Open water swim starts are as varied as the venues where they take place.
From the classic run-in-the-water from the beach to the more unusual jump-off-a-boat, open water swimming has the four general start formats
1. In-the-water start: swimmers begin while treading water in deep water 2. Jump or dive start: swimmers leap (i.e., jump or dive) from a boat, pontoon, pier, jetty or breakwater 3. Running zero-point entry: swimmers run or walk down a sandy beach or from points above the high-tide mark on the shore 4. Stationary zero-point entry: swimmers begin from the ankle-, knee- or waist-level at the shoreline
A zero-point entry is a gradual entry in a body of water for an open water swim. A running zero-point entry is the most common means to start a race or practice and is different from an in-the-water start or a dive from a pier, boat, pontoon, jetty or breakwater. The word is derived from zero-entry swimming pools which are also called beach entry swimming pools. These are swimming pools with an edge or entry that gradually slopes from the deck into the water, becoming deeper with each step, in the manner of a natural beach.
Photo of the Alcatraz Swim above is courtesy of Peg Gerard.
Southern California native, born 1962, is the creator of the WOWSA Awards, Oceans Seven, Openwaterpedia, Citrus Corps, World Open Water Swimming Association, Daily News of Open Water Swimming, Global Open Water Swimming Conference. He is Chief Executive Officer of KAATSU Global and KAATSU Research Institute. Inductee in the International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame (Honor Swimmer, Class of 2001) and Ice Swimming Hall of Fame (Honor Contributor - Media, Class of 2019), recipient of the International Swimming Hall of Fame's Poseidon Award (2016), International Swimming Hall of Fame's Irving Davids-Captain Roger Wheeler Memorial Award (2010), USA Swimming's Glen S. Hummer Award (2007, 2010) and Harvard University's John B. Imrie Award (1984). Served on the FINA Technical Open Water Swimming Committee and as Technical Delegate with the 2011 Special Olympics World Summer Games, and 9-time USA Swimming coaching staff. Note: WOWSA only recommends products or services used or recommended by the community. WOWSA does not receive compensation for links or products mentioned on this site or in blog posts. If it does, it will be indicated clearly on that specific post. See WOWSA's privacy policy for more information.