56 year old woman swims across the Atlantic!

They posted this story on her facebook fan page in November without any corrections. So in my opinion they did not mind the “mistaken ideas” about that swim.

AP article ShareMonday, November 17, 2008 at 12:18pm http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2008/more/11/14/transatlantic.swim.ap/

November 14, 2008
Woman attempting to swim across Atlantic Ocean
By ANTONIO GONZALEZ
Associated Press Writer

The Catamaran isn’t even out of Biscayne Bay yet, and already 56-year-old mother-turned-adventurer Jennifer Figge is giddy with excitement. She’s squeezing into her wetsuit for a final test before her latest endeavor — one that even her own crew calls crazy.

The plan goes something like this.

She will swim 2,100 miles, from the Cape Verde Islands off Africa to Barbados. She’ll do it in a shark cage attached to a sailboat, swimming for six to eight hours a day without rest. The journey will take about two months, and would make her the first woman on record to swim across the Atlantic Ocean.

“I’m saving lots of money,” she jokes. “I only have to buy a one-way ticket.”

The way Figge sees it, she’s been planning the expedition since she was 11 years old.

During a flight to Italy with her mother, Margaret Roberts, a storm was brewing below the plane. While most children would have been scared, Figge had other thoughts.

“I told my mother, ‘I hope that lightning hits the plane and we get to go down in the middle of the Atlantic and get into those cool life vests and swim the rest of the way,’” she said.

She and her family have always lived a bit large. Her mother was a longtime professional opera singer. Her husband was a successful banker who is now retired. And Figge’s son, Alex, is a race-car driver in the .

It was through him that she found endurance sports. He asked her to stop smoking for his 7th birthday, and when she did, she had to replace her cigarette addiction with another habit…

In all, Figge has now conquered more than 3,000 miles running and crossed almost 25 channels swimming (they have ranged from eight miles in length to a few hundred miles), battling the elements all over the planet.

She fought through eight-foot-swells and was stung by a man-of-war on her left leg during a 52-mile, three-day swim from Cay Sal Bank north of Cuba to Marathon Key last year. She dodged rock-throwing Gypsies and outran hungry dogs during a 350-mile run across Romania. She swam through waters contaminated with sheep manure when she crossed the Straits of Tiran off Egypt, and wind gusts near 80 mph lifted her off her feet in the Black Sand Desert during a 300-mile run across Iceland.

Each time, she was left wanting more.

“I haven’t really had many challenges in life, so I have to challenge myself,” Figge said. “Pushing myself to the limit is the only way I know how.”

Figge would not be the first to swim across the Atlantic, but she would apparently be the first woman.

Frenchman Benoit Lecomte is believed to have been the first to record a trans-Atlantic swim. He swam 3,716 miles from Cape Cod, Mass., to the Brittany region of France in 1998. The journey took him 73 days, stopping along the way at the Azores Islands.

In 1994, another Frenchman, Guy Delage, claims to have swum the same route that Figge will attempt, but with a kickboard. His swim was unsupervised and has not been authenticated.

Captain Bill Ray, who has accompanied Figge on some of her swims, was first approached about the trans-Atlantic journey last year. Figge gave him a blank check, and next to the “For” section at the bottom, she wrote: Deposit to Swim Atlantic.

“I thought she was joking,” Ray said. “Then I realized she wasn’t kidding, and I thought this was crazy. But I was intrigued.”

The plan has slowly come together.

The customized Catamaran — fittingly named Carried Away — has a makeshift shark cage made of Kevlar attached to the back. The odd contraption, designed by a Miami-based team of engineers, has drawn stares and photos daily at the Coconut Grove marina in Miami.

“People are always asking questions. They don’t know if it’s a shark cage, shrimp net or some movie prop or something,” said Aurora Ziella, an engineer who helped design the cage. “Little do they know it’s for a swimmer.”

