The weekly task is to chillax in an inflatable chair, but I don't see one at the swim center. |
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Living in water with strong currents and potentially dangerous floating debris, it must swim continuously to avoid injury. |
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How long do you have to run, swim, or do yoga to burn off a handful of almonds or a big mac? |
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We stood on the deck and watched dolphins swim near the ship. |
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People swim into pool walls, people swim into each other, and, in certain parts of the U.S., people swim into alligators. |
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Why, now, blow wind, swell billow, and swim bark! The storm is up and all is on the hazard. |
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In addition to such endeavors, the individuals swim with and surface near surfers at the beach. |
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My wacky aunt takes a swim before the lake freezes every winter. |
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It took Sue Dockar a good half hour to swim out to her target bombora, a moderate swim in spearfishing terms. |
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When we are still worried about our lack of experience and ability to swim, we jump in feetfirst. |
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Fish can swim in the icy waters without turning into fishsicles because many of them make chemicals that keep their blood from freezing. |
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They travel in large schools with other fish and swim continuously throughout the day. |
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However, when they flee, they swim backward quickly by curling and uncurling their abdomens. |
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Because of its streamlined shell and strong foot, it can burrow in wet sand very quickly, and is also able to swim. |
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They rarely swim, despite having webbed feet, usually landing on water only to bathe. |
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Harp seals prefer to swim in the ocean, spending relatively little time on land. |
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On 24 August, he began a second swim by diving in from the Admiralty Pier at Dover. |
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After his record swim, Captain Webb basked in national and international adulation, and followed a career as a professional swimmer. |
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On 6 August 1926, she became the first woman to swim across the English Channel. |
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Her father taught her to swim in Highlands, New Jersey, where the family owned a summer cottage. |
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She trained with Jabez Wolffe, a swimmer who had attempted to swim the Channel 22 times. |
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Gertrude possessed a contract from both the New York Daily News and Chicago Tribune when she attempted the Channel swim a second time. |
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Another American swimmer in France in 1926 to try and swim the Channel was Lillian Cannon from Baltimore. |
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Water deer are proficient swimmers, and can swim several miles to reach remote river islands. |
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They swim well and fly adequately but are almost helpless on land, because their legs are placed towards the rear of the body. |
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Its physical appearance suggests it to be a vigorous swimmer that can swim in a vertical position. |
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Restrictions on cod effectively limit fishing on other groundfish species with which the cod swim, such as flounder and haddock. |
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Sonar reflects off the millions of lanternfish swim bladders, giving the appearance of a false bottom. |
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During this time, the shelled veliger larvae use their ciliated vela to capture food and swim. |
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Research indicates that when a boat has a higher frequency the manatees rapidly swim away from danger. |
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Large numbers of crocodiles swim in circles to trap fish and take turns snatching them. |
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On Saturday 26 August 1911, Alice Maud Boyall became the first woman to swim the Humber. |
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Polar bears sometimes swim underwater to catch fish like the Arctic charr or the fourhorn sculpin. |
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Ten of the sows had a cub swim with them and after a year, six cubs survived. |
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The polar bear may swim underwater for up to three minutes to approach seals on shore or on ice floes. |
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As the distance increases between the pack ice and the coast, females must swim longer distances to reach favored denning areas on land. |
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They will be swimming slower than they could otherwise swim, so their stroke mechanics will be less racelike. |
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The maxim is worthy of the fool in the old story, who resolved not to go into the water until he had learnt to swim. |
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They are unique among passerines for their ability to dive and swim underwater. |
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The two South American species swim and dive less often than the three northern ones. |
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One week after the hatching, the young ruffe start to swim and feed actively, but they do not form schools at this age. |
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Now, in calm weather, to swim in the open ocean is as easy to the practised swimmer as to ride in a spring-carriage ashore. |
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I told my daughter to get her hair dyed at a salon, but she had to swim upstream and do it herself. Now it's a mess. |
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The water line is to that Bend or place she should swim in when she is loaded. |
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Johnston, who coaches the Family Y's Water Rats senior swim team, says her swimmers can't wait to hit the water Apr. |
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In September 2007, a seven-year-old boy who could not swim drowned in a wave pool at the old Olympia centre. |
