10 Quick Tips for Swim Sighting
Open Water, Swim Technique
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August 6, 2013
Swim Sighting Technique - The Basics
Open water swim sighting is an essential skill to up your game in both triathlon and distance swimmer events. Here is some basic advice for beginners looking for a way to get started developing their approach to leveraging the benefits of practicing informed swim sighting. Here are 10 quick tips.Pre-Race Swim Sighting Tips
- Tip 1 Use polarized swim goggles: Polarized lenses reduce the annoying glare present in sunny conditions, restoring definition to your field of vision.
- Tip 2 Treat your lenses with anti-fog spray: No matter how good a swimmer you are, without clear vision, you're bound for trouble. Check to see if your goggles still have their anti-fog coating. If not, treat them before race day so you're prepared.
- Tip 3 Know the swim course: Try to do your swim training on the actual swim course and learn shore landmarks. Sighting the finish relative to larger marks (trees, houses, etc) will help you stay on course, saving time and energy.
Swim Sighting Tips For Race Day
- Tip 4 Keep your head low: If conditions allow, lift your head from the water just high enough to raise your eyes above the surface and quickly scan your swim course position and surroundings.
- Tip 5 Swim a straight line: Many beginners tend to string the buoys together, using a series of line segments to plot their course instead of a straight line. Choose a straight line that keeps your swim within the legal swim marker buoys, instead of bouncing to buoy to buoy.
- Tip 6 Use other swimmers to sight: Following other swimmers instead of doing your own sighting can be risky on longer courses, but is especially useful for a quick check to see if you're still on target. Swimmer feet and swimmer bubbles make excellent targets that are easy to see underwater in most conditions.
- Tip 7 Sight from on high: When it comes to sighting, it pays to take the high road. Under rougher conditions, execute your sighting on top of the waves, not in the wave trough. The higher you are on the wave - the more you'll see.
- Tip 8 Breath strategically: Breathing should not be done during forward sighting, combining the two encourages swimmers to lift their heads higher than necessary, creating considerable drag and breaking good swim stroke form.
- Tip 9 Don't slow down: Don't disrupt your stroke. Learn to keep your stroke moving and increase your swim kick effort during sighting, to make sure your lower body stays in a horizontal plane, without dropping deeper into the water and slowing your progress.
- Tip 10 Pace your sighting: Develop your system for frequency of sighting. Ideally you should be able to swim in a relatively straight line for 20-30 second intervals, but more frequent sight checks may be required to build towards this goal.
- Open Water Swim Safety
- Lap Swimming Etiquette
- Safer Swimmer Open Water Swimming Buoy Review
Learn More Swimming Tips:
- Bilateral Breathing For Swimmers
- Swimming Tips For Beginners: Basic Gear, Pool Etiquette, and Overcoming Inertia
- Swimming Technique: 3 Ways To Improve Speed (Butterfly Edition)
- Swimming Technique Part Two: 3 Ways To Improve Speed (Backstroke Edition)
- Swimming Technique Part Three: 3 Ways To Improve Speed (Breaststroke Edition)
- Lap Swimming Etiquette
- 15 Meter Resurfacing Markers – The Underwater Swimming Rule
- The Benefits of Swimming: 5 Ways Swimming Improves Your Life
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