Human limits

Crossing it

Humans often create arbitrary physical challenges. The swim from Cuba to Florida is one such challenge. There is no real reason for anyone but a Cuban to try it, yet Diana Nyad tried it 5 times just to see if she could do it. She finally did………. at age 64! Think about the creative energy that goes into something like this.


Fifth attempt
On the morning of August 31, 2013, Nyad began her fifth bid to swim from Havana, Cuba to Florida, a distance of about 110 miles (177 km), accompanied by a 35-person support team, swimming without a shark cage[35] but protected from jellyfish by a silicone mask, a full bodysuit, gloves and booties.[36] Before reaching Florida, Nyad broke Penny Palfrey's 2012 distance record for the Cuba to Florida swim,[discuss] putting Nyad closer to Key West than anyone swimming without a shark cage.[37] At approximately 1:55 pm EDT on September 2, 2013, Nyad reached the beach in Key West, about 53 hours after she began her journey.[4][36]
While not directly questioning the authenticity of her story, some skeptics, including long-distance swimmers, requested the swim's GPS history, surface current, weather, and Nyad's eating and drinking data to verify that her swim was not assisted.
[38][39] The swim's published GPS data was analyzed and graphed on September 8 by The New York Times.[40] After Nyad's September 10 response to questions and her publishing path data and notes from her navigator and two observers, a University of Miami oceanography professor, Tamay Ozgokmen, confirmed the navigator's assertion that favorable Gulf Stream currents explained Nyad's apparently incredible total velocity during certain portions of the swim.[41] The New York Times' public editor observed on September 19 that the focus had shifted from serious questions about possibly resting aboard a boat, to more technical issues relating to whether her crews' touching her while helping with her protective suit formally rendered the swim an "assisted" swim.[42] Nyad had explained that wearing the jellyfish-protection suit was a life-and-death measure that for her superseded the previous "traditions" of the sport.[41]

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