Archive for October, 2011
Newsletter
September Chikopi Chant – enjoy!
Yousuf Eltagouri
Article by Terry Laughlin
But, it’s not just a swim; it’s also a race. And on Saturday, I swam the poorest race I’ve had this summer. Virtually everything that might have gone wrong did. Sometimes you have days like that.
Fortunately–far more often–you have days like this:
1) It was a beautiful early fall day and I can’t think of a better way to spend it.
2) I saw literally dozens of good friends–all of whom have become friends because of our shared love of swimming in open water. Among them was my good friend Lennart Larsson who traveled to NY from Sweden so we could do this swim together. I also met quite a few TI enthusiasts for the first time.
3) After the race, Gilles invited a group of us (Dave Barra, Willie Miller, Rondi Davies, John Humenik, Janet Harris, Lisa Neidrauer, Lennart and me) to his nearby apartment on 157th St where he and his wife Shelly fed us piles of crepes and we talked for hours more about open water swimming, and about Dave’s attempt five days earlier to swim twice around Manhattan, an effort supported by most of those at Gilles’ apartment.
4) But the most special part of the day happened because of one of the factors that hurt my race results. After jumping off the ferry, rushing to catch my wave since the start horn sounded before I was ready to go, I jammed my goggles on my face and made about 100 meters before they were completely filled with water. That happened three or four more times before I finally gave up and stuck them in my suit. I swam the first three miles without goggles. Visibility was difficult and I worried a bit about whether I might get an eye infection. But then a young man swimming next to me noticed I was swimming without goggles, stopped and put a hand out. I stopped and he said “Do you need goggles? I have a spare pair.” He reached into his suit and pulled them out. I put them on and we both resumed swimming. That’s truly an open water moment, demonstrating the warm sense of collegiality, more than competition, that differentiates open water from pool racing.
I swam the final 3 miles of the race with a smile and a warm feeling just thinking about it. After finishing I found my benefactor on shore and learned that he is a 15 year old high school swimmer. from Grand Island NY named Yusuf Eltagori, whose ambition is to swim completely around Manhattan. I was hugely impressed to find someone of his age with such mature vision and ambition and with the presence of mind to behave so thoughtfully and generously.
A perfect day. May you have many like it.”


