Monday 28 August 2017

Wednesday 23 August 2017

2 days after swimming Lake Tahoe

   How does Marilyn say goodbye to beautiful Lake Tahoe? I went for a swim, of course.
   After all the crew went home and I had my swim, we drove to San Francisco. Driving through Sacramento at 102 deg. F. (39 deg. C.) was really hard to take. As we descended to sea level and could see San Francisco Bay, the temperature plummeted to 79 deg. F (27 deg. C.) in the space of 25 kilometers. And, I have to admit that breathing is a lot easier at sea level. We are flying home on Sunday.

Monday 21 August 2017

Marilyn's story

What a gorgeous lake! What a great team and captain! Tom is the best, being a swimmer himself who has done this lake 3 times. He understands what a swimmer needs from a captain and is very safety conscious.
Even though the conditions were almost ideal, it was my toughest and longest lake swim since Lake Ontario.
The swim started late at 8:30 pm because we had to wait for a thunder shower to pass. I waded into the 20 deg. C waters of beautiful Lake Tahoe at Camp Richardson, California.The first couple of hours, the light slowly faded behind the ring of mountains around the lake. Then the stars came out, I've never seen the Milky Way in such detail before. After about 3 hours, the washing machine-like swells started. I seemed to be going up and down randomly. These appeared on and off throughout the night, lasting up to an hour at a time. I can understand why swimmers unaccustomed to night swimming would find this disorienting and nauseating. Tom thinks they are caused by a desert crosswind and water sloshing from a strong wind the previous day. Jodi says the winds blew from all directions.
 After about 4 hours, the cold air (down to 15 deg. C.) and breeze started cooling me off. A brief sprint was sufficient to warm me up. However, I couldn't keep up sprinting because the altitude made breathing hard. I noticed around 3 am that whenever I sprinted, I also threw up a bit. This culminated in full out retching. After miserable hour full of quitting thoughts, it dawned on me that the bonamine (Bonine) I had taken at 6 pm had run out after 8 hours. Within minutes of taking a second one, all the nausea went away. That's the thing about marathon swimming, symptoms like pain, nausea and headache come and go and environmental changes happen from hour to hour. It usually goes away if you keep going.
When I took the second pill, I had trouble swallowing it. By the time the break ended, I was shivering. I stayed chilled and having to sprint frequently until after the eclipse ended and the sun finally got warm.
The eclipse: The sky looked like someone had sprinkled black dust in the sky. The water lost it's beautiful cobalt blue colour. The sun was still shining, but it lost it's warmth and a breeze picked up. The eclipse lasted about an hour.
When I warmed up, then my shoulders, back and wrists started to hurt. I slowed down for a couple of hours, but the the pain passed and I was able to pick it up to finish the swim in 17 hours and 2 minutes and 46 seconds at Hyatt Beach, in Incline Village, Nevada.
Oldest woman and first Canadian to swim Lake Tahoe!!!
Thank you to all my crew: Thie, Paula and my husband and especially observer Jodi DiLascio who face-timed her mother, Marilyn Bell DiLascio, to me live.  Thank you to everyone who sent prayers and good wishes.
Ir's not too late to donate to Sashbear!

She finished! She did it! We are proud Canadians for SURE!!! Love you Marilyn!
Last mile! Marilyn's husband is kayking beside our swimmer for the last 5280 feet! Lookin' good!
 Just about there!  1.36 miles to swim. Stroke count steady and looking good!
Solar eclipse and first Canadian to swim the length of Lake Tahoe!!! Awesome!!!
Marilyn battled some strong currents but the sun came up with
8 1/2 miles to go!

Face-time with Marilyn Bell- DiLascio was do great this morning!
16 miles to go and Marilyn feeling good, Great pace! Conditions favourable-
Millions of stars !

