And Irvine Makes 27 - A Swimmer's Paradise In Orange County
Orange County is located in Southern California. Home of Disneyland, Knott's Berry Farm, and three professional sports teams: the Los Angeles Angels (of Major League Baseball), Los Angeles Chargers (of the National Football League), Anaheim Ducks (of the National Hockey League), and Orange County SC (of the United Soccer League).
Its population is slightly over 3 million people and is largely a massive series of suburbs with mostly single-family homes and apartment buildings mixed in with a plethora of office parks, gas stations, convenience stores, and shopping centers.
Ocean swimming and marine sports are major activities in the region that is bordered by the Pacific Ocean with seaside communities like Seal Beach, Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, Corona del Mar, Laguna Beach, Dana Point, and San Clemente.
Ocean swimmers can also swim at hundreds of pools of all sizes, including 25 50m pools. But two more 50m pools will soon be added to the mix when the city of Irvine will break ground on a new three-pool facility in the Great Park.
64 kilometers of coastline with water temperatures ranging from 55-75°C (12-24°F) with a total of 27 50m pools and hundreds of additional 25 yard pools is a swimmer's paradise.
By Steven Munatones.
Southern California native, born 1962, is the creator of the WOWSA Awards, Oceans Seven, Openwaterpedia, Citrus Corps, World Open Water Swimming Association, Daily News of Open Water Swimming, Global Open Water Swimming Conference. He is Chief Executive Officer of KAATSU Global and Editor of the KAATSU Magazine. Inductee in the International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame (Honor Swimmer, Class of 2001) and Ice Swimming Hall of Fame (Honor Contributor - Media, Class of 2019), recipient of the International Swimming Hall of Fame's Poseidon Award (2016), International Swimming Hall of Fame's Irving Davids-Captain Roger Wheeler Memorial Award (2010), Dale Petranech Award for Services to the International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame (2022), USA Swimming's Glen S. Hummer Award (2007 and 2010), and Harvard University's John B. Imrie Award (1984, awarded to the senior whose interests are not bounded by academic or institutional structures. A joyous, deeply-rooted affirmation of life, disdain for the purely conventional; a love of adventure, and desire to learn by experiencing; the ability to respond creatively to difficult situations). Served on the FINA Technical Open Water Swimming Committee (until 2011) and as Technical Delegate with the 2011 Special Olympics World Summer Games, a 9-time USA Swimming coaching staff including 4 FINA World Championships, and 2008 NBC Olympic 10K Marathon Swim commentator.
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