Gifts/Presents for Syncronised Swimmers
August 16, 2010 at 8:00 pm | Posted in Swimming gifts/birthday or Christmas presents, Synchro Swimming, Synchro swimming gifts/presents | 1 CommentTags: 109things.com, 247swim, action fit, birthday, christmas, daisy flower design hat, ebay, gift, gifts, new look, nose clips, sequin synchro swimming costume, swim, swim hat, swimming costume, swimming hat, synchro swimming, synchronised swimming, The Pursuit of Excellence: Synchronized Swimming DVD, vintage
A fantasically glamorous swim hat! Be seen in style with this vintage style flower petal swim hat. White Daisy flower design. Nylon flowers. The hat has a plastic waterproof lining. Both fashionable and practical, these stylish hats will protect your hair from the effects of chlorine.
This is on ebay for £26.00 (Inc. Postage) and is sold for worldwide.
This sparkly swimming costume is from a shop called ‘New Look’ and and was originally £30. It is on ebay for £1 (Bids go up) However the bid will end soon.
This costume is from a website called action fit. They specialize in making costumes for teams of synyronised swimmers and here are two of the many designs they do. The first design is called 3F and the second is called Party. The prices range from $ 54.00 to $ 111.00.
Nose clips are an essential piece of equipment used in syncronised swimming, every swimmer needs one. To see all the nose clips and a bigger variety go to: http://247swim.com/category/swimming-nose-clips/
The Pursuit of Excellence: Synchronized Swimming DVD – This 60 min DVD on synchro swimming is $22.49 on a website called 109things.com. This is a very poular DVD which reveal the pain, sacrifice and determination it takes to be a champion synchronized swimmer.
Updates coming soon….
Thanks Holly xxx
Life as a Synchronised Swimmer
August 16, 2010 at 6:38 pm | Posted in Synchro Swimming | Leave a commentTags: 247swim, aqua ballet, deborah arthurs, edsc, erith and district swimming club, synchronised swimming, syncro, syncro swimming, the egg beater, the flamingo, the oyster
Deborah Arthurs gives her opinion on being a Synchronised swimmer and how to do different moves.
It was kitsch, glamorous and graceful at the same time. The fact that it also featured at a Chanel show sealed the deal. I decided that synchronised swimming - or, to give it its modish new moniker (and the name it originally had in the Thirties) “aquatic ballet” - would be my new way to get fit in 2009.
THE CLASS
There were several classes to join in London - I’d signed up for one in Barnet.
The day of my session though, the pool’s heating failed, so I found myself on the wrong side of Woolwich on a Thursday night, preparing to join the Erith Junior Synchro club.
Following them to the pool for warm-up lengths, I was reminded of Bunty Carmichael, the mature majorette in the Catherine Tate show who refuses to believe she’s too old for the Doncaster spinners.
The other girls slipped into the water like sleek otters, gliding up and down, red swimming hats bobbing as they went. I, on the other hand, became the old lady we used to splash at the local baths when I was 10.
Flowery swimming cap, check. Odd, rigid pose holding head out of water, check. The only thing missing was the nose clip… Oh wait, though I didn’t have my own clip, Lizzie, one of the kind synchro girls, was already proffering her own for me to borrow. The vision was complete.
Coach Sam Finch, 34, a synchro swimmer since the age of nine, led the class, rounding us up by tapping on a metal pole, the clink sounding through the water and above the noise in the echoey pool.
THE EGG BEATER
As a beginner, you must master the basics before moving on to the fun legs-in-air stuff and so it was straight to the first exercise, the Egg Beater - known outside synchronised swimming circles as treading water. Most of us know how to tread water but in synchro you must keep your shoulders above the water, neck straight and head extended, while looking as serene as if you were reading a Jilly Cooper on a sunlounger.
The theory is to be like the swan: serene above the water, paddling furiously below. Legs move in a corkscrew motion, arms scull at your sides, hands scooped, sweeping backwards and forwards through the water to stay afloat.
It might look easy but it’s actually quite tough and after a few minutes of bobbing about furiously in the water, my legs whirling and hands scooping, I began to see why synchronised swimmers get ratty when people say theirs isn’t a proper sport.
Aquatic ballet: Forming elegant shapes in the water while trying to stay afloat and smile at the same time is not easy as it seems.
THE OYSTER
Satisfied that I could float, Sam moved on to back layouts, the starting position for many synchro moves. We were to lie back, legs straight and at the surface, sculling to stay afloat. “Point the toes! Extend the legs! Bottom in!” she shouted, tapping a rhythm on the metal pole so we knew when to come back up.
