Beth’s tips for sea swimming in Brighton

Having worked several summers as a beach lifeguard in Brighton, our very own Bethan Male kindly shares her tip-top local knowledge, giving you top tips for the best sea swimming experience.

Tip 1)
When possible, swim off a lifeguarded beach. This means we can keep an eye on you and give you somewhere to leave your stuff (as long as you ask us nicely).

The link below details where all the lifeguarded beaches are and when they are open. As well as marking the lifeguarded swim area, the (round yellow) buoys also mark where motorised craft are not allowed, so it’s much safer to swim within this area. Lifeguard details: https://www.brighton-hove.gov.uk/libraries-leisure-and-arts/seafront/lifeguards?language=bsl

If we are flying red flags, this is because we do not think it is safe to swim. If you see red flags flying, come and chat to the lifeguard – the reason for this varies from bad water quality to fog affecting our vision, to stormy/challenging sea conditions.

Outside of Brighton, lifeguarded swim areas are marked with red and yellow flags.

Tip 2)
If you get into trouble, float on your back, put your arm up in the air, and the lifeguard will see you and help you.

If you are not in a lifeguarded area, lie on your back and rest – try not to panic and, if possible, slowly make your way back to shore. Nothing wrong with a bit of slow head-up breaststroke to get you into shore.

Tip 3)
Ideally, swim with a bright coloured cap and consider a tow float as this makes it much easier for us to see you when you swim out around the buoys!

Tip 4)
If you are a less confident swimmer or not swimming on a lifeguarded beach, swim along the coast rather than out to sea/around the buoys. That way, if you get into trouble, you can quickly get out of the water. While the buoys make a good target and sighting practice, they are a long way out to sea if you get into trouble.

If possible, swim with a friend and/or make sure someone knows where you are swimming and when you should be back. If you get into trouble, they can call the coastguard on 999.

Tip 5)
Wetsuits and water temperature.

The summer sea temperature is approx. 15-19°C. However, this is warm enough to swim without a wetsuit.

If you plan to swim without a wetsuit, start with short swims, allowing your body to acclimate to the cold.

Consider other benefits of the wetsuit – the buoyancy makes swimming easier and helps you float if you become tired. You will probably be racing in a wetsuit, so it makes sense to practise in it.

Tip 6)
Check the weather and surf forecast before coming down to the beach.
I would use the Met Office for the weather - https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/forecast/gcpchgv78#?date=2018-07-14
And Magicseaweed for the Surf Forecast - https://magicseaweed.com/Brighton-West-Pier-Surf-Report/15/

Generally, offshore (northerly) wind means a calm flat sea and ideal swimming conditions. Onshore (southerly) wind creates more chop. The windier it is, the bigger the waves (i.e. big southwesterly storm = big waves and ‘shore dump’ as well as a very strong current west to east).

Tip 7)
Check and understand the tide times and what they mean.
You can also do this on Magicseaweed  https://magicseaweed.com/Brighton-West-Pier-Surf-Report/15/

As a general rule, when the tide is going out, the current will pull east to west, and when the tide is coming in, the current will pull west to east. Currents change and are strongest around 30-60 minutes before the tide changes (pulling in the direction it is about to change to) but vary in strength depending on the size of the tide.

We have spring (large) tides and neap (small) tides, which are determined by the moon. The current will be stronger during a spring tide due to the greater water movement. At its strongest, this current is tough to swim against, so plan the timing of your swim.

This current isn’t dangerous as it will only pull you along, not out to sea. However, it can become dangerous if you try to fight it – if you are not making progress, there is no shame in swimming into shore and walking back! (It happens to the best of us).

If you are unsure of the tide/current, ask the lifeguard, and they can advise you.

Tip 8)
Rip currents
In Brighton, we don’t really have any dangerous rip currents that would take you out to sea; however, elsewhere in the UK, this is not the case.

However, we often get small rip currents around groynes and other objects sticking out to sea, which threaten children and non-swimmers.

Dangerous rip currents are, however, very common elsewhere in the UK. Before swimming in an unknown body of water, try to find some local knowledge beforehand. Here is some advice from the RNLI for if you do find yourself in a rip current:
Rip currents are a major cause of accidental drowning worldwide and the top environmental cause of our lifeguard incidents. So, what are rips, how can you spot them and - if you ever find yourself caught in one - what can you do?

Rips are powerful currents caused by waves breaking on shallow sandbars and pushing water back to sea through deeper channels. Sandbars are submerged or partly exposed ridges of sand that are built up by the action of tides and waves.
People can easily get caught out by rip currents because, to an untrained eye, they can look like a calmer place to enter the water.

There are several indicators of rip currents that you can look out for:
•    darker patches in the water beside shallower sandbars
•    rippled or churned water without breaking waves (as shown in the centre of the photo above)
•    formation of foam
•    bits of debris floating out to sea
•    and discoloured brown water where the sand beneath has been disturbed.

Rir-Current.jpg

Five steps to escaping rip currents
1. Avoid them, where possible
Always swim between the flags and on lifeguarded beaches. Flags are marked based on where it is safer to swim in the present conditions.

2. Alert others
If you’re struggling in a rip current, always raise your hand and shout for help. Even if you can get out of it, it pays to have others ready to help.
Keep hold of anything that floats, such as a bodyboard or surfboard.

3. Don’t exhaust yourself
If you try to swim against the force of a rip, you’ll lose energy very quickly. Stay calm and float to assess the situation.

4. How deep is the water?
If you can stand, wade out of the current, don’t swim. Rips can flow at 4-5mph, which is faster than an Olympic swimmer!