The Catamaran will carry Figge, Ray, a doctor and at least one crew member and diver on a trek that will cost at least $250,000. The sailboat will be using its motor much of the way to slow down for Figge, consuming more than 700 gallons of fuel. Figge hopes to get sponsors to defray some of the cost, and Ray also has footed part of the bill.

But the physical endurance, especially for a 56-year-old, won’t be easy.

Dr. Jerry Homish, a family friend who has sailed with her on other swims and will make this trip, estimates Figge will burn more than 8,000 calories a day. Her diet, which is still being worked out by a nutritionist, will load up on carbohydrates in the morning and protein at night, including Figge’s favorite: cold pasta and potatoes. The crew will toss her water and electrolytes as needed during swims, and she’ll finish off her day… with a caffeine-loaded soda.

“It will be an incredible physical and mental test not just for Jennifer, but for the crew, to be at sea for two months and not tire or go crazy,” said Homish, an emergency medical specialist at the Holzer Clinic in Athens, Ohio. “But as impossible as it sounds, she is physically up to this. Her body can handle this sort of extreme endurance.”

Figge, who trains above 8,000 feet at her home in Aspen, Colo., will swim in a wetsuit that deflects the harmful rays of the sun. The workouts will be strenuous, causing her to vomit two or three times a day during these long swims. Her main thoughts in the deep blue ocean, she said, will be trying not to break her rhythm — three strokes and turning for air — and concentrating on finishing her .

“I’ve always dreamed about being this little thing in the big ocean,” she said. “The cage is my playpen. It’s like a big french fry basket.”

The Catamaran will be shipped to Spain or France in mid-November, and the crew will sail it down to the Cape Verde Islands, where Figge already will be waiting, “waving to them on the beach so they can pick me up.” The crew is hoping to set sail Dec. 1, a day after Hurricane season ends.

“They say it takes a message in a bottle 60 days to get across the ocean,” Figge said. “So we’re going to send out a bottle, and I’m going to try to do it in 57 days.”

Christmas and New Year’s Day will be celebrated in the ocean. Figge might even make a little tree for the boat.

She knows some will perceive her journey — and even her — as crazy. She’s not sure they’re wrong, but she’s out to prove she can complete her swim.

“I wouldn’t be doing this if I functioned on common logic,” Figge said. “Those who don’t know the impossible are the ones who make things possible.”

http://photos-d.ak.fbcdn.net/photos-ak-snc1/v375/50/123/31076423324/n31076423324_1118907_7826.jpg

She knows some will perceive her journey — and even her — as crazy.\
**
Here’s the one true statement in her story…SHe now gets into the cheater’s hall of fame, next to Rosie Ruiz…

Here is a little prophetic email exchange I had with her PR person when I tried to befriend the ultra swimmer on facebook.

On Tue, Nov 18, 2008 at 11:30 PM, Herbert Krabel herbert@slowtwitch.com wrote:
David,
I am actually the news editor for a big triathlon magazine. As for being a
fan, that’ll have to wait until I learn a bit more about Jennifer. :slight_smile:

Best,

Herbert Krabel

Editor-In-Chief

w: http://www.slowtwitch.com http://www.slowtwitch.com/
e: herbert@slowtwitch.com
p: +1(423)285-8529

Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail.

------ Forwarded Message
From: Facebook <notification+ocs99296@facebookmail.com mailto:notification%2Bocs99296@facebookmail.com >
Reply-To: noreply noreply@facebookmail.com
Date: Tue, 18 Nov 2008 20:19:36 -0800
To: Herbert Krabel herbert@slowtwitch.com
Subject: Jennifer Figge sent you a message on Facebook…

Jennifer sent you a message.


Subject: Jennifer Figge

Hello! Thanks for the friend request. However, this is Jennifer’s admin-only
site.

Instead, please go to the following Facebook page and join as a “fan”:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Jennifer-Figge/31076423324

Enjoy!

well this is interesting

http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/blog/fourth_place_medal/post/The-great-Atlantic-Ocean-swimming-hoax?urn=oly,140525

Joey G.

