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A Little shipwreck on one of the beaches I frequent with the Dog |
My car clock said 8:20 and the temperature read 105. After dousing my hair with clean water, gulping down handfuls of pomegranate seeds, climbing into the car and driving for a few minutes
the digital display had worked its way down to 96.
Since moving to Oman I have wanted to start open water swimming
in the warm Arabian Sea and last week was the first time I felt like it wasn’t
too hot. That’s right, it’s
finally cooled off enough to ocean swim in the wee hours of the morning.
I’ve been lap swimming for years, but plunging into the
salty sea, critters abounding and searing water creeping into your nose, is a
different feeling. I spent most of
my first swim trying to push out thoughts of zebra sharks and sea snakes that
might slowly creep into my field of vision, thus causing panic verging on freak
out. Not that I don’t want to see
them in the right context, but mid stroke I was afraid I would splash about and
become tangled up with something slimy.
Oman has fantastic sea life and snorkeling, but honestly, in this particular
spot my fears were pretty unrealistic.
I saw a few sardines and crabs crawling about on the rocks that dotted
the cove, but it’s a pretty coral-less beach.
Yesterday we headed for a wilder beach without protection
from man made jetties. The rocking
waves are both fantastic and frustrating.
We started against the current and when you’ve been paddling for what
feels like hours and look to the shoreline to discover you’ve only gone a few
meters its kind of a bummer. But
after my first open water swim I came home and googled “open water swimming”
because I’m nerdy like that. One
of the tips I came to again and again was relax
your stroke. The first
instinct when a particularly strong current sweeps across you is to swim
faster, kick harder, work your way through it and stay on course. But I found that if I let it move me a
bit farther out to sea or towards the shore instead of fighting, I can maintain
momentum and save energy – putting me back on course faster and with less
effort.
I swim with a few older women and when we pause to catch our
breath or stretch our arms on the sand we talk about Islam, Architecture,
Politics, The new Opera house in Muscat and gardening. I usually have little to
contribute to the conversation, but I listen and ask questions of women who
have lived here far longer and seen much more than I have. I’ve swapped out my sleek black swimmers
cap for a bright pink one in order to identify myself to fishing boats that zip
along the coast and I wear tight pants to my calves so as not to offend the
locals who troll the beach each morning.
Yesterday I saw a spikey sea urchin and a few fusiliers who had
momentarily abandoned their schools.
It takes all morning to drive out to the beach,
stretch, swim, wash off, dry, kick sand away and navigate my car back across
the beach and onto the paved road again. But I’ve got things to do and meals to cook and a house to clean and library lessons to prepare for and plants that need repotting - do I really have time for this?
Relax your
stroke I think to
myself.