The back layout led to several more moves. First the Oyster, a fun move that Sam says is a big favourite with the girls. From back layout, we snapped legs and arms together out of the water as in a Vsit, creating a shape that makes you plummet to the bottom like a lead weight. Unfold and you bob back up to the top. A quick, dramatic move that proves surprisingly easy to learn.
THE FLAMINGO
The next move I attempted was the Flamingo, the cornerstone shape for those archetypal geometric synchronised swimming images where you hold your body upside down and perpendicular to the surface, with one leg poking out of the water and the other bent and touching the vertical leg.
I tried my best to channel Busby Berkeley’s best bits, attempting to emulate the calm faces and still limbs of the other girls. It didn’t really work out for me - I ended up sculling like I was trying to take off, my legs taking turns to sink to the bottom or fly out of the water. Flapping wildly, I managed to maintain a sort of avian illusion - though much to the amusement of my classmates, my effort was more dodo than flamingo.
Next, we went for the tuck back somersault. This was a move that really separated the men from the boys, or rather, the girls with nose plugs (everyone) from those without (me).
Sam told us to tuck our knees in tightly, reach back with our heads, spin round in a somersault and come back up to the surface. I gamely spun backwards, ducking my head under and drinking much more of the pool water than is probably healthy. As I spluttered my way to the surface, pleased at having completed the manoeuvre, I was greeted with 10 serene faces beaming at me from an effortless Egg Beater.
THE BENEFITS
The hour up, I could feel that my arms, legs and abs had had a workout. I’d heard that Jennifer Aniston and Hilary Duff keep their figures trim simply by treading water, and right now, I could believe it.
So which part of your body does it work? The answer is all of it. Just as swimming provides all-over toning, so does synchro. Areas that get a special workout are the bottom and stomach, as both muscle groups are essential to hold the body upright or horizontal in the water. You’ll burn about 500 calories in a one hour session - the same as a jog – and the best bit is, with the team spirit, the music and the routine to remember, it doesn’t even feel like exercise.
Kaleidoscopic: Channelling choreographer Busby Berkeley, Deborah and the swimmers form a geometric shape in the water.
Sync or swim: Deborah Arthurs joins the Erith junior synchro club for a lesson in aquatic ballet – and discovers that looking serene whilst paddling furiously isn’t as easy as it seems
Preparation before a swimming gala and how to eat
August 14, 2010 at 4:40 pm | Posted in Preparation for Galas, Uncategorized | 3 CommentsTags: 247swim, drink, eat, Eatting befoe a gala, equipment, gala food, galas, keep warm, preparation, race, swimming race, what food to eat for a gala, what to do before a swimming gala
Important equipment required for a gala, what not to forget:
1. A towel
2. Log book
3. Racing swimming costume / trunks and a spare costume trunks
4. Two pairs of Swimming Goggles (1 for spare)
5. Club swimming hat and a spare (In case your other one rips)
6. Club T-Shirt to wear on poolside (looks good and keeps you warm)
7. Two drinks (an energy drink and a bottle of water etc)
8. Drag shorts for the warm up
9. Flip flops or crocs (keeps your feet warm before your race)
10. A pen (To write your race numbers down on your hand)
Getting to the swimming pool location:
If you are going to a new lesuire centre you have never been to then it is a good idea to print off a map or put in the post code in your sat nav if you have one. Before any gala you should find out how long it will take to arrive there. Also you should leave a little bit earlier in order to get there promptly on time and get a seat in the spectators audience for your parents / guests, and if there are any traffic problems you can still get there on time.
Also make sure you have a contact telephone number for your swimming coach or swim club rep, so you can contact them if there are any problems or delays.
You might want to take a CD or your MP3 player for the car journey aswell, so you can listen to your favourite songs and get G’d up for the gala. I would recommend up beat songs to really get you in the mood and zone!
Prepare:
Remember to take some money or change with you for the entry fee and lockers etc….
Bring your flip flops/Crocs to your competition and wear then throughout your time on poolside.
Meals and food you should eat leadind upto and on your gala day
What you eat before and during a competition can have a large impact on your overall performance. Make sure that your final meal before the competition is finished at least two hours before the competition is due to start. Exactly what you eat is not important as long as it is high in carbohydrate and low in fat. Having a meal based around rice, pasta or potato is a good way of filling up with carbohydrate, providing the amounts of fat (e.g. sauce or butter) eaten are small.