Sunday 20 August 2017

Swim is a "go"

   We met with the captain, Tom Linthicum, owner of the Ghostrider. We have decided on an 8 to 8:30 p.m. "jump time" TODAY (11 to 11:30 p.m. eastern time). Water temp is 20.7 C. Air temp will go down to about 10 deg. C. overnight then get up to 26 deg. C. tomorrow. Risk of thunderstorm tomorrow between 2 to 4 pm. We hope to be done by then. The winds will be light for most of the swim. They will be dying down when we leave and starting to gust a bit at the end, but we should be in the shelter of the final ring of mountains by then.
   We've been a bit worried about the stories we have heard of swimmers unable to stop throwing up about 4 hours into the swim. Then Jodi told us about a swimmer who described that the darkness was so disorienting it made her nauseated. So we have all decided to take Bonine, a medication for motion sickness, even though the waves won't be bad. I feel confident this will do the trick.
Talk to you after the swim.
Marilyn signing off, but my crew will try to text as often as they can.
Follow the tracker at https://track.rs/tahoe/

Saturday 19 August 2017

Getting organized

   We are spending today getting organized with equipment and foods, both for the crew and myself. I discussed the weather with the captain and we are aiming to start at 8:15 tomorrow night (11:15 p.m. Hamilton time).
   The Hamilton Spectator published a lovely article yesterday about the swim, emphasizing the suicide prevention work that Sashbear and I do.
https://www.thespec.com/news-story/7510063-hamilton-psychiatrist-fights-suicide-with-lake-tahoe-swim/
   My crew includes Thie Convery, who swam Lake Erie in 2010 (20 km) and has been on most of my swims, Paula Jongerden, who swam the 44 km crossing of Lake Erie in 2002 and helped me swim to P.E.I., and my husband. We are honoured to have Jodi DiLascio as the official observer. Jodi is the daughter of Marilyn Bell DiLascio. In a touching moment this morning on the phone, Jodi thanked my mother for naming me after her mother.

Friday 18 August 2017

Checking out the finish

   Yesterday, on our way home from the airport to pick up the rest of my crew, we drove around the north end of Lake Tahoe and checked out the finishing spot in Incline Village at the Hyatt hotel. We sweet talked the valet at the hotel into letting us park for free while we ran down to the beach and took GPS points and pictures.
   The north end of the lake is more sheltered. The mountains are just as spectacular as the ones at the south end.
   Then we drove along the east side of the lake and checked out all the landmarks.
   We are starting to look at the weather. There seems to be a risk of thunder late afternoon everyday for the next 5 days. We may need to start the swim earlier.

Wednesday 16 August 2017

Emerald Bay

   Tom is taking one more swimmer across Lake Tahoe before my swim, a lady doing a width of the lake today.
   I am only going to swim 20 minutes today. I have to taper my swimming to rest my muscles and joints.
   Yesterday. surprisingly, it thundered and lightninged and rained in California!
   Then we went for a drive along the south west coast of Lake Tahoe into spectacular Emerald Bay. The drive was an experience with 3 hairpin turns on the side of a cliff to the top and then a half kilometer along a ridge with a 600 hundred foot drop on either side without a guard rail. The cloud cover prevented us from seeing the legendary emerald colour of the bay.

Another beautiful day

  Yesterday, I went to see Devon off. Unfortunately the waves were a little higher than predicted and she decided to just complete the single crossing in about 16:08.
  I got pictures of Tom's boat, the Ghostrider. I also got to met a few of my heroes from the South End Rowing Club in San Francisco.
  The water and the sun were so beautiful in my afternoon workout, I felt like I could have kept going forever. I'm sure I will think differently about that on Monday after 20 km, but it still is an excellent sign.

