Zürcher Nachrichten - As Olympics brace for Seine dip, rogue swimmers say water's fine

EUR -
AED 4.180093
AFN 72.278693
ALL 94.229674
AMD 419.433929
ANG 2.037861
AOA 1043.741334
ARS 1674.312766
AUD 1.644936
AWG 2.050207
AZN 1.934107
BAM 1.956425
BBD 2.296923
BDT 140.104737
BGN 1.924583
BHD 0.429172
BIF 3397.56712
BMD 1.138213
BND 1.477372
BOB 7.897522
BRL 5.919281
BSD 1.140459
BTN 107.976478
BWP 15.507952
BYN 3.203023
BYR 22308.983435
BZD 2.293632
CAD 1.617509
CDF 2582.606088
CHF 0.921549
CLF 0.026432
CLP 1040.292843
CNY 7.729038
CNH 7.731281
COP 3904.857468
CRC 517.358379
CUC 1.138213
CUP 30.162656
CVE 110.30022
CZK 24.214182
DJF 202.28344
DKK 7.475143
DOP 66.750434
DZD 152.107462
EGP 56.591171
ERN 17.073202
ETB 183.861901
FJD 2.554383
FKP 0.859213
GBP 0.862254
GEL 3.010568
GGP 0.859213
GHS 12.801087
GIP 0.859213
GMD 83.089892
GNF 9992.70789
GTQ 8.700778
GYD 238.596186
HKD 8.924726
HNL 30.512609
HRK 7.534522
HTG 149.107611
HUF 355.324629
IDR 20426.321494
ILS 3.410452
IMP 0.859213
INR 108.339651
IQD 1493.977039
IRR 1565043.48094
ISK 144.00711
JEP 0.859213
JMD 179.516532
JOD 0.806929
JPY 183.88578
KES 147.341598
KGS 99.536645
KHR 4577.039254
KMF 490.569897
KPW 1024.392495
KRW 1746.776325
KWD 0.351663
KYD 0.950403
KZT 554.747135
LAK 25255.064142
LBP 102126.30974
LKR 381.561836
LRD 207.556274
LSL 18.806205
LTL 3.360849
LVL 0.688494
LYD 7.318305
MAD 10.673908
MDL 20.077411
MGA 4764.521349
MKD 61.638165
MMK 2389.550926
MNT 4073.665921
MOP 9.209841
MRU 45.297071
MUR 54.589147
MVR 17.597151
MWK 1977.522752
MXN 19.977103
MYR 4.723072
MZN 72.732668
NAD 18.806205
NGN 1559.488808
NIO 41.963399
NOK 11.146974
NPR 172.761405
NZD 2.007735
OMR 0.437574
PAB 1.140464
PEN 3.860433
PGK 5.001619
PHP 69.891427
PKR 317.18468
PLN 4.283323
PYG 6952.189349
QAR 4.157327
RON 5.247048
RSD 117.412386
RUB 84.798379
RWF 1672.426672
SAR 4.274323
SBD 9.179738
SCR 15.235
SDG 683.496208
SEK 11.081572
SGD 1.475865
SHP 0.849791
SLE 28.170929
SLL 23867.770913
SOS 651.805263
SRD 42.66364
STD 23558.720176
STN 24.506641
SVC 9.979186
SYP 125.809119
SZL 18.800003
THB 37.86727
TJS 10.577578
TMT 3.995129
TND 3.375778
TOP 2.740545
TRY 52.89915
TTD 7.743473
TWD 36.09821
TZS 2987.808014
UAH 51.193146
UGX 4174.332898
USD 1.138213
UYU 45.744607
UZS 13702.375277
VES 702.124347
VND 29963.468823
VUV 135.17255
WST 3.137286
XAF 656.163636
XAG 0.018405
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.076079
XCG 2.055356
XDR 0.816061
XOF 656.163636
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.634261
ZAR 18.81717
ZMK 10245.284419
ZMW 20.458533
ZWL 366.504263
  • BCC

