Close X
Monday, October 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

East Coast Takes The Plunge In Polar Bear Swims

IANS, 01 Jan, 2017 05:46 PM
    An octogenarian, with the words "Happy 2017" scrawled across his body in permanent marker, took the inaugural leap into the Atlantic Ocean in one of the first polar bear swims of the year.
     
    Eighty-two-year-old Arnie Ross, clad in coral swim trunks, was the first of more than 250 people to jump off the wharf in Herring Cove, N.S., on Sunday.
     
    Organizers said it was the best turn-out since the first polar bear swim in Herring Cove in 1994.
     
    Ross has there almost since the beginning — it was his 21st year participating in the New Year's Day tradition, and he doesn't plan on quitting anytime soon.
     
    "My own belief is a lot of people come to see me to see if I'm going to die this year when I hit the water," Ross said. "I'm not going to because I plan to live to over age 100."
     
    East Coasters, like those in the Halifax suburb of Herring Cove and others in Charlottetown, were the first of thousands across the country to ring in the new year by dipping into Canada's frigid waters today.
     
    In Toronto, hundreds more ran into Lake Ontario: some in costume, others in bathing suits.
     
    "I think this is definitely the coldest I've ever been," said Cait Caulfield, who bundled herself in a reflective emergency blanket after her dip in the lake.
     
    But the adrenaline rush was worth it, she said. She's planning on coming back next year, and she'll bring friends.
     
    About 40 kilometres down the road, in suburban  Oakville, Ont., 700 people ran into the lake at another event. They had been told to wear red and white to mark Canada's sesquicentennial year, and money raised from donations went to charity.
     
    Vancouverites were to take part in this year's edition of the oldest and largest "Polar Bear Club" in Canada later Sunday.  Last year there were more than 2,000 participants.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Extreme fire activity' expected in Nova Scotia as wildfire grows

    'Extreme fire activity' expected in Nova Scotia as wildfire grows
    The department said the blaze in the Seven Mile Lake area had been about 15 per cent contained, even as it grew more than 100 hectares to 350 hectares.

    'Extreme fire activity' expected in Nova Scotia as wildfire grows

    Whale Watchers Witness Battle Of Behemoths In Waters Off Vancouver Island

    Whale Watchers Witness Battle Of Behemoths In Waters Off Vancouver Island
    Several whale watching boats at the western edge of the Salish Sea off Jordan River on Vancouver Island spotted a group of transient orcas surrounding two adult humpback whales and a calf on Sunday.

    Whale Watchers Witness Battle Of Behemoths In Waters Off Vancouver Island

    Quebec Teen Found Dead In B.C. River After Being Swept Away While Fishing

    Quebec Teen Found Dead In B.C. River After Being Swept Away While Fishing
    RCMP in the southeastern B.C. community of Nakusp say searchers located the body of Zacharie Blouin on Aug. 7.

    Quebec Teen Found Dead In B.C. River After Being Swept Away While Fishing

    House Fire Leaves One Dead, Two With Smoke Inhalation In Pitt Meadows, B.C.

    House Fire Leaves One Dead, Two With Smoke Inhalation In Pitt Meadows, B.C.
    The body of a man in his 40s has been found in the home, about 40 kilometres east of Vancouver. 

    House Fire Leaves One Dead, Two With Smoke Inhalation In Pitt Meadows, B.C.

    Film On Arvind Kejriwal To Premiere At Toronto International Film Festival

    Film On Arvind Kejriwal To Premiere At Toronto International Film Festival
    Directed by Khushboo Ranka and Vinay Shukla, "Udegi Dhool", which is 95 minutes long, has been distilled from 400 hours of real behind-the-scenes footage shot through a year. 

    Film On Arvind Kejriwal To Premiere At Toronto International Film Festival

    Torstar Laying Off More Than 50 People, Job Losses At Toronto Star, Tablet App

    Torstar Laying Off More Than 50 People, Job Losses At Toronto Star, Tablet App
    TORONTO — The company that owns the Toronto Star is laying off more than 50 people.

    Torstar Laying Off More Than 50 People, Job Losses At Toronto Star, Tablet App