Goal: Escape From Alcatraz
OK, it hit me like a flash as I rode the Hyde Street cablecar in to work this morning. My new fitness goal should be to do the Escape from Alcatraz Triathlon.
It looks like even getting IN to the Escape from Alcatraz Tri is beyond my current capability, and they’re determining slots now. The event is in June and I’d have a lot of training to do in the meantime. So maybe my goal should be to do a beginner’s tri this year and Escape from Alcatraz in 2005. Hard to say, and I think I need advice from people that are smarter than me.
The hardest part would be the swim: I’m not a swimmer and I have trouble getting into a breathing rhythm even swimming in a pool. 1.5 miles is a substantial length for a newcomer, so building up to that will be a challenge. Add on to that that this is Bay swimming in chilly water and that’s a much bigger deal. The 18 miles on a bike I can pretty much do in my sleep, even 40 lbs overweight like I am and even through the hills of San Francisco. The 8 mile run will be something to work up to as well, but I’m more confident that I could get up to that in 6 months than I am that I could get up to a 1.5 mile swim in six months.
(With one exception) every time I’ve gone to Alcatraz, the Park Rangers have always talked about how it is impossible that anyone that made it out could have survived the Bay waters and escaped. They use as evidence that none of the escapees had ever been reacquired by authorities. They also tell an anecdote (probably true) of one of the wardens taking prisoners to the water’s edge and saying, “OK, now’s your chance for freedom. All you have to do is swim.” and none of the prisoners taking him up on it. Anyway, I always raise my hand and ask if it’s impossible that someone could survive the swim through the icy waters and strong currents, that how is it possible for over 1000 amateur athletes to make the swim each year, and then follow that up with a bike ride and an eight-mile run?
The Rangers say that the convicts don’t have the benefits of a wetsuit, daylight, the (relative) warmth of daytime waters, and a mapped-out route designed to circumvent the worst of the Bay currents. All this is true, of course. A few of the athletes do Escape from Alcatraz without a wetsuit, but not many. Still, if it’s possible for this many people to do it as an event deemed safe enough to be sanctioned by the USAT, a convict desperate for freedom…? I’m not saying it’s certain that any of the escapees did make it, but it’s far from certain that they did not.
As far as none of the escapees ever being reacquired by law enforcement, that doesn’t surprise me at all. If I hated Alcatraz enough to swim through icy waters in the middle of the night, risking being shot if discovered and risking being swept out to the open sea to get chomped by sharks if not discovered, when I reached shore, I’d go straight. I’d find a humble job in the middle of nowhere and lay as low as possible, if not make tracks for Mexico.
In any case, I don’t know when I’ll be going to Alcatraz next, but wouldn’t it be great instead of talking about some other 1000+ athletes that do it each June, to mention that I, myself, had made the swim? Yes, I think that would rock.
Er. No pun intended.
I want to do it too.
I want to do it too.