While many of us may consider the end of summer to be the end of our time in the sea, for librarian, musician and marathon swimmer Corrina Connor, that’s just the warm-up.
In the past few years she has taken on several marathon swims, including the Cook Strait and Lake Taupō – a mere 40.2 kilometres – as well as undertaking several hypothermia-inducing ‘ice swims’, defined as swimming in water of five degrees or less. Brrr!
After waiting three long months for the tides and conditions to line up perfectly, Corrina swam the Foveaux Strait between the South Island and Stewart Island in April 2023.
“That was my favourite swim ever. I waited a long time to do it because the weather was bad.
“I was nervous. It was very cold and full of sharks. Every 30 minutes, they stop you and you have whatever food you’ve planned, like steamed kūmara or a banana. Once I got a fizzy snake stuck in my throat and had to take a big drink of sea water!”
Corrina manages to fit all of this around her role as librarian at Te Awe Library, which she started in April 2022. It’s part-time, providing her the flexibility to swim and train for big events. Making the most of the swimming spots this city provides, she heads to the Wellington Regional Aquatic Centre in Kilbirnie four times a week and spends the other days in the sea – all year round, in all conditions, without a wetsuit. And that’s when she’s not training for a challenge!