Women
Diana Nyad Makes History with Cuba to Florida Swim!
The fifth attempt for 64-year-old, out swimmer Diana Nyad to cross from Cuba to Florida is nearing a successful end.
September 02 2013 2:13 PM EST
November 08 2024 6:35 AM EST
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With rainbow flags and American flags on the beach, endurance swimmer Diana Nyad arrived in Key West and set a record that she has chased for three decades.
CNN reports that Nyad walked onto Smather's Beach on her own, completing the 110 mile swim from Cuba to Florida that she had tried to make four times before. She broke the first record early Monday morning for having gone further than anyone else.
Nyad first tried back in 1978, but enormous waves forced her to quit after 42 hours. When she tried in 2011, Nyad said she "hadn’t swum a stroke for 31 years." In 2012 she made it 41 miles before hypothermia, storms, and jellyfish stings forced her to abandon the effort. Still, she set out for one last try, leaving from Cuba on Saturday morning for the fifth time. As she approached the coastline, Nyad paused and treaded water to talk with the team of people who follow her on the trip and express her thanks.
"I am about to swim my last two miles in the ocean," she told them, according to a blog on her website. "This is a lifelong dream of mine and I'm very very glad to be with you. Some on the team are the most intimate friends of my life and some of you I've just met. But I'll tell you something, you're a special group. You pulled through; you are pros and have a great heart. So let's get going so we can have a whopping party."
Nyad is known for her outrageous swim attempts, including circling Manhattan Island in seven hours and 57 minutes in 1979 and for completing what was then the longest swim in history, a 102.5 miles from the Bahamas to Florida.
She has since been named to the U.S. National Women’s Sports Hall of Fame and the International Swimming Hall of Fame.