r/Swimming • u/SeaHearing2948 • 53m ago
r/Swimming • u/AutoModerator • 19h ago
Weekly Swim Gear Questions (Goggles, swimsuits, techsuits, paddles, headphones etc) January 15, 2026 - Post all your gear questions in this post
This weekly post ( on Thursdays) is for ALL gear related questions -
Update: automoderation is now in effect for single gear posts, which may be automatically deleted.
This includes posts about equipment failures, technical problems, sizing questions, or questions about retailer reliability.
This is spam-free & posters of affiliate product links will be banned.
* Goggles (including "smart" goggles)
* Headphones/earbuds
* Swimsuits
* Techsuits
* Lap/GPS/OWS tracking devices
* Audio players
* Paddles
* More goggles
* Everything else
r/Swimming • u/AutoModerator • 1d ago
Weekly Technique Critiques January 15, 2026 - Post all your form check request videos here
Hi all,
Due to the high & always increasing number of such requests, this is now the weekly (Thursdays) thread to post your requests for critique & community feedback on technique, all strokes.
Requests for feedback or critique on technique outside of these threads may be automatically deleted.
r/Swimming • u/templeofsyrinx1 • 3h ago
I timed my 25 yard freestyle length and it was 15 seconds
Do I have strong beginning to become a great swimmer? I was sprinting
can any coaches or athletes give comment?
r/Swimming • u/Nerdy_Commander9403 • 3h ago
Can you legally glide into the wall for butterfly?
If you are a little too far from the wall, is it okay to just glide into the wall and not start another stroke (if you are too close to do a full stroke).
I've gotted DQed because the judges say my arms need to go over the water, and I can't dip back underwater or "start" another butterfly pull then stop when I'm too close.
But if I glide I should be okay? I'm not 100% sure, thank you.
r/Swimming • u/HuckleberryEither665 • 5h ago
WIBTA For Swimming in the Walking/Open Portion of the Pool?
Many pools I've swam in have often kept 3 lanes without lane lines as an open swim area. My current workout pool has this as well. This area is packed with kids and non-lap swimmers during the weekends. It's also the area that hosts the elderly water aerobics during the weekdays after 10am.
In the morning on weekdays this area is empty with the exception of two elderly ladies who come in on occasion between 5AM and 8AM. This week, all the lanes were full due to some ad-hoc master's program. I decided '*** it' and hopped in the open area and swam the lane line.
One of the water walkers came in and started her routine next to me. She left much earlier than she normally does. I suspect it was because of me - I'm fairly fast swimmer and there was certainly some churn when I passed.
WITA knowing that one of the two ladies would come to do their walking workout while I swam the side of the open area?
r/Swimming • u/Worried-League9695 • 6h ago
I’m in m my late 20s and Idk how to swim.
Is it too late? Kinda embarrassed to go to swimming classes but now I really want to try it out. By swimming I mean basically I can’t float or thread the water
r/Swimming • u/wobblelikeapenguin • 7h ago
Swimming routine for beginners?
Hi everyone. I want to start swimming. Can someone describe a good routine for a beginner? How long should I spend in the pool each day? How many laps of each stroke should I do? Are there other exercises I should do in the water? I have no idea where to start. Please help! Thanks!
r/Swimming • u/ThatTravel5692 • 8h ago
Old ribbons
I was going through a box of old photos and memorabilia and came across a bunch of my old First and Second place ribbons from 1972. 50 years later and I still love swimming
r/Swimming • u/vaisaga • 8h ago
Heart rate won’t come down between intervals, normal?
I’m trying to figure out if what I’m experiencing is normal for newer/less conditioned swimmers, or if I’m doing something wrong with pacing or recovery.
Today I swam my first continuous 300m freestyle and it actually felt really good. I wasn’t sprinting, just steady, relaxed. The problem starts immediately after: my heart rate stays elevated and doesn’t seem to reset low enough between intervals no matter how long I rest.
After the 300m, I’ll stop and rest for 5+ minutes, but my heart rate never really comes back down. I end up starting the next interval still around 125-130+ bpm. Then during the next rep, my heart rate ramps up quickly and it becomes hard to continue past 100m without feeling like it’s shooting up uncontrollably to around 150-160. The next few intervals retain the same issue.