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Shall not all the letters of the Torah have little whiptails, to swim into our inward parts, there to implant themselves and grow? |
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I don't need armbands anymore, but I like the woggles that my friends use on our Sunday swim. |
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He had very little money, but he was lucky at cards, made many acquaintances, took part in all entertainments, in a word, he was in the swim. |
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Other fish, prawns and crabs come into the Lake on the king tides and swim up to the warm backwaters to breed. |
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She completed the swim, nominally 11 miles but equivalent to 22 miles because of tidal flows, in 7 hours 20 minutes. |
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Their father taught the boys how to swim and ride, although he sometimes hired a slave to teach them instead. |
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Very few lotic insects are strong swimmers, probably because of the energy expenditure required to swim against a current. |
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Jersey Swimming Club have organised an annual swim from Elizabeth Castle to Saint Helier Harbour for over 50 years. |
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All three islands offer scuba diving, and the Cayman Islands are home to several snorkelling locations where tourists can swim with stingrays. |
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In July 1966, Brenda Sherratt became the first person to swim the length of the loch. |
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She began her swim the day before her 18th birthday, completing it the following day having turned 18 during her swim. |
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A reduced blood flow in the webbing on their feet outside of the breeding season also helps to maintain body temperature when they swim. |
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In 2013, one boar was reported to have completed the seven mile swim from France to Alderney in the Channel Islands. |
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Sperm are flagellated and must swim from the antheridia that produce them to archegonia which may be on a different plant. |
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Large groups will dive and swim together in circles repeatedly and all rise up to the surface, heads first and bills open. |
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Secondly, large groups will swim in a line weaving across each other in the same direction. |
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After one month, the pup can leave the holt and after two months, it is able to swim. |
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Dolphins swim by moving their tail fin and rear body vertically, while their flippers are mainly used for steering. |
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Although they are traveling in these pods, the dolphins do not necessarily swim right next to each other. |
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Eels swim by generating body waves which travel the length of their bodies. |
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This provides refuges for juvenile salmon so they do not have to swim into large channels where they are subject to predation. |
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They swim along with their mouths open, filtering the plankton from the water as it passes through their gills. |
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The fish swim in a grid where the distance between them is the same as the jump length of their prey, as indicated in the animation above right. |
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Suitably designed trollers can also catch mackerels effectively when they swim near the surface. |
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I'd not've fallen in if you'd've told me it was there, Da. And I'd not've sunk if you'd've taught me how to swim. |
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Scallops swim in the direction of the valve opening, unless the velum directs an abrupt change in course direction. |
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In the absence of barnacle encrustation, individual scallops swim significantly longer, travel further, and attain greater elevation. |
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They also possess a swim bladder, and do not dwell on the bottom, instead dispersing from their hatching grounds as plankton. |
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The larva also loses its swim bladder and spines, and sinks to the bottom, laying its blind side on the underlying surface. |
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Freshly hatched fish larvae are also plankton for a few days, as long as it takes before they can swim against currents. |
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Hence ctenophores usually swim in the direction in which the mouth is eating, unlike jellyfish. |
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They swim at the bottom, where shrimp and crabs are found and shoot out a jet of water to uncover the prey buried in the sand. |
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This cleaning helps the turtle swim by reducing the amount of drag and improves their health. |
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This symbol mirrors the real life of the green Hawaiian turtle as it will swim hundreds of miles to lay its eggs at its own place of birth. |
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Surface feeders that swim often have unique bills as well, adapted for their specific prey. |
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They are known to swim alongside other cetaceans such as humpback, fin, minke, pilot, and orca whales on occasion. |
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Resident killer whales swim with porpoises, other dolphins, seals, and sea lions, which are common prey for transient killer whales. |
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They also lack arrector pili, so their fur can be streamlined as they swim. |
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Young pinnipeds typically learn to swim on their own and some species can even swim at birth. |
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Male walruses may help inexperienced young as they learn to swim, and have even been recorded caring for orphans. |
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Squid and octopus can be found along the coast and sea turtles and hammerhead sharks swim in the sea around the coast. |
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The sea currents carry their eggs to the Norwegian Sea, and the adults also swim there to benefit from the food supply. |
