I got started swimming in the
river when I was about a month away from graduating college,
and one of my friends called me from here and said, "Hey,
we're going to do this relay race around Manhattan and we need
a last person—will you join us?" Of course I said
yes, right away, without thinking about it! So I did the race,
and I had so much fun, jumping in the river and swimming through
all the bridges, that I decided that next year I was going to
do the whole race solo.
Everybody talks about Hell's Gate, which is that area where
the Harlem River meets the East River: it's rumored that sometimes,
if the currents are right, the ships can't even get through
it. There was one time that I was swimming in the race around
the city, and I was swimming up the East River, and I was all
excited that I was doing the swim. And then I saw the sign in
front of the FDR Drive that said 155th Street and 8th Avenue,
and I was like, "Sweet! I'm moving up the river!"
And a half an hour later, I was still in front of the sign.
And then another half hour after that I was still in
front of that sign! Eventually I was able to cut through it
and finally make it all the way around.
Another time, on one of the training
swims we did—it was in preparation for setting up the
race around the city—we had a city boat, and we did a
swim from Battery Park, up underneath the three bridges, just
so we could test out the tides. I lived on the East Side at
the time, so I went all the way down to Battery Park, and we
swam all the way around the park, up under the Brooklyn Bridge,
the Manhattan Bridge and Williamsburg Bridge, and when we got
up to near the Water Club, they said, "OK, that's all we
need, you can jump into the boat and we'll go back down to Battery
Park". But I said, "This is silly, I live on the East
Side, I don't want to have come all the way back up here by
subway." So I climbed up on the boat, and we pulled right
up to the Water Club where everybody's eating lunch and having
a lovely afternoon, and like Swamp Thing I crawled
over the barrier by the Water Club, and they threw me my bag
over the side and I got dressed and went back home!
It's a fabulous view, it's a great way to see the skyline and
the bridges—the bridges are much cooler from underneath—and
it's just exciting! I mean, there's only so much excitement
you can create for yourself, swimming in a pool—which
I do manage to do, since I love swimming—but it's so much
more exciting when you have elements of nature ... well, in
this case, city ... it's extreme swimming.