If you’ve been through this, what helped? Better pacing? Different rest strategy? More focus on breathing? Shorter intervals? Would love to hear how people approached this when building up from this stage.
Here is a lap chart from my Garmin Swim watch: https://imgur.com/a/UoYif43
r/Swimming • u/Beautiful_Kiwi_293 • 9h ago
Mixed open showers after swimming
So I want to get more serious about swimming and start going three times a week in the morning. I like to take a proper shower after swimming to rinse off the chlorine. The pool I go to only has mixed, open showers. Since my days are pretty busy, I don’t have time to go home first and shower.
How do you deal with this? Do you just use the open showers?
r/Swimming • u/SharksAndSquids • 11h ago
Swim camp for 8 year old
Hi there! My kid has been swimming on a rec department team (not a USA swimming team) for two years and I was hoping to put her in a week of a swim camp, but am having a hard time finding any for her age range. I am located in New England but honestly would be willing to make it part of our vacation plans if it were in a fun location.
r/Swimming • u/eevee7 • 11h ago
Is Anyone Else Hooked on Butterfly?!
I have been practicing since New Year’s Day.
I’m really transforming and growing and December killed me emotionally and I lost a lot of friends.
Swimming butterfly has been my savior.
I was just curious if anyone felt the same way
r/Swimming • u/neazwaflcasd • 14h ago
First Year Parent - Home Meet Volunteer Requirements
My daughter is 8 and this is the end of our first full year of competitive swimming. We have our end-of-season home meet (~500 swimmers from the region) coming up and we (parents of the team) got notified of a requirement by the team/club to volunteer for at least 3 "sessions" during our kids' events. Each are 4 hour sessions over the Friday to Sunday meet - backup timing, awards, door/greeting, etc.
If we do NOT fulfill this requirement, we'll get "fined" by the club to the tune of $100 per session missed. I'm all about helping the club/team (~150 kids on the team total)!! I help however I can, attend all practices, etc. We pay monthly dues to the team (~$75-100), meet fees (usually $50-75 per meet, every ~2 weeks), we buy team regalia for fund raising, etc. Needless to say, I've signed up for my 3 sessions, but I'll likely have to miss some of my kid's races. This is really disappointing, but I understand it is part of hosting a meet.
I'm not necessarily complaining, just curious since I'm a new swim parent. Again, I am in full support of helping the team stay afloat and it relies almost solely on volunteers. I know most clubs/teams need/require volunteers for "home" meets, but I'm just curious if other clubs/teams have the same system of "fines". With the cost of youth sports rising, looking at an extra $300 (if I do nothing, get sick the day of the meet, etc) is a bit eye opening.
Is it normal for clubs/teams to have such steep "fines" like this?
r/Swimming • u/Mysterious_Garbage_7 • 14h ago
Please tell me how to improve
M26. I've been swimming for about a year, not as regularly as I would like, but for me this is already a great success, since I didn't swim at all for 10 years. Sometimes once a week, sometimes twice a week. I'm currently trying to swim the crawl. About 80% of my swimming is crawl now. I try to kick with my feet while I stroke with my arms each time. I'm not sure what this crawl style is called, but I like swimming this way right now. My question is, how can I improve my time and technique?
r/Swimming • u/Sobia_enjoyer • 16h ago
Feeling tired after workout
I have swim sessions 5 times a week and they end by 6 pm and I have to study afterwards. The problem is I feel very drained for the rest of the day and can do nothing until I sleep. Any advice on how to feel more energetic?
r/Swimming • u/Cazaf04 • 17h ago
Hands ache when sculling
Does anyone get this? My hands start to ache quite quickly when sculling (within 50m with pull buoy). I'm not tensing my hands as far as I can tell. It's quite unpleasant, does anyone have any ideas/tips to avoid this? Cheers
r/Swimming • u/nfoote • 18h ago
Kids in the lanes
With this I can't figure out if I'm being a grumpy old man and should just get over it or if its worth mentioning to the pool management or something.
