I work in a nice leisure centre and all the open water in Belfast is likely to have corpses floating in it, so I'l take the pool!
Pretty much this, except there are some rivers in the world that have sharks as well... Yes, I am indeed paranoid.TheTim said:Pool? Check
River? Check
Lake? Check
Ocean? Sharks
Exercise actually makes you more susceptible to hypothermia, because you're burning off tons of energy and the water is going to dilute it very quickly. Part of cold water survival is not to swim/tread water if you aren't going to make it somewhere dry.Esotera said:The ocean is generally a lot colder than public pools though, and if you're doing some serious exercise then you'd find it incredibly hard to get hypothermia without staying in the water for several hours.
Even then pools, especially indoor pools, win, because you don't have to contend with wind and spray as well. Also I have never been in a sea/pool/river that reached anywhere near 74F. Most I would guess were about 5-10*C (40-50F)Dags90 said:Exercise actually makes you more susceptible to hypothermia, because you're burning off tons of energy and the water is going to dilute it very quickly. Part of cold water survival is not to swim/tread water if you aren't going to make it somewhere dry.Esotera said:The ocean is generally a lot colder than public pools though, and if you're doing some serious exercise then you'd find it incredibly hard to get hypothermia without staying in the water for several hours.
I guess most people don't go in that early, but my summer camp used to have instructional swim at 9am. Pool usually wasn't higher than 74F, which about where the ocean is now.
Oh I'm well aware, but my fear of sharks is too great.Jaeke said:You have more of a chance being struck by lightning... twice... than to be attacked by a shark. Especially at this time of year.TheTim said:Pool? Check
River? Check
Lake? Check
Ocean? Sharks
That's because Britland has an awful climate. Go take a trip to the Mediterranean sometime.ClockworkPenguin said:Even then pools, especially indoor pools, win, because you don't have to contend with wind and spray as well. Also I have never been in a sea/pool/river that reached anywhere near 74F. Most I would guess were about 5-10*C (40-50F)
Trust me, you've got nothing to worry about. During low-tide you can go out 50 yds and still only be waist high in water, and you can always see below.TheTim said:Oh I'm well aware, but my fear of sharks is too great.Jaeke said:You have more of a chance being struck by lightning... twice... than to be attacked by a shark. Especially at this time of year.TheTim said:Pool? Check
River? Check
Lake? Check
Ocean? Sharks