Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD was literally seeing no one as we have no neighbors here Age and play date type stuff has felt awkward for her (she’s not too socially adept). Huge shift from being incredibly lonely for months to being pretty normal again once swim team began. It is a risk but one we feel is better than locking her in for a year. She does not do another sport or activity (beyond instrument).
There are other ways to socialize like online. We will only do the absolute minimum required by the team to hold the spot and do swim lessons where there is one child per lane only.
Anonymous wrote:My DD was literally seeing no one as we have no neighbors here Age and play date type stuff has felt awkward for her (she’s not too socially adept). Huge shift from being incredibly lonely for months to being pretty normal again once swim team began. It is a risk but one we feel is better than locking her in for a year. She does not do another sport or activity (beyond instrument).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The time when I would be concerned is whne you are on the wall. Proximity plus time is exposure. So swimming past someone minimal risk even if they have covid because there is not enough time for most people to be infected. So ideally you would not want more than two to a lane to be safe. You could do more if siblings. But every time a swimming is on the wall next to another swimmer you have proximity and time. That is the issue.
They start from opposite sides of the pool. So there are never more than two swimmers at the wall at a time. And most teams will space them by not having them both rest at the wall. On will remain six feet away until the other pushes off. It can be done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, indoor swimming is too risky. Especially since you cant wear masks when you swim.
When I lived in London I swam outdoors year round. They heated the pools. It worked fine.
No but you mostly breathe out through the water. The droplets will be well mixed with the hypochlorite in the water. And the spacing even at 4/lane is quite good.
With club swim, you are exposed to the same people every. If your team has a good culture and you trust the other families to not come in if there is any positive among extended contacts, then the risk is lowered further.
Like anything else it comes with some risk. This is going to be going on for a while so you need to decide the acceptable risk level, which applies to everything your family does, not just swim. But the risk is pretty low compared to a lot of things people seem to think are ok.
The problem is different families have different risk tolerance. Many are traveling and eating out (excluding employment) and there is a huge risk from those families. People can spread COVID and be asymptomatic.
There have been several reports of COVID on swim teams. NCAP and RMSC.
Those diagnosed contracted covid elsewhere and it didn’t spread to any other members of the team. The health department followed up with the swimmers from both teams.
You are very much minimizing what is going on to justify its all ok. The point is it can very easily spread especially when there are four kids to a lane and they are standing waiting/passing each other and many of the facilities in MoCo are not well ventilated. They were lucky it didn't spread to any team members but one team member can spread it to many. Families like you aren't staying home and not following best practice so it puts families like ours who are at high risk. But, hey, as long as you have your fun and sports, its all good. No need to worry about anyone else.
Anonymous wrote:The time when I would be concerned is whne you are on the wall. Proximity plus time is exposure. So swimming past someone minimal risk even if they have covid because there is not enough time for most people to be infected. So ideally you would not want more than two to a lane to be safe. You could do more if siblings. But every time a swimming is on the wall next to another swimmer you have proximity and time. That is the issue.
Anonymous wrote:
I would hope that people take reasonable precautions but for mental and physical health sports/activities are necessary. To say that we can do nothing for two years is drastic. And if you don't think that this will be an 18 to 24 month event you are naive. I was watching society fall apart after three months of the only activity was to walk/run your neighborhood. We have to be reasonble. Be safe. Yes, those that are bouncing around at restaurants and being socially distant with a billion people are also engaging in risky behavior. How many people do you know are still seeing everyone but sitting outside? Those events have risk too and the more people you do them with the more the risk increases.
If your tolerance for risk is low then you have to circle the wagons and do what is right for you. But unless you are a complete shut in with no outside contact you have a chance to contract it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, indoor swimming is too risky. Especially since you cant wear masks when you swim.
When I lived in London I swam outdoors year round. They heated the pools. It worked fine.
