Where did you learn to swim?
Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 3:19 pm
Where/when did you learn to swim?
Normally this would be a pretty mundane subject but it could be an interesting one! At the time of our youth learning to swim could be an adventure, many times not a good one. How many friends of yours did not learn to swim or were afraid of the water?
Today most kids learn to swim at the YMCA or at a local pool.
In our time I don’t think that was the case.
We had a lot of places to swim including: Orchard Beach, Nichols and Georges Beaches, Bronx Pool and Beach, probably the most common. But there were many other places, especially if your family had a car, like Jones Beach, Tibbets Brook, The Rockaways Greenwood Lake, and other close by lakes. Some of us even swam in Bronx Park above the dam where people could rent a row boat. To see a “few local urchins” jumping bared-ass off the rocks and enjoying their swim on a hot summer day might have been a bit disconcerting to some. Unfortunately, not many girls (any?) partook of this enjoyment, at least to my knowledge (please refute this).
Also in the summertime the community center organized trips to Monroe high school to go for a swim. Of course you had to be a boy and you had to swim naked. Why did they always discriminate against girls? It would have been great to see some girls at the pool “au naturale”. But unfortunately…
Do you remember how you learned to swim and where? Also how about adventures or misadventures you had when first learning to swim.
I recall a few misadventures I had in learning to swim.
At Orchard Beach when I was real young( maybe 7-8) I fell in a big hole and I was sruggling. Luckily, Dutch Learnard, one of the older guys, saw me go under and he pulled me out. There were usually a lot of neighborhood people there in section 13.Another time I was at the Jersey Shore when I was older and got caught away from the beach in a rough surf and I had a bad experience in a rip tide and could not swim back to shore.. I was fighting it and soon I was, exhausted and I didn’t think I would make it. Somehow I was able to reach the beach, probably with a lot of help from prayers. After that I learned not to swim against the rip but to swim perpendicular to it and once away from it then swim to the beach.
Another experience, but a good one, was when I was swimming in the Bronx River where a girl showed me how to swim. It was a great adventure, as she was 13-14 and I was ~9 and she was showing how to swim, clad in only in her bra and panties. Yes, by you must know that I am suffering a case of arrested development due more likely to strict Catholic education. Oh well. Well I hope I have at least 50 years to work this out.
Now I swim with the seniors at the Y.
Normally this would be a pretty mundane subject but it could be an interesting one! At the time of our youth learning to swim could be an adventure, many times not a good one. How many friends of yours did not learn to swim or were afraid of the water?
Today most kids learn to swim at the YMCA or at a local pool.
In our time I don’t think that was the case.
We had a lot of places to swim including: Orchard Beach, Nichols and Georges Beaches, Bronx Pool and Beach, probably the most common. But there were many other places, especially if your family had a car, like Jones Beach, Tibbets Brook, The Rockaways Greenwood Lake, and other close by lakes. Some of us even swam in Bronx Park above the dam where people could rent a row boat. To see a “few local urchins” jumping bared-ass off the rocks and enjoying their swim on a hot summer day might have been a bit disconcerting to some. Unfortunately, not many girls (any?) partook of this enjoyment, at least to my knowledge (please refute this).
Also in the summertime the community center organized trips to Monroe high school to go for a swim. Of course you had to be a boy and you had to swim naked. Why did they always discriminate against girls? It would have been great to see some girls at the pool “au naturale”. But unfortunately…
Do you remember how you learned to swim and where? Also how about adventures or misadventures you had when first learning to swim.
I recall a few misadventures I had in learning to swim.
At Orchard Beach when I was real young( maybe 7-8) I fell in a big hole and I was sruggling. Luckily, Dutch Learnard, one of the older guys, saw me go under and he pulled me out. There were usually a lot of neighborhood people there in section 13.Another time I was at the Jersey Shore when I was older and got caught away from the beach in a rough surf and I had a bad experience in a rip tide and could not swim back to shore.. I was fighting it and soon I was, exhausted and I didn’t think I would make it. Somehow I was able to reach the beach, probably with a lot of help from prayers. After that I learned not to swim against the rip but to swim perpendicular to it and once away from it then swim to the beach.
Another experience, but a good one, was when I was swimming in the Bronx River where a girl showed me how to swim. It was a great adventure, as she was 13-14 and I was ~9 and she was showing how to swim, clad in only in her bra and panties. Yes, by you must know that I am suffering a case of arrested development due more likely to strict Catholic education. Oh well. Well I hope I have at least 50 years to work this out.
Now I swim with the seniors at the Y.