Toronto Star

‘Yes, I want the record!’

Kim Lumsdon, 56, has already made the swim across Lake Ontario — twice. Now she has a new challenge: become the oldest woman to make the crossing

- VALERIE HAUCH STAFF REPORTER

“I’m not fast, I’m not a speedster. But . . . it’s about how strong your mind is, as well as your body.” KIM LUMSDON ON SWIMMING LAKE ONTARIO

How many 56-year-old Toronto women are anxious to dive into the famously chilly, deep waters of Lake Ontario and swim across?

There’s only one in the lineup, already signed up with Solo Swims of Ontario, a non-profit that monitors and provides strict guidelines for open-water solo swims in provincial waters.

That would be Kim Lumsdon, who is aiming, starting July 26, to be the oldest woman — for the second time — to make the crossing.

It’s a gruelling minimum 51-kilometre (winds and currents can make it longer) swim from Niagara-on-the-Lake to Marilyn Bell Park, named after the legendary young swimmer who swam the same route at age 16. (The oldest swimmer to conquer Lake Ontario was American Bill Sadlo who swam across in 1957 at age 57).

On Aug. 5-6, 2006, at the age of 49, Lumsdon became the oldest woman to swim across, doing the trip in 26 hours and 38 minutes. The title was taken away a week later by another long-distance swimmer, Colleen Shields, 54.

Shields took just 17 hours and 56 minutes. She had previously made the swim at 38.

But now, Lumsdon hopes to break Shields’ still-standing record in her third crossing of Lake Ontario. At age19, Lumsdon crossed in 21hours, 27 minutes, coached by her father, Cliff Lumsdon, a world champion long-distance swimmer himself and winner of the Lou Marsh Trophy for outstandin­g Canadian athlete of the year in 1949.

She and Shields have a friendly rivalry.

“She has told me by email that I would have the record this year and she would have it next year,” says Lumsdon, laughing during an interview at an Etobicoke coffee shop, and adding she doesn’t know if Shields is joking or not.

It turns out Shields is serious about going again. She told the Star she is planning another swim across the lake (she has been unsuccessf­ul in several tries since 2006, the most recent in September 2012), but she’s not sure when.

Did anyone think age dimmed the competitiv­e spirit? Not so.

“Yes, I want the record!” says Lumsdon. “I’m not fast, I’m not a speedster. But I do have the endurance and I’m good in waves and I’m good in cold water. Cold water’s not the greatest to be in, but it’s about how strong your mind is, as well as your body. So if your mind is bright and you’re strong . . . and I do have my father’s genes.”

At this point in the conversati­on, Lee Shimano, one of Lumsdon’s coaches, a friend of more than 25 years who’s been with her on previous swims, interjects.

“She gets a little impatient towards the end. She wants to get it done.”

This time around, Lumson has new knees: titanium. “I want to see how well they do in the water,” she says of the knee replacemen­ts. She’d have done the swim last year but was still recovering from surgery on one knee.

Lumsdon was born with twisted legs and had pins put in when she was12 because her knees would dislocate.

“I was knock-kneed,” she says. Swimming was the only sport she could do and it turned out she loved it, competing in age group competitio­ns for years as a child, turning pro at age 16.

She competed on the circuit of profession­al swims, taking second or third place prizes each year from 1972 to 1976. Lumsdon has also competed in Masters swim competitio­ns for several years and has placed regularly in the Ontario Top 10 for the 800 metres and 1,500metre free.

She’ll be competing at the 2014 FINA World Swimming Masters championsh­ips in Montreal.

For this Lake Ontario swim, she’s also trying to raise money, and has a link on her website for the Ontario Cancer Insitute, a cause that’s close to her and many she knows. Lumsdon currently coaches some swimmers living with cancer who work out in the pool, even through periods when they’re getting chemothera­py and radiation. “Swimming lends itself to recovery,” she says. And as an older person, it also helps her stay fit. Her dad, whom she fondly refers to as “my father, my friend, my coach’’ stopped swimming at age 46. He saw his weight swell to 300 pounds, became diabetic and had heart problems. He died at age 60 in 1991. “That’s why I’m swimming,” she says. “I’ll always swim. . . . When I swim, my cholestero­l is level — all that stuff doesn’t go wacky tacky.” At 269 pounds spread over a 5foot-6 frame, Lumsdon says she’s about 10 to 15 pounds heavier than the last time she swam across the lake, part of that a carry-over from post-surgery inactivity. But her training regimen is tougher now than in 2006. And with doing weights four days a week, swimming five times a week at the University of Toronto pool and outdoor swims in small lakes starting in May, some of those pounds will probably come off, says Lumsdon. The Solo Swims of Ontario associatio­n requires that in the 12 to 24 hours before a crossing, a swimmer’s crew must confirm certain minimum conditions. They include: a water temperatur­e of at least 10C, wind not more than 19 km/h, and waves not more than one metre, trough-to-crest. Lumsdon’s 29-year-old daughter, Jana Lumsdon Jarnecic, who lives in Australia, will be here for her mother’s swim and continuing the Lumsdon tradition of “pacing,” or swimming near the person crossing the lake for periods of time. Swimmers find it encouragin­g and it helps them keep up a certain pace. Lumsdon’s late mother, Joan, paced Marilyn Bell that last 16 kilometres of her swim. “She’s the one who jumped in with her bra and underwear on,” said Lumsdon. Her mom didn’t have a bathing suit with her at the time, but wanted to lend support to her friend Bell, who would later call her “one of my life’s most precious treasures” in a letter read at Joan Lumsdon’s memorial service in 2000.

On this swim, Lumsdon feels her age and lengthy swim and coaching experience will stand her in good stead.

“I think age is probably a good factor for me,” she says. “I know what to expect . . . my big thing is just getting across. If it takes me 30, 40 hours . . .”

At this point, coach Shimano, who sometimes gets seasick, breaks in: “If it takes you 40 hours, you’re going to lose friends.” They both laugh and Lumsdon continues: “I don’t care how long it takes me. It’s not a race. I just have the urge to go in there and swim. It would be nice to have the record — it’s a bonus.”

Lumsdon will be accompanie­d by a film crew making a documentar­y about her life.

“They’ve been following me for two years,” she says. As a single mother of three now-grown children, formerly married to an alcoholic, life hasn’t been easy. “But it’s made me really strong . . . I can get through a lot because I’ve been through a lot.”

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO/TORONTO STAR ?? Swimmer Kim Lumsdon, 56, has crossed Lake Ontario twice. She’s aiming to become the oldest female swimmer to do it.
CARLOS OSORIO/TORONTO STAR Swimmer Kim Lumsdon, 56, has crossed Lake Ontario twice. She’s aiming to become the oldest female swimmer to do it.
 ?? CARLOS OSORIO/TORONTO STAR ?? Kim Lumsdon, 56, trains at the U of T’s athletic centre pool Thursday. Lumsdon is getting ready to make her third crossing of Lake Ontario this summer and set a record while she’s at it.
CARLOS OSORIO/TORONTO STAR Kim Lumsdon, 56, trains at the U of T’s athletic centre pool Thursday. Lumsdon is getting ready to make her third crossing of Lake Ontario this summer and set a record while she’s at it.

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