SWIMMING AROUND THE WORLD
Tokyo had Houston-level humidity and was 96 degrees. The water at the Tokyo swimming pool was at 32C, the lifeguard told me. I googled 32C; that was 90F! It was like swimming in miso soup. Plus, I had to wear a bathing cap, which made the miso even warmer. (You have to wear a cap in Japan.)
Then I found an indoor Tokyo pool, which was cooler, temp-wise. My son the musician sneaked me into his hotel, and on floor 15 there was a three-lane lap pool. No kiddie area. Just lanes. That’s class. I had to wear a bathing cap there, too.
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I was visiting my daughter’s family in Chicago this summer. It was 93 degrees. No lockers at the Chicago pool. I changed into my swimsuit in the locker room, but I couldn’t store clothes or valuables. I had to take everything to the pool deck. I said to a lifeguard, “What — no lockers?” Alfred E. Neuman-style. The guard said nobody would steal anything.
A couple hundred people — like in Tokyo — tried to chill in the heat. Nobody stole anything.
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Cumberland Pool
Cumberland Pool in Cleveland Heights has 14 lap lanes. Name a pool with more lap lanes. The city adds lanes and reduces the kiddie area, probably because Cleveland Heights is boomer central, with many elderly lap swimmers and lap joggers.
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My go-to Cleveland swimming pool is the Cleveland Skating Club, which has six indoor lap lanes (and a skating rink). I never have to share a lane, year-round. That seclusion is worth the club dues. I don’t like playing rugby in the water.
Maybe I’ll install a one-person “endless” lap pool/tub where my dining room is. But I haven’t heard much, good or bad, about “endless” tubs.
One last thing . . . in Japan nobody wears flip-flops at pools. It’s all bare feet.
2 comments
I hadn’t really thought about the no flip-flops at Japanese swimming pools. It’s probably because no one wears flip-flops in public baths or at hot springs here — it’s bare feet all the way.
I enjoyed the dip in that Olympic-sized pool in Tokyo, but cycling is still my thing, even when temps hit the 90s. I just douse myself with water from a public faucet and keep moving. And duck into convenience stores for the AC.
Thanks to Dean Hillel Weiss for the suggestion to change “soup” to “miso soup” in the first paragraph.
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