Once you have completed your competition warm-up you will need to replenish the carbohydrates you have lost by drinking diluted juices, squashes or sports drinks. You should not eat anything unless you have at least an hour before you are due to race. Between races you should continue to take additional carbohydrates in liquid form and only eat if you have more than an hour to spare before you next have to swim. If you do have time to eat then a very light snack of bananas, dried fruit, popcorn, jelly cubes, or muesli bars is most appropriate. Crisps or other such snacks….!
Before your race:
This may sound silly but is true, 10 minites before your race you should make sure you go to the toilet/restroom. I don’t think I need to explain why.
Before you start your race make sure you do a few stretches also keep your self moving (sitting down will not help!) jumping up and down helps too. Drink lots of fluid (it make all the difference in your race). Wear your t-shirt and crocs until it is your race, then take them off and leave then nearby and out of the way (sometimes their are chairs you can put your stuff on.) It is important you keep warm.
Food you should eat leading to the run-up to your gala
You may not believe it, but the last few meals before a swimming race make all the difference in how well you will perform.
Firstly, it’s not as simple as “Eat spaghetti the night before a gala and you will be able to swim a PB!”
Carbo-loading needs to take place several days before your event, at least three days prior to competition. Pastas, breads, cereals, etc. can be incorporated into your diet more than usual, although be careful not to add or increase your intake of cream sauces, butter, or milk with those items.
A common mistake people make when carbo-loading is that they stop eating vegetables, fruits, and proteins. Pasta carbo-loading is fine, but not at the expense of other nutritional supplements that are vital to giving you your best performance ever.
Be careful the night immediately before a race – you may want to lay off the tomato sauce (tomatoes contain acid that can give you an upset stomach).
Steamed or microwaved vegetables are essential to peak performance, but don’t forget they are also a good source for carbohydrates. However, vegetables take longer to digest than simple grain-based carbohydrates like bread and cereal.
Uncooked vegetables are definitely not recommended. Stay away from broccoli, carrots, corn, and other “hard” vegetables in favor of watery ones like salad, zucchini, squash, and asparagus. They will pass through your system, supply you with carbohydrates and nutrients that you need, and not weigh you down.
What to Drink
Orange juice and milk are fine with any healthy breakfast, but are best avoided 24 hours before you compete. Much better to stick with boring old water as your fluid intake in the day before you race; you don’t need the extra calories or acidic side effects of a fruit juice (no matter how healthy it is), nor the hard-to-digest side effects of dairy products.
With pure water, you stay hydrated without additional calories, and there will be no unexpected side effects that a fruit juice, dairy product, or soda could provide.
Snack time
Pretzels are a fine carbohydrate, provided that they are unsalted (salt causes your body to retain water, leaving you bloated and heavy).
Dried fruits, although they sound natural and healthy, are bad because they pack plenty of calories and, once consumed, they absorb water and expand to their full size (so just a few dried apricots can bloat you).
Light is Right
The morning of your event, it is best to eat light. Avoid a Juicy Lucy type full English breakfast and go for half a bagel, half a banana and a glass of water.
A light breakfast, such as a bowl of cereal and a banana, or an energy bar if you’re swimming a morning event.
If you’re swimming in the afternoon, eat a big breakfast and a light lunch.
Two hours before the event, bananas, crackers, and plain toast with no butter in modest amounts are good food. The best foods are pasta, cereals, bagels, breads, fruits, and vegetables. These are out of the stomach in two hours, therefore should not be eaten more than three hours before swimming or they could override the energy in time for the race. Bananas are great because they have potassium which makes you more resistant to fatigue.
Actually, it’s best not to change your diet too drastically in the days before you race. Increase your carbohydrate load slightly while maintaining a healthy intake of protein, and stay away from dairy products and highly acidic fruits.
Twenty-four hours before your event, I suggest drinking water for fluid intake and having a light meal at dinnertime the night before consisting of grain-based carbohydrates, soft vegetables, and light protein (chicken, fish). The morning of your race: water, half a bagel, and half a banana should be enough to provide sustenance and optimum performance without weighing you down.
The most important thing to remember for an age group swimmer is calories, young teens will need more than any other age group in excess of over 2,000 per day. On race day there are a few things you should do and a few things you shouldn’t do.
Race day is about fueling the muscles between races and of course hydration.
Take and eat small amounts of lots of different things, do not rely on just 2 or 3 things to eat.
If you are racing early then stick to a small breakfast, if you are racing later then a bigger breakfast is fine.
Breakfast = Porridge, toast with peanut butter spread is good or just plain toast and fruit juice.
Things to eat between races are fruit & veggies.
Protein will help to keep your sugar levels stable, which is good against the feelings of hunger and stops moods swings. Cheese sticks, nuts, yogurt drinks or hard boiled eggs for example.
