As triathletes we have our work cut out for us. Why try to excel in one sport when you can take on three at the same time? For most of us, swimming is the least natural of the three disciplines. The vast majority of age group triathletes learn to formally swim as adults. Perfecting breathing, form and technique in a pool is challenging and requires a great deal of work. Adding the element of open water can complicate matters.
As the race season approaches, the transition to open water begins. Just like learning to ride a bike outside is a skill, learning the proper swimming techniques in open water is a skill as well.
Trees’ entrance into the swim discipline was later than most. “I learned to swim at around 24 years of age, so as a pro triathlete I was always one of the weaker swimmers in the field,” said Trees
Swimming is a sport of technique. Even someone with a massive VO2 engine like Trees is not an exception to this rule. He was able to bridge the gap, getting his 1500m swim time from 30 minutes (1:50 per 100 yards) down to 18:33 (1:08 per 100 yards).
His crowning achievement came when he won the World Masters Games 1,500m OWS title in Auckland 2017. “This is the achievement I am proudest of, I proved to myself that I had finally learned to swim in open water,” shared Trees.
Trees’s success is a combination of hard work, consistency and focus on skills development.
Now he wants to share those skills so that others can see a similar progression.