Mon. Nov 25th, 2024

Strong rain was not enough to dampen the spirits of a record team of 150 swimmers from The Armidale School who made up almost half of all entries in this year’s 2km Coffs Ocean Swim on 7 April.

“It was very different conditions to last year with quite a bit more chop and a current pushing us all to the south of the harbour which added a twist to the race and made us work a bit harder. But the water was beautiful, it was warmer in the water than out of it,” said Year 10 student Bella Henderson, who led the TAS team across the finish line for the second consecutive year and was the 34th finisher overall.

Large enough to warrant their own official start, the TAS team wore blue caps not only to be distinct, but to give visibility to the important issue of mental health.

“This is the last event for Blue Week at TAS which is about giving profile to the Blue Tree Project which encourages people to have conversations about mental health. It’s such a special swim for TAS to spread the message about a good cause – I didn’t go into the race to win, but it was the cherry on top to come on top,” she said.

Eleven year old Lachlan Wood was the youngest in the TAS team, spending just over an hour in the water in his first two kilometre ocean swim.

“I did the six hundred one last year and have also swum a kilometre in the Armidale pool so it wasn’t as bad I thought it was going to be. Because of the swell there was a challenge not to swallow the sea water and also to keep my strokes at the end when I was getting a bit tired, but it was really good and I’m pretty proud of myself for doing it,” he said.

Amongst the course marshalls on rescue boards were a number of TAS Year 12 students who last year completed their surf bronze medallions as part of the school’s surf lifesaving program, run in conjunction with with Sawtell Surf Life Saving Club which organises the Coffs swim.


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