Carbs will help fuel the muscles, but you have simple carbs like 100% juice, apple juice, fresh or dried fruit, or veggie sticks. Complex carbs are things like crackers, unsweetened dry cereal, pita or other breads.
DON’T eat sweets, they are not as effective as people will tell you, and can totally unsettle your sugar levels.
Be careful of fibre, you may have a low tolerance to it which can upset your tummy, when nerves are already not helping if you know
Drink little and often, if you wait till you are thirsty then it’s already too late.
After your race:
Put on your t-shirt and crocs in order to warm yourself up again and take deep breaths.
Thanks. Holly xx
Here is one of my race videos:
BEWARE OF THE WEEVER FISH!
August 7, 2010 at 10:40 am | Posted in Open water swimming, Weever fish | Leave a commentTags: 247swim, beach, beware, buired under sand, danger, Open water swimming, poison, sea, shallow water, stop sting, weever fish
Beware all open water swimmers!!!!!! The Weever fish is giving swimmers a nasty sting!

What is a Weever fish?
The Weever fish is the most poisonous fish in Britain! It may only be 15cm small but it will be sure to give you a sting to remember. The fish is light brown and loves shallow water. It has sharp poisonous spikes on top of its head that you would not want to be under your foot! They hide in the sand and blend in which makes the so hard to see. Many people do not see it until they have stepped on the Weever fish and been stung.
What to you do if you have been stung?
If you have been stung you should tell a lifeguard and they will be able to help you. If there is not a lifeguard available then soak your sting in very warm water until the pain has gone. You must act quickly as the longer you leave it the more painful it will get.
How do I know I have been stung?
The poison is not dangerous but it will make your foot very red and swollen for a little while. The most obvious symptom would be the excruciating pain in your foot.
How do you avoid getting stung?
If you want to avoid getting stung by the Weever fish then you can wear flip-flops, jelly shoes, Crocs or beach shoes.
Thanks, Olivia x.
Weever fishes has been reported to attack and even kill divers and swimmers in mediterranean, south-east pacific and the eastern Atlantic waters…watch out.
Here is another video of the weever fish in the sea.
Competitive Swimming Rules and Regulations
August 6, 2010 at 8:41 am | Posted in Competitive Swimming Rules and Regulations | 3 CommentsTags: 247swim, all strokes, backstroke, BCSSA, breaststroke, butterfly, competitive, finishes, freestyle, frontcrawl, im, Individual Medley, link, relays, rules and regulations, starts, swimming, takeovers, turns
UK ASA Disqualification DQ Codes
UK-ASA DQ Codes List
Butterfly
1A 8.1 Body not on the breast (except when executing a turn)
1D 8.2 Arms not brought backward simultaneously
1B 8.2 Arms not brought forward together
1C 8.2 Arms not brought forward over the water
1G 8.3 Breaststroke kick used (legal in Masters’ Competitions)
1E 8.3 Movements of the legs not simultaneous
1F 8.3 Alternating movement of legs or feet
1H 8.4 Did not touch at turn or finish with both hands, or touch not simultaneous
1I 8.5 More than one arm pull under water (following start or turn)
1J 8.5 Head did not break the surface at or before 15m mark following start or turn
1K 8.5 Not on surface during stroke (except first 15m following start or turn
Backstroke
2A 6.2 Left position on the back (other than to initiate a turn)
2B 6.3 Totally submerged, (except for first 15m following the start or turn or at the finish
2C 6.4 Not on back when leaving the wall
2F 6.4 More than one single or double simultaneous arm pull used to initiate the turn
2D 6.4 Did not touch the wall during the turn
2E 6.5 Not on the back at finish
Breaststroke
3D 7.1 Single fly kick not performed during the 1st arm stroke or followed by a breast kick
3B 7.2 Stroke cycle not one arm stroke to one leg kick
3C 7.2 Arm movements not simultaneous or not in the same horizontal plane
3A 7.2 Body not on the breast
3E 7.3 Hands not pushed forward together from the breast on, under, or over the water
3F 7.3 Elbows over water except last stroke before turn, during turn or final stroke at finish
3Q 7.3 Hands not brought back on or under surface of the water
3G 7.3 Hands brought back beyond hip line (except after 1st stroke following start or turn)
3H 7.4 Head not breaking surface during stroke cycle (except after start & turn)
3I 7.4 Head did not break surface before hands turn inward at widest point in 2nd stroke after strt or
3K 7.4 Leg movements not simultaneous (alternating leg movement)
