I compounded the problem by doing what one should never do…look back. Catalina,
bathed in the dawn’s sun, appeared to be stalking me. And as if on cue, here came the winds. Now from the
south and east the waves buffeted by progress and began to take their toll. My stroke count started to fall and my liquid
feedings were no longer doing the trick.
While my progress
slowed, I continued doggedly on with the support of my crew. While not in the water crew members got some shut eye in
the bunks below. Meanwhile my captain wiled away the boredom by playing on his bagpipes.
At ten hours I was bushed. My lack of ocean preparation was beginning to take
a toll (not to mention my age…which I am loath to admit). Exhaustion and pain are first cousins. Pain you
can ignore. Exhaustion gets right in your face and just won’t go away.
Channel rules prevent a swimmer from touching or holding on to a boat or rope. I started
taking a longer break at the half hour feeds. Treading water for a few minutes more didn’t help all that much. And
I began to lose interest in finishing off the barely palatable brew of sugar and electrolytes I called food. Then I started
doing some breast stroke to rest my arms (a real bad sign…I knew it… and so did the crew.) I began to wonder
if I had the will to make it. I started doing more breast stroke and less freestyle….uh oh!
Then I did what I should have been doing. Concentrate on the moment. One
stroke at a time, feed to feed, forget about the itty bitty shore horizon or time line. How was I doing right now?
Given my druthers I would have been elsewhere, but what seemed to be an infinite total body ache was manageable and it couldn’t
last forever, could it?
At last I saw waves crashing
on the shore. A dingy was set free and there were smiles on the crew. My California landing was near. How was
I to know they saved the worst for me?
For a hundred
yards out there were dense kelp beds. I could knife my way through them with a free style stroke. With breast stroke
the tendrils of sea weed bound my arms and legs as effectively as a police pat down. Big mossy boulders were my
next discovery near shore. Four foot waves were crashing in and propelling an exhausted swimmer (me) onto the foot size
and barnacled stones just ahead. I was rolling around on the rocks like a pair of dice on a craps table. Now I
know what a frog in a blender must experience.
The
swim ended as it began twelve hours and fifty one minutes earlier, with me standing unassisted and straddling a couple of
dry rocks with my tired and recently stoned and scraped legs. I dreaded, for good reason, my exit off the beach over
this same piece of soggy real estate. I was one tired puppy.
A couple of the support crew jumped in and endured the same rocky fun in order to pry me off the beach. One
dove off the dingy stripped to his underwear and a pair of boat sized sandals. Normally I would resist the urge to hug
a guy in this attire, but not this time.
I began the
day with a support crew and observers that were mere acquaintances. I ended the day with true friends I trust with my
life. As is often the case, personal success, when you read the fine print, is truly a team effort
The saga of my Triple Crown swimming quest is over. I am now one of twenty
eight in the world to have swum the English and Catalina Channels and the Manhattan Marathon Swim.
What next? More time with my family for sure. And more biking and maybe
a triathlon or so. Lots of new skills develop. What about distance swimming…nothing at the moment although
the Strait of Gibraltar has the allure of swimming from Spain to Morocco.
Peter Drucker, an icon of American business, had a passion for mastering new and unfamiliar disciplines up until
his death in his late nineties. Complacency with a contented life is as dangerous is as saturated fat. Mike Oram, the
English Channel pilot, often opines “Define your limits….and then exceed them.” I am not a gifted
athlete…..but I am a better athlete….and a better person by pushing the elasticity of my self imposed limitations.
Besides, I have had a hell of a time and met many great people
along the way.
Steve