"_My preference is swimming in the sea. I find the sea is more liberating, wild and good fun rather than plodding up and down a pool._" - Jo Brand,
'Wild' swimming is the only term that covers what we're talking about, really. It's not just 'swimming' because that includes indoor swimming pools; it's not 'outdoor swimming' because that includes lidos and outdoor pools; it's not 'swimming in rivers and lakes', because it also includes seas, oceans, lochs, pools, reservoirs, gravel & sand pits, old quarries, estuaries, firths, ponds, streams and anywhere else you can swim in nature - and then the name would be a bit too long. Wild swimming nails it.
In the early 20th century there were outdoor swimming clubs all over the UK, but they slowly died out as indoor pools were introduced, and our waterways became more polluted. Back then it didn't seem at all eccentric to swim in nature, as it still doesn't on the continent, where lakes often turn into lidos in summer.
It was a different story in the UK as the 20th century progressed. Local authorities discouraged it, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents wanted it stopped (but not mountaineering, horse-riding or hang-gliding), the Environment Agency issued an annual warning not to do it, and the Health & Safety Executive insisted on a life-guard on inland swimming spots.
The River and Lake Swimming Association was set up in 2003, and campaigning resulted in RoSPA changing their focus to alcohol and swimming, the EA stopping their annual press releases, and the HSE changing their life-guard policy to waters where swimming is actively encouraged. So the previous levels of discouragement aren't there any more.
Also, British water bodies are generally less polluted than they were 50 years ago, as manufacturing industries have been exported to the Far East. Whatever that means for the global environment or our economy, it means cleaner rivers, lakes and coastal seas in the UK, which is one of the reasons that wild swimming is taking off again - although agricultural runoff and sewage discharges are a problem, so it's best to check the state of water bodies before swimming in them.
Safety
Legalities
In Scotland it's clear - you can swim anywhere. In England and Wales, it's much less clear, but it's certainly not illegal to swim in most open water.
Landowners next to watercourses own some of the bed, and angling clubs own fishing rights - but no-one owns the water, and that's all you're touching, apart from getting in and out. So check that there's public access to your entry and exit points, and you should be OK.
The Canal & River Trust don't allow swimming in canals or rivers used for navigation. See the River & Lake Swimming Association for more info on legalities.
Practicalities
Other things you can do
Join the Outdoor Swimming Society or the River & Lake Swimming Association and help campaign for more access for wild swimmers.
You can help wild swimmers even if you don't do it yourself, by:
Thanks to Daniel Start of wildswimming.co.uk for information.
Daniel Start runs wildswimming.co.uk. He's a travel writer, photographer and environmental consultant, and author of Wild Swimming Coast, Wild Swimming France, Wild Guide South West and winner of the Writers’ Guild Award for Non-Fiction. He lives at the confluence of two rivers in rural Somerset and is married, with a baby daughter.
Date on Lowimpact:2013-06-10