No but you mostly breathe out through the water. The droplets will be well mixed with the hypochlorite in the water. And the spacing even at 4/lane is quite good.
With club swim, you are exposed to the same people every. If your team has a good culture and you trust the other families to not come in if there is any positive among extended contacts, then the risk is lowered further.
Like anything else it comes with some risk. This is going to be going on for a while so you need to decide the acceptable risk level, which applies to everything your family does, not just swim. But the risk is pretty low compared to a lot of things people seem to think are ok.
The problem is different families have different risk tolerance. Many are traveling and eating out (excluding employment) and there is a huge risk from those families. People can spread COVID and be asymptomatic.
There have been several reports of COVID on swim teams. NCAP and RMSC.
Those diagnosed contracted covid elsewhere and it didn’t spread to any other members of the team. The health department followed up with the swimmers from both teams.
You are very much minimizing what is going on to justify its all ok. The point is it can very easily spread especially when there are four kids to a lane and they are standing waiting/passing each other and many of the facilities in MoCo are not well ventilated. They were lucky it didn't spread to any team members but one team member can spread it to many. Families like you aren't staying home and not following best practice so it puts families like ours who are at high risk. But, hey, as long as you have your fun and sports, its all good. No need to worry about anyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, indoor swimming is too risky. Especially since you cant wear masks when you swim.
When I lived in London I swam outdoors year round. They heated the pools. It worked fine.
No but you mostly breathe out through the water. The droplets will be well mixed with the hypochlorite in the water. And the spacing even at 4/lane is quite good.
With club swim, you are exposed to the same people every. If your team has a good culture and you trust the other families to not come in if there is any positive among extended contacts, then the risk is lowered further.
Like anything else it comes with some risk. This is going to be going on for a while so you need to decide the acceptable risk level, which applies to everything your family does, not just swim. But the risk is pretty low compared to a lot of things people seem to think are ok.
The problem is different families have different risk tolerance. Many are traveling and eating out (excluding employment) and there is a huge risk from those families. People can spread COVID and be asymptomatic.
There have been several reports of COVID on swim teams. NCAP and RMSC.
Those diagnosed contracted covid elsewhere and it didn’t spread to any other members of the team. The health department followed up with the swimmers from both teams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, indoor swimming is too risky. Especially since you cant wear masks when you swim.
When I lived in London I swam outdoors year round. They heated the pools. It worked fine.
No but you mostly breathe out through the water. The droplets will be well mixed with the hypochlorite in the water. And the spacing even at 4/lane is quite good.
With club swim, you are exposed to the same people every. If your team has a good culture and you trust the other families to not come in if there is any positive among extended contacts, then the risk is lowered further.
Like anything else it comes with some risk. This is going to be going on for a while so you need to decide the acceptable risk level, which applies to everything your family does, not just swim. But the risk is pretty low compared to a lot of things people seem to think are ok.
The problem is different families have different risk tolerance. Many are traveling and eating out (excluding employment) and there is a huge risk from those families. People can spread COVID and be asymptomatic.
There have been several reports of COVID on swim teams. NCAP and RMSC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, indoor swimming is too risky. Especially since you cant wear masks when you swim.
When I lived in London I swam outdoors year round. They heated the pools. It worked fine.
No but you mostly breathe out through the water. The droplets will be well mixed with the hypochlorite in the water. And the spacing even at 4/lane is quite good.
With club swim, you are exposed to the same people every. If your team has a good culture and you trust the other families to not come in if there is any positive among extended contacts, then the risk is lowered further.
Like anything else it comes with some risk. This is going to be going on for a while so you need to decide the acceptable risk level, which applies to everything your family does, not just swim. But the risk is pretty low compared to a lot of things people seem to think are ok.
The problem is different families have different risk tolerance. Many are traveling and eating out (excluding employment) and there is a huge risk from those families. People can spread COVID and be asymptomatic.
There have been several reports of COVID on swim teams. NCAP and RMSC.