Swimming Across the Atlantic

Suppose I attempt to swim across the Atlantic. For sake of argument lets suppose that getting tired, eating, drinking, and sleeping are not factors. What are the chances that some EXTERNAL factor (sharks, boat propellers, giant whirlpool etc) would prevent me from completing the journey?

Well, I can’t quote figures, but from experience, I’d say that your biggest danger is going to be hypothermia. That thar ocean is cold! Brr!

Extreme sunburns might be the next most likely cause of death, because umpteen hours in the water is going to defeat even the best sunblock.

Then maybe sharks.

I think the whirlpool is rather far down on the list…

Are we assuming that there is no external support structure here? No boat puttering alongside with staff to reapply sunblock and the like?

No external support.

What about desquamation?

I think it’s going to be quite difficult for an unsupported swimmer to maintain a proper course - sure, you could tread water every now and again to take a bearing, but I think you might end up meandering to the extent that the distance to be swum becomes significantly greater.

unneeded post

Just being in the water that long will do horrible things to your skin like make it swell and crack to the point where you probably couldn’t survive it after a few days. I think huge waves could be a big threat also.

[Hijack] Could someone swim across the Atlantic with the support in place? taking breaks along the way? [/hijack]

Benoit Lecomte

[hijack] I think it’s funny that of all the things we hear about in the news that get 24/7 coverage (Paris, OJ, Britney, etc), stuff like this guy’s SWIMMING ACROSS THE ATLANTIC OCEAN just gets swept under the rug. Geez! Thanks for sharing, Exapno. [/hijack]

That’s amazing but hardly 600km??

Maybe they mean 6000 km. I wonder why he picked that area to do it, instead of swimming between South America and Africa, a mere 2800 km.

Maybe helpful currents (NAD)? Maybe more sharks etc. in tropical waters?

Holy crap, I didn’t know someone actually did it.

I’m not actually sure a person could do it without support: it would take too long and you still need to eat and drink.

Presumably because he would first have had to swim 8,000 km from Cape Cod to Rio.

Strong West to East currents. He slept onboard the support boat while it was floating with a drift sock out. While he swam for 6-8 hours each day, the currents pushed him towards France 24X7.

I asked about this guy a couple of years ago. I still don’t believe it. He would have to average 51 miles a day, every day. That’s just over 2 miles an hour, for 24 hours. Even if he swam for 12 hours a day that’s 4 miles an hour, as fast as the fastest Olympic swimmer in the 1500. Even the best swimmers in the world couldn’t do that much swimming that fast, I would say most don’t even do that in a year.

I think there’s something really fishy about the guy as I’ve never heard of him doing anything else. Nor does he get talked about on any swimming boards or magazines.

It petty much breaks the rules in most peoples mind if they can leave the water. None of the other feats like swimming the English Channel allow the people to get out of the water and rest or sleep.