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Winter swimming
Until the advent of winter swimming clubs, the swimming season in New
South Wales was usually considered to start on the Labour Day long weekend
in October and go through until around Easter Monday public holiday, the
ANZAC Day (25 April) public holiday, or the end of April.
Winter swimming began in Sydney in the 1920s as a way for men to maintain
fitness in the off-season for swimming and surf lifesaving competitions.
Winter swimming clubs from that era include the Bronte Splashers as well as
the famous Bondi Icebergs.
After WWII, winter swimming soared in popularity.
Winter swimmers do not wear wetsuits, so it's not surprising that winter
swimming clubs have well-established drinking as well as swimming
traditions. Some winter swimmers attribute their health, longevity and their
ability to withstand cold water to drinking a concoction of rum and Bonox.
Some clubs are highly formalised, others are loose associations of
individuals. Many winter swimming clubs have strong links with the surf
lifesaving movement and often draw their members from surf clubs..
The Bondi Icebergs are not the only winter swimming club with strict
attendance requirements for their members. Members of the Tuggerah Tuffs who
go on holiday during winter and want to keep their attendance record intact
have to go to another winter swimming club's meeting and bring a signed
letter back to the Tuffs as proof
Most winter swimming clubs remained men-only into the late twentieth century, but
even the Bondi Icebergs now have female members. The Bondi Mermaids club,
which formed when the Bondi Icebergs were not accepting female members, also
has both female and male members.
In 2003, female winter swimmers competed for the first time in their own
championship events at an officially sanctioned winter swimming carnival.
Although women have been accepted as members by most local clubs since the
late 1990s, objection
from the few remaining all-male clubs meant women had not previously been
able to compete at a representative level in events sponsored by the Winter
Swimming Association of Australia (WSAA).
Not all the NSW winter swimming clubs are associated with ocean baths; some
are based at non-tidal pools. Winter swimming championships have been staged
at inland aquatic centres and now even include competitors wearing the same
style of full-length body suits that are used by Ian Thorpe and many other
Olympic swimmers. Competitors at the Australian winter swimming titles
include former Olympic swimmers and relay events for the over-80s.
Like NSW, Victoria and Western Australia also have winter swimming clubs.
The 2004 Australian winter swimming championships were held in the Illawarra
at Unanderra in a non-tidal pool.
Winter swimming clubs often raise funds for charities.
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