The Kerryman (South Kerry Edition)

Elaine makes history with marathon Tralee Bay swim

TRALEE WOMAN SWIMS FROM FENIT TO BLENNERVIL­LE... AND BACK AGAIN

- By STEPHEN FERNANE

WHILE most of us were watching Kerry’s minors make history on Sunday afternoon, Tralee woman Elaine Burrows-Dillane decided to make her own history by becoming the first woman to swim from Fenit to Blennervil­le.. .and back again.

Elaine swam the 16km route in 4h-10mins with water temperatur­es at a chippy 13c. And if swimming Tralee Bay wasn’t enough, Elaine completed the swim under marathon rules which meant one swim cap, one pair of goggles and no wetsuit – the latter meaning she went without the buoyancy and protection from the cold a wetsuit gives.

Elaine said her motivation on Sunday stemmed from a sense of personal accomplish­ment rather than any fixation with times or races – a reason why she decided to give it a go.

“The temperatur­e had dropped in the days before the swim and I wasn’t sure how I would get on. But in the end I couldn’t have written away for a better day.

“I never felt tired and sometimes when swimming you can get into a zone. I just love swimming so much that a sense of enjoyment took me over. I can honestly say there wasn’t a bit of the 16km that I didn’t enjoy,” Elaine said.

She hit the water in Fenit at approximat­ely 1:20pm and arrived 2 hours and 10 minutes later at Blennervil­le before making her way back to Fenit again; all the time under the watchful eye of Kevin Williams of Tralee Bay SC.

Under the rules, Elaine was required to briefly step out of the water at Blennervil­le to check her health. They also told her the Kerry minors had just won the All-Ireland.

“My friend’s son is on the team so I was delighted to hear they won. When I reached Blennervil­le three of my toes felt numb and I was afraid by the time I got back to Fenit my whole leg would go numb. Thankfully, my body had acclimatis­ed fully to the point where it actually felt warm. I actually had a lovely swim back.”

They say once a swimmer, always a swimmer and even though Elaine has been swimming since she was knee-high, she gave up the sport for 25 years.

Astonishin­gly, Elaine is only back swimming two years having joined Kingdom Masters Swimming Club and Tralee Bay Swimming Club. Even though wetsuit swimmers are considered 10 to 15 percent faster in the water, Elaine would love to promote the benefits of non-wetsuit swimming to more people as it’s a totally different experience.

“It really is and I find wet- suits are too restrictiv­e. It’s probably that bit tougher without one, but when your sport is your passion it’s seldom hard.

“I hadn’t told anyone I was doing the swim on Sunday, but by the time I approached Fenit there was bagpipes playing and people there to support me. It was just fantastic,” she added.

 ?? Photo by Domnick Walsh ?? Elaine Burrows-Dillane warm and dry again after her deeply impressive feat of endurance on Sunday - swimming from Fenit to Blennervil­le and back non-stop. Tralee woman Elaine Burrows-Dillane swimming full steam ahead in Tralee Bay Elaine returns to the...
Photo by Domnick Walsh Elaine Burrows-Dillane warm and dry again after her deeply impressive feat of endurance on Sunday - swimming from Fenit to Blennervil­le and back non-stop. Tralee woman Elaine Burrows-Dillane swimming full steam ahead in Tralee Bay Elaine returns to the...

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