    -0.7400

    71.8

    -1.03%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.11

    -0.23%

  • NGG

    0.6000

    81.57

    +0.74%

  • CMSD

    -0.1200

    21.96

    -0.55%

  • RIO

    -3.7800

    95.58

    -3.95%

  • BTI

    1.8400

    60.74

    +3.03%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.63

    -0.16%

  • BCE

    0.3900

    23.04

    +1.69%

  • GSK

    1.3300

    52.07

    +2.55%

  • BP

    -0.4500

    39.33

    -1.14%

  • RBGPF

    0.9600

    61.3

    +1.57%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4700

    18.16

    -2.59%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    14.05

    -0.5%

  • AZN

    4.5900

    181.02

    +2.54%

  • RELX

    0.3800

    31.21

    +1.22%

As Olympics brace for Seine dip, rogue swimmers say water's fine
As Olympics brace for Seine dip, rogue swimmers say water's fine / Photo: Geoffroy Van der Hasselt - AFP

As Olympics brace for Seine dip, rogue swimmers say water's fine

While the 2024 Olympics will stage events in the Seine river from the ornate Alexandre III bridge, a proud declaration of the waterway's environmental renewal, many swimmers in the capital are already defying decades-long bans to take the plunge.

Text size:

Fears over pollution and safety led to a ban on swimming in the Seine and the Paris canals in 1923, though application of the rules has been relaxed in recent years.

One group of pioneers calls itself "Les Ourcq Polaires" -- a pun invoking polar bears and the name of the canal that is a favourite swimming site, running northeast out of the capital.

In five years, none of their swimmers have been fined, said one member, Laurent Sitbon, and they have been dragged out of the water by police only once.

Thirty years ago, Jacques Chirac, Paris mayor at the time, boasted that the Seine was becoming a "clean river" and that he would soon go for a swim -- though he never did.

But the 2024 Olympic Games organisers plan to hold the triathlon and the open-water swimming events in the Seine, with French authorities investing 1.4 billion euros ($1.5 billion) to clean up the river.

Already pools have been roped off in the Ourcq canal for the annual Paris Plages summer events in recent years, and permanent venues for the general public are scheduled to open in the region by 2025.

On the first Sunday in July, the Polaires organised a dip in the Seine. Swimmers lined the railing on a barge moored at the Ile-Saint-Denis, north of Paris, where the Paralympic athlete's village is being built.

"I can't wait to swim in the Seine! It's something else than a swimming pool," said one swimmer, Celine Debunne.

- 'We've paved the way' -

At 8 pm, with little traffic on the river, around 20 people took to the water for a one-hour outing, covering two kilometres in warm water.

At 25 degrees Celsius (77 Fahrenheit), the temperature "is borderline" too high for a club that has "polar" in its name, said one swimmer, Josue Remoue.

They are just downstream from the setting of French artist Georges Seurat's painting "Bathers at Asniere" from 1884, a time when frolicking in the Seine was common.

"People say, 'You're crazy, you'll get spots'," said Tanguy Lhomme, who was welcoming swimmers to his barge on the recent Sunday.

"As a result, they treat the Seine like a sewer."

Lhomme admits that when he started living on the river in 2017, "it was out of the question for me to get into it".

The club's members go out with inflatable buoys and in groups, which, along with their designated lifeguards, explains why they are "tolerated", Sitbon said.

"The Seine gets a lot of bad press, like all dark-coloured rivers. The colour will never make you dream," said Louis Pelerin, another swimmer.

The Paris police did not respond to requests for comment on their attitude to swimming in the river.

"It's not the pollution but a control of morals that's at the root of it," said Benoit Hachet, a Paris sociology professor who had also dived in.

After summer rains wash dirt from paths and roads into the water, the Parisian authorities post signs banning swimming on the canal banks.

"Pollution is always a great pretext and often a great lie", said Sibylle van der Walt, a German sociologist based in Metz in eastern France, where she campaigns for wild swimming access.

"Whereas in the Nordic countries, people swim at their own risk, in France the mayor is responsible," Van der Walt said.

In the heat waves of recent summers, growing numbers of Parisians have taken to cooling off in the canals.

"More than the Olympics, it's global warming," Hachet said. "In ten years, it'll be 40 degrees. People will go in the water whether its forbidden or not!"

Sitbon also said that attitudes were changing.

"There were only a few of us in 2017. We feel we've paved the way a little."

A.Wyss--NZN