5. Swim parallel
If the water is too deep to stand, and you can swim, swim across the direction of the current, parallel to the shore until you are free. Use any breaking waves to help you get back to the beach.
Relax and float for around 60-90 seconds if you need to catch your breath. Some rip currents recirculate rather than flow out to sea and may bring you closer to shore.

Break through swimming and the Tri Camp Mallorca

graeme by the pool.jpg

It’s a fairly obvious direct correlation that more swimming makes you a better swimmer. My basic rule of thumb has always been “twice a week to maintain, three+ to improve”. However it’s also a truism that more isn’t always better - and when we’re talking about training, more can mean injury, over-tiredness and reinforcing technique errors that will eventually become blockers. So what are the top tips for improvement, and how can the training camp help this process?

swimming-reduces-stress.jpg

1. Prepare. At the club camp, we will have a swim session on every one of the six core training days, plus we will be getting into the sea on at least a couple of afternoons. That means between 9km and 15km+ of swimming is available in a week, which is probably a lot more than you’re used to. To get the benefit of this, I recommend planning a steady ramp in your swim volumes in the weeks leading up to the camp, meaning that two weeks before you should be in the pool three or four times, to ensure that you can handle the increased load. Remember to arrive at the camp fresh though - taper for those last few days before the flight!

Swim-smooth.jpg

2. Swim smart. We will make sure that everyone attending the camp knows their Critical Swim Speed before they arrive - a pace around which your training will be based. This pace is key to handling the volume and intensity of swimming that we will be doing in the week and keeping in check the energy and enthusiasm that we always see when people first arrive. It’s not how you start the week that counts, it’s how you finish!

3. Skills for the win. The fantastic part of such dedicated time to train is the focus we can put on skills. We will be videoing everyone both under and above the water and providing detailed feedback on how to tune your stroke, tracking that improvement across the week and giving you your video to take back with you, plus we will feed our key recommendations and videos back to the rest of the BriTri coaching team, meaning that your progress will continue under their expert eyes once you’re back at Wadurs! I guarantee that everyone coming will leave with guidance on stroke improvement that will translate into speed and efficiency in the water, and most will experience a measurable improvement in CSS in the process. Your best swim split awaits...

spa.jpg

4. Recover. When all is said and done, it’s more important to swim well than to just turn up. Everyone on the camp should feel good about having a lie in and missing a swim if fatigue starts to become a serious issue. There will be so much on offer on our week in the sun that most people will struggle to do everything. Rest is as important as the training itself - welcome to the life of the professional athlete!

https://brightontri.org/training-camp-2018/

Brighton Tri Club Swim coaching blog - Nov 17

Nov Swim Photo 1-450.jpg

Swim training should consist of the right mix of technique and fitness work. You cannot become a better swimmer by swimming lots of fast lengths if your technique is holding you back, nor can you improve your swim speed by purely concentrating on drills and technique. Technique work incorporates specific drills to ensure you focus on a particular aspect of the stroke. These often use fins or pull buoys, and should always be performed deliberately and conscientiously. Do not rush the drills to get to the ‘real swimming’!

The fitness work should consist of the right mix of endurance swimming, threshold swimming and sprinting. Triathletes looking to swim/race distances of 750m or more should limit the amount of sprint work (short intervals of 25-50 metres with long recoveries).  Most of our training sessions will, therefore, be focussed on either endurance swimming (longer intervals of 400 metres or more with relatively short recoveries) or threshold-paced swimming.

Nov Swim Photo 2-450.jpg

Threshold paced swimming is also known as your critical swim speed (CSS), and we measure it during the CSS test. It’s the pace you should be able to race at for 1500m. The CSS time is a time per 100 metres (4 lengths). We will test this periodically throughout the year. You can see how your swimming is improving, and we can use to provide focussed swim coaching sessions. The best improvements in your swim speed will come from training at or around your CSS speed. The best device for ensuring you swim at this pace, is the Finis Tempo Trainer Pro. It is a small electronic device, which you wear under your swim cap so you can hear it beep after a certain number of seconds. You can therefore set it to beep when you should reach the end of every length (CSS time divided by 4). Try to keep to the beep! It is harder than it sounds. Our natural tendency is to start much too fast, and then progressively get slower. Try to keep these sets evenly paced throughout. It may even feel ‘too slow’ initially, but it certainly won’t by the end of the set.

Have a look at Swim Smooth head coach, Paul Newsome explain the concept of CSS and why we test it above.

The best device for ensuring you swim at this pace is the Finis Tempo Trainer Pro. It is a small electronic device, which you wear under your swim cap so you can hear it beep after a certain number of seconds. You can, therefore, set it to beep when you should reach the end of every length (CSS time divided by 4). Try to keep to the beep! It is harder than it sounds. Our natural tendency is to start much too fast, and then progressively get slower. Try to keep these sets evenly paced throughout. It may even feel ‘too slow’ initially, but it certainly won’t by the end of the set.

The club has invested in a number of Tempo Trainers to use at club sessions. Don’t be scared of the Tempo Trainers, or the club sessions! Club swimming is really the best way to improve your overall swimming technique and fitness. We recommend three sessions a week- two club sessions, plus one additional session. You can use this to focus on any specific swim faults you are aware of.

Nov Swim Photo 4-450.jpg

At Brighton Tri Club, we use the Swim Smooth coaching philosophy. If you’re not familiar with it, you can read all about it here. Do sign up for the blog as well, it has loads of useful information in it. 

http://www.swimsmooth.com/beginner.php

Lastly, if you’ve never been to a club swim session before, have a read of This Document which explains what to expect, and gives guidance on lane swimming in a club setting, plus which swim aids we recommend (pull buoys and fin etc).