I have mastered the art of swimming underwater backwards and thought I would pass on tips to anyone interested:
Take time to collect your breath and slow down your breathing, taking a couple of deep breaths before you take the final breath to last you the length underwater. The final deep breath will probably be an audible gasp; don’t be afraid to make it.
Give yourself a good momentum when you push off from the wall; you don’t have oxygen time to waste on gaining speed underwater.
Tip your head right back so that the top of your head is at a 180 degree angle from the surface of the water.
Use a backwards breaststroke motion.
Position yourself close to the surface of the water as it will give you more freedom to manoeuvre your head, should you need/want to. It also means that you will avoid banging your head on the bottom of the pool (I speak from trial and error experience).
Look where you are going (that is part of the fun anyway). Have someone swim a normal breaststroke in front of you if it helps.
Let out your breath very, very slowly at regular intervals from your nose, not your mouth. (I have been advised to try a nose peg, but haven't got around to trying this way yet.)
Set yourself a goal – 10 meters, 15 metres, 20 metres, 25 metres and beyond...
In Conversation: Rocky Dawuni
6 years ago
No comments:
Post a Comment