3L 7.4 Leg movements not on the same plane
3N 7.5 Executed scissors, flutter, or downward fly kick (except after start or after turn: SW7.1)
3M 7.5 Feet not turned out during the propulsive part of the kick
3P 7.6 Head not breaking surface during the last complete or incomplete cycle preceding touch
3O 7.6 Did not touch at turn or finish with both hands, or touch not simultaneous
Freestyle
4A 5.2 Did not touch the wall at the turn or finish
4B 5.3 Totally submerged (except for the first 15m at start and turn)
4C 5.3 Head did not break surface at or before 15m mark following start or turn
IM
5A 9.1 Incorrect individual stroke order (Fly, Back, Breast, Free)
5B 9.3 Finish of each stroke not in accordance with rules for the particular stroke
IM
6A 9.2 Incorrect medley relay order (Back, Breast, Fly, Free)
62 10.1 Stroke Infraction swimmer #2
61 10.1 Stroke Infraction swimmer #1
63 10.1 Stroke Infraction swimmer #3
64 10.1 Stroke Infraction swimmer #4
6C 10.10 Fewer than four swimmers in a relay team
66 10.11 Swimmer #2 feet lost touch with starting place before preceding team-mate touches
68 10.11 Swimmer #4 feet lost touch with starting place before preceding team-mate touches
67 10.11 Swimmer #3 feet lost touch with starting place before preceding team-mate touches
6D 10.12 Team member enters water during race not to swim their length
6B 10.13 Team swum in incorrect order to that previously nominated Erith and District Swimming Club UK-ASA DQ Codes List
Miscellaneous
7A 2.3.2 Delaying the start
7B 4.4 Start before starting signal
7C 10.2 A swimmer did not cover the whole distance – DNF
7J 10.3 Swimmer did not remain and finish in lane in which he/she started
7D 10.4 No contact with wall during turn or turn not made from wall or took stride/step from bottom
7E 10.5 Walks during freestyle events or during the freestyle portion of the medley
7F 10.6 Pulled on the lane rope
7G 10.7 Obstructing or interfering with another swimmer – foul
7H 10.8 Device or swimsuit aiding speed, buoyancy, endurance or unauthorized use of tape on body
7K 10.9 Swimmer enters water during an event in which he/she is not scheduled to swim
7L 10.14 Obstructing another swimmer/team when leaving pool after completion of relay leg or race
7I 10.16 Pacemaking, plan or device or instruction given.
——————————————————————
Below is a list of rules and regulations of what not to do in a race/gala or you will be disqualified:
All Strokes:
- walking on bottom toward the finish
- pulling on the lane rope in the direction of the finish
- springing from the bottom, imparting motion toward the finish
- left the water before completing the full distance or DNF (did not finish)
Freestyle:
- failure to touch on the turn at 25m (50m, 75m)
- failure to surface by 15m after the start (or turn at 25m, 50m, 75m) in the freestyle
Backstroke:
- failure to touch on the turn at 25m (50m, 75m)
- an arm pull independent of the turning action at 25m (50m, 75m)
- Revised: kicking without any accompanying turning action at 25m (50m, 75m)
- failure to remain on back during race (or at finish)
- failure to surface by 15m after the start (or turn at 25m, 50m, 75m) in the backstroke
- not on back when feet left the wall at 25m (50m, 75m)
Breaststroke:
- non-simultaneous touch at 25m (50m, 75m, finish)
- one hand touch at 25m (50m, 75m, finish)
- scissor (or dolphin) kick
- asymmetrical arm pull
- alternating arm movements
- arm pull past hips
- failure of head to surface during each stroke
- failure of head to surface at end of propulsion phase of second arm stroke on start (or turn at 25m, 50m, 75m)
Butterfly:
- non-simultaneous touch at 25m (50m, 75m, finish)
- one hand touch at 25m (50m, 75m, finish)
- flutter kick
- scissor kick
- underwater arm recovery
- uneven arm pull (asymmetrical arm pull)
- failure to surface by 15m after the start (or turn at 25m, 50m, 75m) in the butterfly
Individual Medley:
- strokes swum in wrong order (should be: fly, back, breast ,free)
- roll more than 90 degrees before touching on the change over from back to breast
Relays
- Swimmer left the blocks before the other swimmer touched
- relay strokes swum in wrong order (should be: back breast, fly, free)
NOTE: These are not the only possible reasons for disqualification, nor the only possible wording. Judges may use their own wording provided it is accurate, precise, and unambiguous.
Here is also the official rule book for the BCSSA (This is a PDF file): http://www.bcsummerswimming.com/docs/February-2008-Swimming_changed-0706-1.pdf
Thanks for reading this post. Holly xxx
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