Triathlon Swimming and Breathing

olympian-swimsuits-for-public-sale-speedo-lzr-swim-suit-available-for-pre-o[1]Breathing is a pretty fundamental part of almost every sport šŸ™‚ As far as swimming goes you canā€™t do it underwater without some sort of snorkel.

Itā€™s one of those aspects of swimming technique that is important. So here is some info intended for relative beginners and improvers.

What not to do: Panic, splash a bit, lift your head up by pushing down with your arm/hand and look forwards. Take a quick shallow breath and carry on panicking!

Breathing Action:

  • Exhale continuously and fully from when your mouth enters the water to when it leaves the water
  • Inhale as completely as you can (obviously when your mouth is above the water).
  • ā€œBubble Bubble Breatheā€ is what the kids are told to do.
  • Some people make a noise as they exhale to remind them to keep doing it.
  • In fact, your mouth should ideally be half-submerged at its uppermost point where you are looking horizontally, exhaling. You might be able to do a weird thing with your mouth where you can keep your head a tiny bit more submerged by skewing your mouth halfway up the side of your cheekā€¦makes you look pretty. šŸ™‚ donā€™t worry about this detail too much yet.
  • There should be sufficient time to inhale a fair bit rather than merely sucking in a super-quick half-lungful. If you find this not to be the case you might want to slow down a bit if you can, and focus a bit more on body roll/rotation.
  • Your submerged ear should be somewhere vaguely near your leading arm/shoulder, not heading skywards.
  • Avoid the whale spout ā€“ an observer at the poolside should not see you complete your exhale above water.
  • Exhaling as completely as possible supposedly reduces an inadvertent and uncontrollable panic caused by CO2 remaining in the lungs.
  • Taking in some water and even swallowing it is probably not the end of the world from time to time. If you make a habit of that then you may well find that, in the future, seawater and lake water do not taste as nice as you would imagine.

Breathing Patterns

ā€˜Whatever works for youā€™ is the best advice for relative newcomers. However, it is often breathing that is NOT working.

Furthermore it is likely that open water swimming/sea swimming, at some point, will require you to be able to exclusively breathe on one side. Letā€™s hope itā€™s the side you choose šŸ˜‰

So your longer-term goal needs to be able to support symmetry in your stroke ā€“ this will come from breathing alternately to each side. Being ABLE to breathe to any one side will help you when the wind and waves are crashing around you.

  • From pushing off you should be almost immediately exhaling. You should continue exhaling as you take a stroke or two before taking your first breath. Easier said than done, donā€™t worry too much about this.
  • Breathing every third stroke (splash) is what most people aim for. This isĀ what everyone refers to asĀ ā€œbilateral breathingā€. Itā€™s a good thing, try and do it ASAP.
  • When pool swimming, aim also to alternate the side you take your first breath.
  • Breathing every third stroke is difficult for relative beginners as you will have an oxygen deficit that requires you to breathe more. So half-lengths or complete lengths of breathing to one side is the place to start (alternating the pattern on the return length).
  • You can then progress to 2-3-2-3-2-3-2 breathing. This increases the number of breaths you take per length (compared to 3-3-3-3-3 breathing) whilst maintaining the aim of symmetry. Again, alternate the side of the first breath on each length.
  • Take a breath at each end ā€“ sure why not?

DRILL: Practice swimming slowly with breathing pyramids of 3-5-7-5-3 or variations thereon, use pull buoy if needed.

  • A swim snorkel (Finis) is not a bad idea. It totally eliminates the worry of breathing ā€“ you can concentrate on some other aspect of your stroke. Use the snorkel incorrectly and practice inhaling masses of water and then panicking as you canā€™t get the bit out of your mouth and then further panicking as you have a nose clip on and canā€™t breathe through that either!

DRILL: At some point you will need to look where you are goingĀ in openwater (sighting). This is great because your old breathing style of lifting your head a little and looking forward comes in handy šŸ˜‰

  • Breathe when sighting every 9 or 12 strokes. Alternatively, follow the person in front and hope they are following someone else who is going the right way. Sounds stupid? Youā€™d be surprised!
  • Tumble Turns ā€“ If you are a competent tumble turner you donā€™t need advice on how to breathe when swimming. Taking a breath in before tumbling is advisable šŸ™‚

If your goal is a Half IronMan or longer I would strongly suggest working on a good breathing pattern. Itā€™s a long way in open water. Similarly, if you are targeting shorter, faster races then continually lifting your head to breathe will slow you down no end.

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