• 4 months ago
A former Paralympian is hoping to become the first blind person to swim the English Channel.

Gerrard Gosens, 54, a retired triathlete, has been training twice a day for two years and sets off on the 21 miles from Dover to France in the coming days.

The Aussie is set to battle against the current while carrying the flag of his nation - which he'll hand over to his daughter Taylor Anne Gosens, 26, in Paris after landing in Cape Gris-Nez.

Taylor, who has 4% vision, will take the flag with her to the Paris 2024 Paralympics, where she will compete in Judo at the end of the month.

The window for his Channel swim runs from Saturday (10) until Friday (16); he will set off one day in that window, depending on weather and conditions.

He's no stranger to challenges - and has already competed in Dancing with the Stars, and climbed Everest.

Professional chocolatier Gerrard is a B1 or T11 athlete – meaning he has no light perception and is unable to recognise shapes.

Gerrard, from Brisbane, Australia, will swim with six support members, and reckons it will take him approximately 16 to 18 hours.

A three time Paralympian, he took on the swimming challenge to keep him busy in his sporting retirement.

He said: “Taking the flag across the English Channel and being with my teammates and their honour and their pride, will give the Paralympic team the chance to see anything is possible.

“Delivering the flag before the games will give them the chance to know what it means to be Australian - despite challenges we’re still willing to get out there and give it a go.

“I'd been retired from triathlon for five hours then someone mentioned to me there had never been totally blind person to swim the English Channel – I thought about it for a few minutes then thought why not.

"I thought it would be a great opportunity to raise funds for charity and break down perceptions about someone who is totally blind.”

Gerrard, who was born blind, will be attached to his support team using an International Paralympic Committee-approved tether which he designed for himself and other blind swimmers, which allows all swimmers to move freely.

Now in the UK ahead of their swim window next week Gerrard and support swimmers Philip Edwards, Hayden Armstrong, Rosie Ning, Jo Smallacombe, Alexis Tannock, and Dr Sarah Brereton have been acclimatising to British weather conditions.

“I'm attached by the thigh so we can pull through with the stroke - each of the guys have particular strengths so I'll be using those as we go," he said.

“They've been with me training for this for two years, so they’ve also had to go through the 13-14 degrees swim qualifier, going through choppy waves to cold mornings and being on poolside in eight degrees in the winter.

“From a training perspective the most enjoyable thing has been my team - we have a great cohesive team that gets on well and works well together, they understand and trust one another."

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Transcript
00:00This swim is significant for a number of reasons, not only is it the fact that it's the first
00:06time a totally blind person has ever swum the English Channel, secondly obviously for
00:11me being an Australian it's very important that Australia lead the way in many of these
00:15particular achievements, and thirdly we also get the chance to swim the Australian flag
00:21across the English Channel and take it to the Athletes Village and present it to the
00:26Australian Paralympic team, and I think fourthly also from a world's perspective in history
00:32it's the first time a father and daughter have actually represented their country at
00:36a Paralympic Games and my daughter Taylor will be representing Australia in Judo and
00:41potentially if she's there I'll hand over the flag to her and the team in the Athletes
00:45Village.
00:56Go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go
01:26I think there are many challenges associated with the English Channel and it's not just
01:52me swimming the actual channel, it's the entire team. I have a team of six swim guides, four
01:58females, two guys, and the challenges, whether it's not just today or tomorrow or next week
02:04when we swim the channel, it's the last two years. And those two years have been about
02:08the preparation, whether it be the day-to-day training out there in the open water, whether
02:12it be the seas, whether they be rough or choppy or rips or the whole range of various conditions
02:18and more so importantly, the actual cold water. And this team has endured some fairly
02:23significant conditions along this particular journey, but they also recognise that success
02:29is a journey never ever a destination. And the challenges now for us as a team is to
02:35get across the channel as quickly as possible, not be impeded by the actual tides and to
02:41also ensure that we have the best possible conditions.
02:48For more information visit www.fema.gov

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