Atlantic Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea with an average of 3 knots (5.5 km per hour). Heavy boat traffic, logistical barriers and surface chop confront swimmers throughout each attempt.
• Window of Opportunity: June to October.
• Hazards: Its boundaries were known in antiquity as the Pillars of Hercules. The currents remain of Herculean strength. Combined with the unpredictability of the water conditions and high winds, only 185 successful one-way crossings and 7 double-crossings have been made to date.
• Additional Information: Most attempts are made from Tarifa Island due to the influence of strong currents, a distance of 18.5-22K (10-12 miles).

Who will be the first to achieve the Oceans Seven? Who will be the first to try?

Footnote: The Seven Second Summits is another mountaineering term that refers to the second-highest peak of each continent.

What swims might be included in the Ocean’s Second Seven, open water swimming equivalent of the Seven Seven Summits?

A very small number of candidate swims might include the Straits of Magellan in Chile, Skagerrak Strait between Norway, Sweden and Denmark, Cape Point and Cape of Good Hope both in South Africa, Lake Baikal in Russia, Beagle Channel between Argentina and Chile, Lake Titicaca from Bolivia to Peru, Gulf of Aqaba (or Eilat) between Egypt, Israel, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, Rottnest Channel in Australia, circumnavigation of Yonaguni Island in Okinawa near Taiwan, Loch Ness in Scotland, circumnavigation of Isle of Wight or the Jersey Island, Lake Tahoe between Nevada and California, U.S.A., Capri to Napoli in Italy, Majorca to Minorca, Spanish Balearic Islands, one of the crossings in the Santa Barbara Channel in California, U.S.A., crossing of the Five Lakes of Mount Fuji in Japan, Lake Balaton in Hungary or Lac St-Jean in Quebec, Canada, Jeble to Latakia in Syria, circumnavigation of Manhattan Island in New York City, U.S.A., or the Gulf of Toroneos in Greece…although there are innumerable other swims to be discussed, proposed and attempted, but there are many others.

Photo of Chris Guesdon of Australia.

Copyright © 2008 by World Open Water Swimming Association