FEATURE: B52 SWIMMING ASSOCIATION
The joys - and benefits - of sea swimming Regular swimmers have a tendency to become evangelical about the benefits of taking to the ocean not just for a quick dip, but for some serious (or some seriously fun) exercise. It now seems that their beliefs are backed by science, and the sea swimming movement is gaining credence, and numbers, here and overseas. Christine Young talked to a group of local swimmers to find out just what it’s all about. The claimed benefits of sea swimming include increasing your libido, among other more mundane benefits like boosting your immune system, improving circulation, and burning calories. One source uses arcane terms like ‘thalassotherapy’ (using seawater for cosmetic and health treatment) and says it is a practice that dates back to the ancient Egyptians. Advocates also say that sea swimming’s popularity is growing, and advise this “could be the perfect time to take the plunge and restore your body and mind”. Voluntarily immersing yourself in cold water will be seen by some as a euphemism for self-torture – but on the Shore, the water is warm for a few months at least, and groups and individuals gather at local beaches to enjoy the social and physical benefits of an early morning swim. During summer, they join adherents of the sea swimming cult who faithfully congregate at local beaches year-round. One such group, we’re told, is the “Wild Women” who swim at daily at Narrow Neck at 8am. Another is the grandly titled B52s Swimming Association. The B52s are a gathering of Devonport peninsula locals whose numbers have swelled over the past few years from four enthusiastic mates to a WhatsApp-driven congregation (aged from their 40s to 60s) who get together year-round to swim at least three times a week. They have a club captain, a secretary, and a “cultural director” – presumably in charge of various ritual events, including pizza nights that celebrate the simmer and winter solstices, camps and general hilarity wherever they meet. Mark Simmons, B52s club captain and one of the initiators of the group, says there are magazines devoted to the practice, and ocean
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Issue 128 - March 2022 www.channelmag.co.nz
Members of the B52s warm up after a swim: Mark Walker, Mark Simmons, Andrew Graham, Paul Cane, Jon Hooper, Theresa Wells, Ineke Graham, Kevin Patterson
swim clubs starting up “all over the world”. He began swimming to help free up a permanently damaged back, doing aquarobics at the gym before progressing to swimming in the sea – and becoming hooked. His back injury, he says, “forced me to be active, to get into nature every morning”, and he loves it. At that stage there was an informal group of “coastal cruisers”. Through them, he bumped into Paul Cane, a Devonport local and a mate Mark hadn’t seen since their Canterbury University days. In turn they met up with other similarly inspired souls who came and went – especially as the weather got colder. Mark, Paul and a small hardened core continued swimming into the winter, and decided the group needed a name. They adopted the B52s Swimming Association moniker – the B stands for buckets (in homage to original sea swimming group The Buckets, started by a group of university lecturers, who swam on Sundays at Narrow Neck beach and took their swimming gear to the beach in large buckets). The 52 – of course – was testament to their commitment to swim year-round. As Mark tells it, the group gradually evolved, but swimming remains core. Mark has developed a mellow pre-swim playlist for sunrise, before the swim, and a more raucous playlist for the post-swim shower. “Our theme became Love Shack,” he says. (Look it up – it’s by those other B52s.) The local B52s may have met through swimming, but their personalities mean they have melded into a tightly supportive group of party animals. Up to 20 people have been admitted to the somewhat exclusive WhatsApp group; eight to ten regularly gather to swim at around 7am on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. It’s not about being fast, Mark emphasises, through there are a couple of fast swimmers in the group. “It’s about being in nature and having fun.” Those who want to, wear one fin, or two, “so if we’re slower we don’t hold each other up”. At Narrow Neck, they go with the tide (doing the longest stretch with