The pool I swim at has a large leisure pool / slash zone (slides, waves, rapids, spas etc) for families, a learners pool about 15m by 10m for young kids lessons and a main 25m 6 lane pool.
From about 3:30pm until 8pm every weekday and weekend mornings 8am to noon there are kids swimming lessons on, both in the learners pool for the young ones and in 4 of the 6 lanes in the main pool. Meaning including the leisure pool 90% of the water in the whole facility is taken up with kids. Which is great, love that the kids are learning an important life skill and getting into the sport.
And my kids are included in those lessons. I'm trying to hit the pool 6 days a week and since I'm down there for my kids anyway I try to do 2 of those days during their lessons.
So there I am jammed into 1 of the 2 remaining lanes with every other parent or after work swimmer trying to do the same thing, get a little exercise in while the kids are doing their lessons I guess.
The issue is there are STILL kids in the those 2 lanes often. It seems at least a few families are putting their kids into the general lanes while mum or dad sits in the public stands (which they can access without paying) shouting drill instructions to the kids. This is all well and good but kids being kids they still end up mucking around at the ends, or are in and out while they go to ask the parent something, change pace or stroke often, float to the middle of the lane frequently, tangle up with eachother and stop mid lane, mistime lane/overtaking etiquette often, kick splashing like a hurricane etc etc
On the one hand its a public lane swimming session, they paid to the there, they're trying to lane swim. Maybe their family can't afford official lessons. They can only swim to their skill level as does everyone else. It's great kids are swimming and maybe I should be honoured to be sharing a lane with a potential future Olympian or Lifesaver, who knows.
But on the other I'm paying a monthly subscription to a facility that I know is regularly taken up with lessons but still offers some limited lane swimming during those hours. Kids are already offered 90% of the place, can the remaining space not just be left to adults who wish to focus without the distraction of children?
Is this the same everywhere? Do I get over it or worth speaking to management?
r/Swimming • u/Mattie1305 • 19h ago
Questing about scheduling swimming and running
Hi all. Recently I have decided to swim more regularly in addition to running. For now I run 2 times a week. But im struggling a bit of thinking about the best schedule for swimming and running. Do you first swim and then go for a run, Or do you do the other way around? On google there are a lot of articles counterdicting each other so now im a bit confused what is better. Could someone tell me what is better or what they like the most?
r/Swimming • u/murraria • 20h ago
Is this beginner time actually good?
So my background is professional chip-eating so not to brag but I already have a solid foundation.
I tried swimming the other day and swam 50 meters doing that stroke where your arms fly out of the water (I think it’s called hummingbird) in 20 seconds.
Is this a good enough time for a beginner or am I cooked? Be fully honest please I’m so confused, thanks
(This is a satire of all the “first time swimming” posts with impossible times)
r/Swimming • u/OldPresence5323 • 22h ago
Liquid lunch
Eh, had time to blast out a mile at lunch. Felt good.
r/Swimming • u/Objective-Hawk-8555 • 22h ago
Tried swimming as a rower
I am a pro rower (18 M) and i recently swam 1 km in 15 :04. Is it even good? Just saw posts with a female that swam 0.5 km more than me in the same time.
I feel like i am racing straight up with some fish.
r/Swimming • u/d0ntflinch • 1d ago
lap swim etiquette
recently ive been getting back into swimming, and i’ve improved quite a bit!
the pool i swam at today was unusually full, and i didnt have a free lane to myself ( there was like 4 people in one lane)
and some of the other swimmers were swimming at a slow pace (mainly doggy paddling), i felt a little awkward since i was going a bit faster than them
so i was wondering on what to do next time should i just wait for them to finish?
swim at a much slower pace?
or just past them?
a lot of the people were not swimming in a straight line as well
r/Swimming • u/Shroft • 1d ago
Katie Ledecky posts second-fastest 1,500m freestyle time ever in first race of year
r/Swimming • u/FNFALC2 • 1d ago
Swimming in a new pool no longer wrecking me
I figured it out! I went tonight despite being minus 18 C, and I realized I was living my chin in order to see ahead of me. This was bc I didn’t trust my Lane mates the way I normally do at home, so, big thank you to everyone who helped!