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Osmerids are generally small, silvery, elongate fishes that swim in the water column. |
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Gar and bowfin have a vascularized swim bladder that functions in the same way. |
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Many bony fish have an internal organ called a swim bladder that adjusts their buoyancy through manipulation of gases. |
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The male inverts himself beneath the female, and the pair swim in circles while spawning. |
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Fish innately know how to swim, they don't go to school to learn it. |
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A recent study tracking swimming jellyfish revealed that these medusae can detect marine currents and swim against the current to congregate in blooms. |
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Pelicans swim well with their strong legs and their webbed feet. |
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Zoea larvae swim with their thoracic appendages, as opposed to nauplii, which use cephalic appendages, and megalopa, which use abdominal appendages for swimming. |
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He acquired his ability to swim in the River Severn at Coalbrookdale. |
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As you begin to integrate butterfly into your workouts, begin with two to four full butterfly strokes from the wall, then swim easy freestyle for the remainder of the length. |
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While humans are allowed to swim with manatees in one area of Florida, there have been numerous charges of people harassing and disturbing the manatees. |
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His final stunt was to be a dangerous swim through the Whirlpool Rapids on the Niagara River below Niagara Falls, a feat many observers considered suicidal. |
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Experienced and beginner divers are invited to swim around the Kittiwake. |
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These turtles swim using all four feet in a way similar to the dog paddle, with the feet on the left and right side of the body alternately providing thrust. |
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It was still too shallow for the turtle to swim, but it used its four flappers with so much effect against its two assailants, as to give them a thorough shower-bath. |
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They may spend several days at sea and travel up to 50 kilometers in search of feeding grounds, and will also swim some distance upstream into freshwater in large rivers. |
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Why don't you take a swim back across the Rio Grande, jabroni. |
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Thousands of fleeing Bastarnae perished, many asphyxiated in nearby woods by encircling fires set by the Romans, others drowned trying to swim across the Danube. |
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Elephant seals do not swim until weeks after they are weaned. |
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Cut off, the native crew leaped overboard and tried to swim back to shore. |
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The dolphins would swim up behind enemy divers and attach a buoy to their air tank, so that they would float to the surface and alert nearby Navy personnel. |
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Hybrids can swim well like minks and burrow for food like polecats. |
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An annual swim from New York City's Battery Park to Sandy Hook, New Jersey is called the Ederle Swim in memory of Gertrude Ederle, and follows the course she swam. |
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There are also dolphin shows daily and a swim with dolphins program. |
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Killer whale populations in New Zealand and Peru have been observed preying on bottlenose dolphins, but this seems rare, and other orcas may swim with dolphins. |
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These young turtles are rarely seen as they swim in deep, pelagic waters. |
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Other conservation efforts also occurred, such as when Christopher Swain became the first person to swim all 315 miles of the Hudson River in support of cleaning it up. |
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They can swim backwards by reversing the direction of the wave. |
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It can swim when pressed to do so by pursuit from predators. |
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These freshwater eels spawn in the ocean, and then enter estuaries as glass eels and swim upstream to live in fresh water during their juvenile growth phase. |
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They swim with their mouth wide open and their percula fully expanded. |
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The Greenland halibut can swim in a vertical position and both sides of its body are a speckled brown colour, but the left side is rather paler than the right. |
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The polar bear is an excellent swimmer and often will swim for days. |
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I sink because I cannot swim, undertowed to the Centre, abandoning all remembrance of the surface toward the cloud of unknowing, without choice I'm pulled. |
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Only five men had been able to swim the English Channel before Ederle. |
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Many pelagic fish swim in schools weighing hundreds of tonnes. |
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Dipping is also common when birds are sitting on the water, and gulls may swim in tight circles or foot paddle to bring marine invertebrates up to the surface. |
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We took a trip out to swim with the whale sharks, explored Contoy Island and visited the turtle farm where the turtles grow to be released back into the wild. |
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There's a pear orchard, and a knot garden, and a diddy little lake that's just big enough to swim in... hey, if the weather stays like this, we can have a dip tomorrow. |
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This is in contrast to nekton organisms, such as fish, squid and marine mammals, which can swim against the ambient flow and control their position in the environment. |
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Whales swim by moving their tail fin and lower body up and down, propelling themselves through vertical movement, while their flippers are mainly used for steering. |
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