The Province

English Channel’s next for marathon swimmer

Kelowna teenager swam around Bowen Island

- GEMMA KARSTENS-SMITH THE CANADIAN PRESS

BOWEN ISLAND — It took nearly 11 hours, but a 17-year-old girl from Kelowna, has completed her gruelling goal of swimming around an island off the coast of Vancouver.

Instead of resting, Emily Epp is now reaching for another milestone — she plans to swim across the English Channel next month and she’s raising thousands of dollars for a children’s hospice in the process.

“Her dad and I are super proud,” said Cheryl Epp, Emily’s mother. “She blows us away with how determined she is and how hard she’s been working.”

Emily continuous­ly swam about 30 kilometres around Bowen Island on Saturday, braving the frigid waters of Howe Sound in just a bathing suit, a swim cap and goggles.

The tough conditions were meant to prepare the teen for what she’ll face during her internatio­nal swim in mid-July.

The Channel Swimming Associatio­n says on its website that the English Channel is “considered by many to be the ultimate long distance challenge,” because the 32-kilometre stretch hosts a variety of difficult conditions, including cold waters, high waves and occasional debris such as seaweed and wood planks.

Swimming off the coast of B.C. isn’t easy, either. Cheryl Epp said Emily faced rough waters, cool weather and nausea during her swim on Saturday, but never once wanted to quit.

“She was never in any doubt that she could do it,” Cheryl Epp said. “But sometimes things come up that you aren’t expecting. So she was happy she was able to push through.”

Emily has spent months training in Okanagan Lake and with her competitiv­e swim team, but Saturday marked the first time she ever swam for more than six and a half hours continuous­ly, her mom said.

“So to have gone 11 hours was really a mental breakthrou­gh for her,” Cheryl Epp said.

She said Emily wasn’t sore on Sunday, but was “a little bit fatigued.”

Now Emily will begin tapering down the time and length of her swims to allow her body to rest and repair before she heads to England next month.

Swimming the English Channel will be more than just a cool experience. Emily is also using it as an opportunit­y to raise money for Canuck Place, a children’s hospice that has been an important place for the Epp family.

Cheryl Epp said they started receiving care there about five years ago for their daughter Elan, who lost all of her motor control following a viral infection when she was 18 months old.

“Elan was pretty sick at that point,” she said of her middle daughter, who is now 15. “We were having a lot of issues with pain management and feeding, and really just helping her to have the best quality of life that she can have.”

Epp said the program has improved Elan’s life dramatical­ly.

“For our family, Canuck Place was life-changing for all of us,” she said. “As a parent, just seeing her be happy again was huge.”

Elan’s success is what inspired Emily to “do whatever she can” to help other kids, Cheryl Epp said. Swimming just seemed like the natural option, she added.

Emily has raised more than $4,000 for her English Channel swim and a Vancouver-based foundation is matching all the donations she brings in.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Emily Epp, 17, seen holding a shell she found on her swim around Bowen Island on Saturday, plans to swim across the English Channel next month to raise money for Canuck Place.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS Emily Epp, 17, seen holding a shell she found on her swim around Bowen Island on Saturday, plans to swim across the English Channel next month to raise money for Canuck Place.

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