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Pretoria’s ice swimming hero braces for Midmar challenge

After his great achievements at the recent Ice Swimming World Championships in Europe, an open water swimming champion from Pretoria is looking forward to participating in a special challenge during the Midmar Mile, where he also wants to do his part for charity.

Over 20 degrees separate the freezing waters of Molveno, Italy, where Pretoria swimmer Reino von Wielligh has been competing, and the much warmer KwaZulu-Natal dam, where he will soon tackle the 16-Mile Charity Challenge at next month’s aQuellé Midmar Mile.

Von Wielligh recently represented South Africa at the sixth Ice Swimming World Championships, earning multiple podium finishes in an event that brings together elite swimmers from around the globe to compete in near-freezing temperatures

“The water temperature over the few days ranged from 1.1 degrees to 1.8 degrees Celsius with air temperature at most of my swims at -2 degrees Celsius,” explained the intrepid 31-year-old, who claimed three medals in Italy.

According to Von Wielligh he is chuffed with the three overall medals he won in Italy.

“I finished third to win bronze in the 1000m, which is the main race of the ice swimming world champs in the sense that it is where the king and queen of the ice are determined. So, coming third there I am really, really chuffed. And I was second in the 500m, and third overall in the 250m where I also set a new age group world record,” he explained his podium places.

Von Wielligh has now set his sights on completing a mile distance in the ice in Berlin this week, before heading to warmer climes back home.

The well-known open water swimmer from Pretoria, Reino von Wielligh, recently won three medals at the Ice Swimming World Championships in Italy and he will be back in South Africa in time to participate in a goodwill challenge at the Midmar Mile in Kwazulu-Natal.
Photo: Action Photo SA

While the water temperature at Midmar Dam will be far more forgiving, the challenge ahead remains formidable, with Von Wielligh due to swim eight miles on 6 February and another eight on 7 February, all to raise money for children’s cancer charity, Happy Bundles, and then adding several more miles during the main racing part of the weekend.

“It is nice to see everybody taking hands, getting together, raising money for charity, and especially the great work that Happy Bundles is doing… If people do not follow them on Instagram or Facebook, I advise them to do so and just see the difference that these charities do make,” he remarked.

For Von Wielligh, the charity aspect of the challenge is deeply motivating and this will be the eighth time he is taking on the 16-mile challenge.

“The ice swimming world champs was nice. I achieved some personal goals and I could see my results from there, but doing the 16 mile is that one time in a year where it is not about you. It is about doing something good and giving something back to the community. I think that is important and that is something that keeps me motivated to come back and do the 16-mile challenge every year,” he said.

As for the competitive side of the aQuellé Midmar Mile, Von Wielligh is eager to take on a new challenge. Having recently moved into the 31-and-over age category, he is setting his sights on claiming the title in his new division. Among his competitors will be his coach, former international swimmer Mark Randall.

“It is going to be an interesting swim where the swimmer and the coach race against each other. With my ice swimming results, being able to win the 31 and over category would really be rounding off my achievements so far for this year, if I can get that right,” he commented.

 

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Koos Venter

Koos Venter is an experienced journalist who started his career 35 years ago, before the days of cellphones, modern computer systems, the internet and digital cameras, as a correspondent for Nexus, the former national magazine of the Department of Correctional Services. He has since worked for various other publications in all aspects of news coverage, as a columnist and in the production side of newspapers and online publications. Since 2007 he has specialized as a sports writer, while he is also regularly used as an analyst and commentator by several radio stations.
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