On the 5th September 2011 the comedian, David Walliams (Little Britain), began his swim for the charity Sport Relief.
He stepped into the Thames at Lechlade and swam a determined length each day. He was taken ill shortly after beginning his swim through contact and digestion of dirty river water. This caused a slight delay to the schedule, but he bravely got back in wearing a wetsuit and continued swimming the 140 miles planned of the 215 mile river until he reached Westminster Bridge in central London on the 12th September 2011. It was estimated at this point that his swim earned the charity well over 1 million pounds in donations.
David even managed to save a dog along the way !
This is not David's first swim for the charity. He has already swam the English Channel in 2006 and the Straight-of-Gibraltar in 2008.
You can boat on it, you can swim in it, sightseeing.
Don't swim in it, then you will have avoided it.
yes you can because david walliams did.
yes but no0t in downtown the dirty and oily part .
Sure, but not in downtown London where the water is all dirty and oily.
He is an accomplished swimmer, having swam the English Channel and other seas.
swim
Well, David Walliams swam the River Thames so there isn't anything stopping you. Only he probably got permission from somebody. To swim the river thames, David Walliams ate food with quite alot of calories for energy. Did that answer the question? ------------------------------------------ There are sevral places in the upper Thames where people swim in the summer. However down river (near London) it would probably be best to avoid swimming.
TheFirst person to swim was muyambiri WA njangaruko as he attempted to cross river rupingaci in embu,eastern province,Kenya in search of sugarcane fields in the forest.
The most popular activity on the River Thames is rowing.Fishing, rowing, cruising, sightseeing
It would depend on where they fell in, the time of day and how good a swimmer they were. If you fell in the Thames at Kemble, you'd be lucky to get your shoes wet. If you fell in anywhere else along it's length and couldn't swim, you'd be in trouble.
She was the first disable person to swim across the English channel.