Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver, Are You Ready to Take the Dip at the 97th annual Polar Bear Swim?

Vancouver Park Board, 21 Dec, 2016 04:29 PM
    Get ready to take the plunge with thousands of fellow swimmers and revelers on English Bay this New Year's Day. Daredevils can dress-up in fancy costume, compete in the Peter Pantages Memorial 100-yard swim race, or just come out to watch and delight in the spectacle! 
     
    “The Polar Bear Swim is one Vancouver’s iconic events and I look forward to joining thousands dressed up to enjoy our clean ocean water even after this cold snap,” said Park Board Chair Michael Wiebe. “As a former Park Board lifeguard, I intend to take a dip myself and am still pondering the 100-yard swim race.”
     
    Vancouver’s Polar Bear Swim Club is one of the largest and oldest in the world. Ninety seven years ago in 1920, Peter Pantages and nine other brave swimmers started their New Year in style by plunging into the chilly waters of English Bay. Recently, the Vancouver’s Polar Bear Swim has attracted more polar bears around the world, reaching a record of 2,550 polar bears in 2014!   Water temperatures have ranged from 6.5 to 9 degrees Celsius in the past decade.
     
    “My grandfather always considered the swim to be about family, friends, community, fun and tradition. He would be absolutely amazed --as we are-- at how many people in so many places have embraced this crazy fresh start to the New Year. It is marvelous!” says Lisa Pantages, Peter Pantages’ granddaughter who plans to swim for the 54th time.
     
    Participants can download and complete the registration form, and bring it to the swim to avoid lineups and enter a prize draw. 
     
    Participants have a chance to win Polar Bear Swim t-shirts and one-month Flexipass valid at any Park Board facility. Simply share photos of this yer's swim on Twitter and Instagram with the hastag #VanPolarBearSwim.
     
    Cash and food donations for the Greater Vancouver Food Bank will be collected onsite. 
     
    Polar Bear Swim tips:
    • If you have a heart problem – be a spectator!
    • Children must swim and stay with an adult.
    • Please leave your dog at home.
    • Do not drink - alcohol does not warm you up - it accelerates hypothermia.
    • Do not stay in the water longer than 15 minutes. Body heat is lost 25 times faster in water than in air.
    • Do not remove your clothing until swim time. The swim will be started by a flag and siren.
    • Entrants in the 100 yard race - meet in the front line on the north side (Stanley Park side) of the enclosure.
    • First three swimmers to touch the marker buoy by the lifeguard boat - give your names to the lifeguard.
    • After you swim, pick up your commemorative button at the large polar bear or at the registration table.
     
    Find out more about Vancouver’s Polar Bear Swim at vancouver.ca/polar-bear-swim

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadians Pick Common Loon As Favourite To Become Country's National Bird

    Canadians Pick Common Loon As Favourite To Become Country's National Bird
    MONTREAL — The votes are in and, if Canadians have their way, the common loon could one day join the beaver and maple leaf as an official symbol of Canada.

    Canadians Pick Common Loon As Favourite To Become Country's National Bird

    Ontario Tories Win Toronto Byelection After Flip-flopping On Sex-ed Curriculum

    Ontario Tories Win Toronto Byelection After Flip-flopping On Sex-ed Curriculum
    TORONTO — Ontario's Progressive Conservatives won a provincial byelection Thursday in northeast Toronto, but it may have come at a cost.

    Ontario Tories Win Toronto Byelection After Flip-flopping On Sex-ed Curriculum

    Screening Immigrants For 'Anti-Canadian' Values Will Make Canada Safer

    Screening Immigrants For 'Anti-Canadian' Values Will Make Canada Safer
    OTTAWA — Federal Conservative leadership hopeful Kellie Leitch stood firm Friday amid criticisms of a survey from her campaign that asked whether would-be immigrants should be screened for "anti-Canadian" values.

    Screening Immigrants For 'Anti-Canadian' Values Will Make Canada Safer

    Targeted Shooting Leaves One Dead, Says Chilliwack, B.C., Police

    Targeted Shooting Leaves One Dead, Says Chilliwack, B.C., Police
    Police say two victims were found at the scene with gunshot wounds.

    Targeted Shooting Leaves One Dead, Says Chilliwack, B.C., Police

    RCMP Urge End To B.C. Vigilante Groups Targeting Online Predators

    RCMP Urge End To B.C. Vigilante Groups Targeting Online Predators
    The team targets the "worst of the worst offenders" using the Internet to lure children for sexual purposes.

    RCMP Urge End To B.C. Vigilante Groups Targeting Online Predators

    Co-Workers Raise Money, Spirits, Of Cabbie Stabbed In Kamloops, B.C.

    Co-Workers Raise Money, Spirits, Of Cabbie Stabbed In Kamloops, B.C.
    A taxi driver who was critically injured last month says he is overwhelmed by the generosity of his co-workers in Kamloops, B.C., and is already looking forward to returning to the job he loves. 

    Co-Workers Raise Money, Spirits, Of Cabbie Stabbed In Kamloops, B.C.