Swimming.
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- Posts: 1452
- Joined: Mon Apr 12, 2004 7:02 pm
I love to swim but don't do it much anymore. I used to swim a bunch but it's hard to access a pool easily. I'm scheduled for a triathlon in July and am planning on hitting the pool for the two months before just to warm up to it. For me, swimming is easier and comes more naturally than running or riding.
Does he have a strange bear claw like appendage protruding from his neck? He kep petting it.
I definitely feel the same way about running vs. swimming. I love to swim. I just joined a gym w/ a 25 meter pool and plan to swim several times a week. I swam competively in high school, but I'd forgotten what a great full body workout it can be. I can spend 40-45 minutes on the elliptical trainer and be a little tired, but swimming for the same amount of time burns up a lot more of my energy.Artsay wrote: For me, swimming is easier and comes more naturally than running or riding.
I'm an experienced woman; I've been around... well, alright, I might not've been around, but I've been... nearby.
~ Mary Richards (Mary Tyler Moore Show)
~ Mary Richards (Mary Tyler Moore Show)
I used to swim alot. Started during a year when I wasn't able to rock climb on a regular basis and had cheap access to a lap pool. Started getting swimmer's shoulder. These days I start a swimming workout a few months before the annual trip to the seashore and then quit when I get back so my shoulder can recover.
No chalkbag since 1995.
It was interesting getting started in swimming. For the first 10 or so workouts I felt like I could barely swim 100m without stopping and GASPING for air. Then one day out of nowhere I swam for 300m. I've been going at it for about a month and I'm up to 4x 600m per session. Feels great. Anyone else have this exponential improvement or am I just amphibious?
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