How does someone swim across the ocean solo? That sounds scary as hell. Do they pull a dinghy?

They posted this story on her facebook fan page in November without any corrections. So in my opinion they did not mind the “mistaken ideas” about that swim.

this is so weird and sad. she (they) obviously had zero chance of fooling anyone. what was her intention with this…i mean, she obviously didn’t come anywhere NEAR ‘crossing’ the ocean. it’s really bizarre that they would go along with that story, yet they didn’t even bother to make it look anywhere near believable or possible for that matter. it appears that none of the crew has ever heard of a calculator or taken math past grade 3.

are you guys really unfamiliar with personalities like this?

its like people that do a 17 hour ironman then name drop their ironman completion whenever possible.

or winning your age group some local duathlon by getting real lucky with the lack of talent in your age group and bragging on the internet about it

oh wait, that was me…

All these complaints, and I haven’t heard anything about the shark-proof cage or the wetsuit. Post this article on a swimming website, like the guys from the English Channel Association’s site, and they will discredit the swim based on those two things alone. No wetsuits, no cages. Oh, and only swimming 10 percent of the distance doesn’t help either.

are you guys really unfamiliar with personalities like this?

its like people that do a 17 hour ironman then name drop their ironman completion whenever possible.

or winning your age group some local duathlon by getting real lucky with the lack of talent in your age group and bragging on the internet about it

oh wait, that was me…
presumably you completed the entire event before bragging about winning though, right? not her…

The shark cage doesn’t bother me really plus many people who cross big bodies of water wear wetsuits.
John, How about you making a real attempt?

On her Facebook page it says "My open-water swim will support Volvic’s “Drink 1, Give 10 program to benefit UNICEF”. Drink 1 give 10, swim 1 sail 10, maybe there’s something to that.

The wetsuit bothers me a lot more than the shark cage. If I were to make an attempt, to make it legit, I wouldn’t even consider bringing the wetsuit. The cage might be another story. I’ve never swum anywhere more than ~3 or 4 miles offshore, so I don’t know how I’d go on that one.

I would like to make a real attempt. I just need a sponsor to fork up about $2million for all the expenses related to this. Any takers?

The shark cage doesn’t bother me really plus many people who cross big bodies of water wear wetsuits.

Nothing compares to Martin Strel.
http://www.amazonswim.com/main.php
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Strel

Amazon
Danube
Yangtze
Mississippi

Strel swam the Amazon River, commencing on February 1, 2007 , finishing 66 days later on April 7, 2007. If verified this would be another record-breaking distance of 3,274 miles (5,268 km), longer than the width of the Atlantic Ocean. He had escort boats that poured blood into the river to distract meat-eating fish such as piranhas and sharks. Though this is not verifiable
The Nile had been proposed as his next river, but Strel said, “I am not going to do the Nile. It’s long but not challenging enough, it is just a small creek. The Amazon is much more mighty.”

On the subject of distance swimmers:

I ran into Tammy Van Wisse last year, and I asked her, “Are you going to the Olympics now that they have open water swimming?”

Her response: “Nah, it’s only 10k—it’s too short.”

http://www.tammyvanwisse.com/

I think her brother races Ironman. I could be wrong, but I think he was in Ironman NZ a few years ago.

On the subject of distance swimmers:

I ran into Tammy Van Wisse last year, and I asked her, “Are you going to the Olympics now that they have open water swimming?”

Her response: “Nah, it’s only 10k—it’s too short.”

http://www.tammyvanwisse.com/

I think her brother races Ironman. I could be wrong, but I think he was in Ironman NZ a few years ago.

She is much, much more attractive than Strel and it seems a whole lot faster. He is just an out-of-shape looking guy who has incredible endurance and persistence.

I love sites that talk about world records. For example I have the world record 5.1 mile run from my house both clockwise and counter-clockwise around the nearby subdivision. To me it is not a world record unless it is either site dependent e.g. longest continous swim by distance or an accepted common “course” such as the English Channel swim.