It is warm water. They go into the warm water to avoid shock. When they go into water for practice or something, their body temperature goes down quite significantly. It is important for them to raise the body temperature to the normal level to avoid shock.
I think you mean plunge pool. It is similar to a splash pool. IE just a small pool you can plunge into just to cool off
FINA which is the world governing body for international swimming calls for a 50 Meter pool with 8 lanes. However movement is being created for having pools built with 10 lanes, with the outer 2 not being used for competition. (The waves created by swimmers bounces off the side walls and 'slows' down the swimmers in those lanes, thus an buffer is created by not using lanes 1 and 10 in competition). That said, if you are talking about size, Olympic generally refers to the length of the pool, not the number of lanes.
dolphins dont sleep. not really. they shut off half of their brain (because they are conscious breathers and swimmers) and when its rested, they shut off the other side
The ball is given back to the ref. and each team goes to their side of the pool. the 6 players and the goalie line up along the wall with the fastest swimmers closest to ref. the whistle is blown and the ball is dropped into the water the swimmers push off the wall and swim towards the center of the pool, whoever out of the two fastest swimmer from each team gets there first, picks up the ball and starts the play over with there team.
after you get the blueprints you find Alfred on the side of the pool, How do you defeat him
Answer You would be better off waiting a day or two.
This "smacking" moves the lactic acid around the body and splits it up so it is not in high concentration anywhere. The lactic acid causes fatigue in the muscles and subsequently worse times in a race
To ensure there is as little friction or drag as possible for example the streamlined helmets that bicyclists wear or the full body swim suits that are becoming popular for swimmers. Swimmers also shave body hair to streamline their bodies and reduce drag.
middle lane it can be anything 4 5 6 then 5 would be the middle laneAnswerWhile training, it is a good idea to put fastest swimmers in a lane at on outside lane, and have the slowest in the outside lane at the opposite side of the pool (i.e. in a 6 lane pool, lane 1 is fast and lane 6 is slow, or visa versa (depends on the coach)). If your team includes very inexperienced swimmers, they may get both outside lanes so that they may have the comfort of the wall to grab onto. Also, most more experienced swimmers would rather not swim near the wall for space reasons and the choppiness of waves bouncing off the wall. However, in a swim meet, the fastest swimmer is always in the middle lane, lanes 3 or 4 if it is 6 lane pool, lanes 4 or 5 if it is an 8 lane pool, then slightly slower swimmers on either side of the fastest seeded swimmer as to create a v formation during the meet (a little more exciting to watch in a meet).I am a competative swimmer, and i only know several different types of training, but in meets i know that is fairly standard. Other training techniques by other people may stray from the training lane assignments i told above, but that is usually how my coaches have had swimming set up.the reason is so that all the swimmers can see the fastest person. If the fastest were to be in an outside lane, they could only be seen by the person next to them.
Have you ever heard of a little chemical called chlorine. But that doesnt do the job entirely, there are also other methods, vaccuum the pool and get a small pool net and clean the top of small leaves and other miniscule waste.
I have a 15' above ground pool, when we installed the pool it was a little uneven (not even 1") now that the pool has been up for a while it has settled and now the side that was lower is off by about 3-4". How can I fix this without draining the whole pool?
12 unless your teammates are in the pool off to the side