Tuesday 15 August 2017

Top of the mountain

   Yesterday I did my high altitude training. A high altitude expert told me that the best way to acclimatize to a given altitude is to go up to a higher altitude for a few hours.
   So I took the gondola and then another chairlift to the top of Heavenly Valley, a world famous ski resort.  Then I hiked up even higher past the top of another chair to the very top of the resort, the Sky Express chair at 10,040 feet. I think I huffed and puffed enough to get my body into high altitude gear. The views of Lake Tahoe and the surrounding mountains were spectacular.
  At noon, I'm going to send off Devon Clifford, a lady from near New York City, who wants to do a double crossing of Lake Tahoe. You can follow her on the tracker at the same link that my swim will be on. https://track.rs/tahoe/

Monday 14 August 2017

Training in Lake Tahoe

   I swam 2 hours yesterday and 1 hr 40 minutes today. The altitude only bothers me when I sprint. The water temperature is gorgeous at 69 to 70. The sun on my back is wonderful too. An annoying chop comes up at around 11 a.m. That is why I will be starting at 9 p.m. to minimize my time in the afternoon chop.
   Last night I went to Camp Richardson to see the start of another swim. I met my captain, Tom Linthicum, and saw the boat, the kayak and the starting spot. It is pitch black here. No glow of lights on the horizon, just surrounded by tall black mountains. Also, the air gets quite cool at night, which I am thinking will be the biggest challenge. I will have to sprint to stay warm and the altitude may put a cap on how fast I can swim.
   I'm staying in a hotel right on the beach the first 5 nights until my crew arrives and then we move to a big rental house. I have a clear view of the first half of the course and I can picture where the finish is by the slope of the distant mountains. It is very reassuring that I can see the whole outline of the lake from my balcony. One of the mountains still has snow on it. So far, from my balcony, I've seen paragliding, water skiing, kayaking and stand up paddle boarding.
   Fun observations about Lake Tahoe: It never seems to rain here, even the boats don't cover up for the night. Overnight is usually calm and the wind blows from 11 am to 7 pm. The forecast is always the same. There are no bugs. Water boils sooner at a lower temperature and it takes longer to cook food at higher altitude.

Sunday 13 August 2017

Greetings from Lake Tahoe

I just posted a picture of the view from my hotel window.
How Lake Tahoe was formed is an interesting story. According to the Washoe Indian legend, an innocent Native American man was being chased by an Evil Spirit. In order to ward off the Evil Spirit, the Great Spirit gave the man a branch of leaves, promising that each leaf dropped would magically produce a body of water that would impede the Evil Spirit's chase. However, the man dropped the entire branch in fright, thus creating the giant lake.

Saturday 12 August 2017

Solar eclipse

I'm all packed and will leave for the airport shortly.
Exciting news.
There will be an 80% solar eclipse at 10:20 in the morning, California time, for 2 minutes, while I am swimming.
As my official observer, Jodi DiLascio, says, "Marilyn will swim from dark to light to dark to light."
I am laughing to myself because I am not allowed to wear a watch and my crew never tells me the time so that I don't get discouraged with my slow progress. But I will know when 10:20 happens!!! The other issue is whether I should take my dark goggles off for 2 minutes or not.

Friday 11 August 2017

Last swim in Lake Ontario

Lake Ontario had a nasty good bye present for me today. Rather than the 22 to 23 degree Celsius water we have been enjoying for the last 2 weeks, the water near shore was 15 to 16 degrees. The strong south wind blew the warm water out into the middle of the lake. I guess it is good practice if Lake Tahoe decides to do the same thing to me.
A guy jumped off his boat anchored near where I was swimming, presumable expecting warm water like yesterday, and I heard him screaming with the cold.

Monday 7 August 2017

Less than 2 weeks to go

     This weekend was spent looking at radar in order to dodge thunderstorms as well as trying to avoid busy boating times in order to get my daily swims.
     I did a whole workout in my new Speedo Aquablade suit and it fit well and didn't rub anywhere. It fit so snugly, I didn't even get any seaweed down my suit. It's not very flattering but it is fast. My nickname for this suit is "my saran wrap suit".
     CBC Hamilton interviewed me today. No details on publication or airing times yet.
     Sashbear is busy setting up their facebook page to follow my swim. We are all excited about the posts that they are running. I like to call them "DBT skills with Marilyn".  https://www.facebook.com/Sashbearorg/