
The Triple Crown Of Lake Monster Swims
The Triple Crown of Lake Monster swims includes swims across Loch Ness, Lake Memphremagog and Lake Tahoe
The Triple Crown of Lake Monster swims includes swims across Loch Ness, Lake Memphremagog and Lake Tahoe
Courtesy of WOWSA, Huntington Beach, California. Word out of Northern California has it that Joseph Locke became the second person in history to swim from Farallones and the Golden Gate Bridge in a swim that took nearly 14 hours. No one has tried to tackle this mighty stretch of cold water than the former Harvard swimmer. Time and time again, he trained,
Veljko Rogošić’s Moje Najteže Milje – His Hardest Mile Courtesy of WOWSA, Huntington Beach, California. "He couldn't possibly do it." "No way, she must have jumped on the boat." "There is no documentation or proof of the swim." "No GPS record exists and no Observer's Report was posted online." These are the most common reasons why contemporary marathon
Photos of Craig Lenning by Vito Bialla. Last week, Craig Lenning was able to replicate the only two successful swims from the Farallon Islands to California that were first performed in 1967. With his 15 hour 47 minute crossing from the Farallon Islands to Muir Beach on the mainland, he was celebrated locally and throughout the global open water swimming
Courtesy of Vito Bialla and the Night Train Swimmers. Craig Lenning swimming from Farallon Islands to Muir Beach on the California mainland from Vito Bialla on Vimeo.
The Evolutionary Digitalization Of Open Water Swimming Courtesy of WOWSA, Huntington Beach, California. The open water swimming community is rapidly and dramatically heading from paper and pen to laptops and the cloud. The digital comprehensive Observer Report by Evan Morrison that describes Craig Lenning's swim from the Farallon Islands to Muir Beach on
Photos and article courtesy of Bruckner Chase of Ocean Positive Inc.. On April 8th 2014 Craig Lenning became the second person in history to enter the Pacific Ocean at the Farallone Islands and walk ashore on the California mainland after being in the water for 15 hours and 47 minutes. The first, Lieutenant Colonel Stewart Evans, entered the water off
Craig Lenning did the remarkable when he swam from the Farallons Island to Muir Beach - 14 miles north of the Golden Gate Bridge - in 15 hours 46 minutes. His swim was deservedly praised throughout the global open water swimming community. It was an monumental effort in one of the toughest stretches of waters in the world. His support crew had experience
Photo of post-swim Craig Lenning by Vito Bialla. It took a team of believers and one very hard-core man from the mountains to finally end 47 years of non-success from the Farallon Islands. Craig Lenning, supported by captain Vito Bialla, navigator David Holscher, co-captain Patrick Horn, crew chief Jamie Patrick and observer Evan Morrison, started at the
Photo of Craig Lenning courtesy of Vito Bialla, currently 4.4 nautical miles from the California mainland. As night is falling, Captain Vito Bialla and crew are escorting Craig Lenning to Muir Beach due to a intensely thick fog that has shrouded the area around San Francisco Bay. "There was no flood tide and there was a person who jumped from the Golden