The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Swimming adventure has made bath a no-go zone

Rab thought taking the plunge and dipping his toes into the world of wild swimming would be fun but his first foray into the sea may well turn out to be his last after he had a bit of a nightmare...

- With Rab McNeil

This news just in: I have been wild swimming. And? And it was a disaster. Left me limping and distressed. Wild swimming is just the new term for taking a dip in the sea. I don’t know what possessed me to try it. I’ve learned time and time again that I should never do anything “interestin­g”.

I’d thought about it before, as a possibilit­y at a quiet place I know which has one of Rab’s Rocks – you know, somewhere I can sit and practise my profession of sea watching.

On this occasion, I’d been invited down to the holiday home of some friends. It’s the place I’ve often written about it, the one that sits right on the shore.

After lunch, I said: “Right, I’m going for a swim, ken?” My friends said in unison: “Eh?” They looked goggle-eyed.

Goggles: I should have brought some. But, in anticipati­on of this ill-advised adventure, I did at least bring trunks and a towel. My friends, oddly enough, are adventurou­s types, who frequently take (or took, pre-virus) exotic holidays. Yet they’ve never explored the shore or wood beside the house, nor visited the island across the bay (which can be reached at low tide). How odd.

Not as odd, however, as my decision to go swimming in a place not really designed for it. I’d envisaged strolling down slowly levelling off sand until I was fully immersed, then doing some pathetic, face-above-water swimming.

I don’t know why I thought this when I knew already the shore, where I frequently walk, is all sharp, unstable rocks and slippery seaweed.

The first problem was where to peel off, but there’s a grassy nook I know, and that all went swimmingly, despite worrying that people on a large boat nearby, or over at the hotel, might be watching me through binoculars.

My pale Scottish skin would doubtless have horrified them. I’m one of these Scots that Billy Connolly mentioned, the ones who have to lie in the sun for a week before they turn white.

But I got into my trunks and waddled gingerly into the water. Almost immediatel­y, I lost my footing. And I kept losing my footing. Then I found that, contrary to popular myth, I had indeed forgotten how to swim.

Eventually, however, I managed a few panicky strokes that took me further out. Then I had trouble getting back.

The water was up to my waist but, nearer the shore, too shallow to swim in. The seabed was hellish to walk over. It kept giving way. Sharp rocks stabbed the soles of my feet. Seaweed made me slip.

Repeatedly, I fell into the water until, eventually, I scrambled ashore and up the rocks in a most undignifie­d manner, feeling like Gollum from The Hobbit.

As I prepared to change, I noticed blood on a rock, and wondered if something ghastly had happened. Then I became aware my knees, one of my ankles and the sole my left foot were all bleeding.

I hobbled back to my friends’ house and went into Rab’s standby mode: humiliatio­n. Never again.

Wild swimming? From now on, I wouldn’t even try mild swimming. Hell, I’m not even taking a bath again, in case it causes me to relive the trauma.

 ??  ?? Wild swimming sounds like fun, but try walking on slippery seaweed like Rab did and you might change your mind.
Wild swimming sounds like fun, but try walking on slippery seaweed like Rab did and you might change your mind.
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