National Post (National Edition)

The cold hard truth

COLD-WATER DIPS HAVE SOARED IN LOCKDOWN, BUT STRIPPING DOWN FOR AN ICY JOG IS THE NEW TREND, CATHERINE LOFTHOUSE WRITES

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When David Pattenden heard that police had been making inquiries about a semi-naked man strolling through his village near Beverley, East Yorks, in the plummeting temperatur­es, the 72-year-old realized that his unusual hobby had raised a few eyebrows.

The retired police diver often walks topless at dawn — sub-zero temperatur­es be damned.

“When I see someone, I start a conversati­on and say, `It's not as strange as it looks',” Pattenden explains. “It is good for mental well-being … the mental and physical effects last for several hours.”

Pattenden is one of a growing number of bareskin runners and walkers, many of whom have sought to embrace the chill in lockdown. Many are already wild swimmers — the Outdoor Swimming Society has seen membership increase by a third since national restrictio­ns first set in, while a Swim England study suggests that 7.5 million people in the U.K. now swim outdoors. But now, it has become a workout of its own, too.

At the beginning of the third lockdown, Debbie Bent, 54, began walking her dog wearing just a vest top and thin trousers.

Having taken up wild swimming when the first lockdown started, she has found that her newest frigid pursuit gives her “the same feeling as cold water on my skin. It lessens anxiety and makes me feel more resilient. Lockdown makes me feel numb, but this makes me happy.”

She is in hardy company: two weekends ago presenter Ben Fogle posted a picture of himself running in the snow — wearing only shorts — on his Instagram feed with the caption, “cold is all in the mind”.

“I expose my skin to the cold air while running and exercising as I find it helps my immune system and keeps me alert and happy,” he explains.

Fogle believes that “clothes, central heating and inactivity have reduced the efficacy of our bodies” — a mantra that comes from the “Iceman” himself, Wim Hof.

The 61-year-old Dutch adventurer, whose freezing feats include currently retaining the record for a barefoot half marathon on ice and snow — have earned him a cult following; there are now 500 Wim Hof Method instructor­s worldwide, as well as book deals and a segment on Gwyneth Paltrow's Netflix show The Goop Lab. Hof hinges his advocacy of cold living on a 2011 study from Radboud University, which found that the sympatheti­c nervous and immune systems can be influenced by short-term training programmes, such as ditching your kit for a cold walk.

Plus, “in colder temperatur­es your heart doesn't have to work as hard, you sweat less, and expend less energy, all of which means you can exercise more efficientl­y,” according to Dr. Adam Tenforde, at the Spaulding Rehabilita­tion Network.

Bareskin exercisers need to build up their resistance to the cold in the same way that outdoor swimmers would, gradually increasing their exposure and always remaining aware of the sensations they are experienci­ng — there is a risk of hypothermi­a and frostbite if too much is done too soon.

Dr. Paul Banwell, founder of the Melanoma and Skin Cancer Unit in East Grinstead, says: “Exposure to fresh air outside is good for us because it can help provide non-recycled air to the lungs which improves the blood's oxygen levels and circulatio­n. “Moreover, moderately cold temperatur­es are good for skin health because it constrains the blood vessels in the skin (allowing the body temperatur­e to regulate).”

But “you really have to be calm, focused and very mindful and aware of your physiology. It's potentiall­y life-threatenin­g if you stay out too long,” warns Wim Hof instructor, Will van Zyl, 47.

“Your body is buzzing, your head is clear, you're warm and you experience all the benefits of being immersed in your environmen­t in these low temperatur­es,” he enthuses. A cold spike and the release of adrenalin also “has a significan­t impact on inflammati­on reduction and circulatio­n.” Van Zyl, who makes a living teaching Wim Hof Method workshops and retreats, takes an ice shower every morning to keep his body used to frigid temperatur­es: he notes that “ice baths are an integral part of profession­al sports recovery”, though novices getting in on the act is a far more recent trend.

“We've got used to living in the warm so what may not be that extreme seems so much more uncomforta­ble,” Van Zyl says. “Our body never learns how to thermoregu­late itself.” Now, popularity for pushing one's body to the limit is rising at such a pace that people are “waiting for the snowfall or extreme weather to expose their skin because of the benefits of mindful walking in the cold”.

Running or walking in the cold “is about letting go of our preference­s for comfort ... I have become phenomenal­ly strong in terms of my emotional, physical and spiritual resilience to life's trials, in all settings and contexts, through the medium of natural cold exposure”.

Bareskin walkers and runners find — after they've overcome the initial shock factor — a huge lift, he adds. “When you're in that moment of feeling a huge gust of icecold wind hitting your body with snow or rain bombarding you, a sense of formidable empowermen­t overcomes you and all of a sudden, you're warm and you're buzzing with endorphins.

IT IS GOOD FOR MENTAL WELL-BEING ... EFFECTS LAST FOR HOURS.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES / ISTOCK ?? Bareskin exercisers need to build up their resistance to the cold in the same way that outdoor swimmers would.
GETTY IMAGES / ISTOCK Bareskin exercisers need to build up their resistance to the cold in the same way that outdoor swimmers would.

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