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20 January, 2007 14:00:42 | in sports

Martin's vision: The Amazon Swim. From Atalaya, Peru to Belem, Brazil

(by Martin Strel, professional marathon swimmer -link-)

00Martin Strel, professional marathon swimmer
Martin Strel sets out to challenge limits of human endurance, long-distance medicine
© Martin Strel
My name is Martin Strel. I’m from a very small but beautiful country called Slovenia. It’s a small country, a tiny country, but over the last 6 years, I, for one, have set myself and achieved, some incredibly large goals:

- To be the first and only person to swim the Danube river - 1877 miles (3021 km).
- The first and only person to swim the Mississippi river - 2360 miles (3798 km).
- The first and only person to swim the Yangtze river in China - 2500 miles (4023 km).

And I have come at last to what looks like the impossible challenge of being the first and only person to swim the Amazon river.

From close to its source in Atalaya, Peru, to where it spills out of the Amazon Basin into the Atlantic, at Belem, Brazil. Some 3375 miles (5430 km).

No one has ever done this... I know that I’m going against almost insurmountable odds, but I have my reasons.

Some of which I’m going to tell you about.


The Amazon river flows mainly through the rainforests of Peru and Brazil, some of the most beautiful, most diverse and potentially, the most impacting (in a positive way) ecosystem on our planet. There are hundreds of tribes living in that rainforest, some of whom have never seen the light of the modern day world. And there are thousands of species of animals and medicinal plants, many of them, scientists believe, hold the keys to solving some of our greatest illnesses. Natural compounds that could hold a cure for cancer, malaria, and HIV/AIDS.

00The Amazon Swim 2007
The Amazon Swim 2007: 3375 miles in 70 days
© Martin Strel
The Amazon rainforest, and it’s river, is also home to some of the most poisonous, dangerous and ferocious animals that we know of. And a lot more that we don’t know of. I’ve said many times to myself and others that I’m going to swim that river or die trying... And I mean that quite literally. I could die in that river, but that is not my intention. My intention is to swim through the rainforest in order to prove something.

In 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King had a dream that changed our world.

I, too, have a dream. I, too, have a vision, that I hope will change our world. My dream is to swim the Amazon to prove to the world that nothing... nothing, is impossible.

If I can swim that river, then the Palestinians and the Israeli’s can find a way to live together in peace.

If I can swim that river, then the Muslims, Christians, and Hindus, in India and Africa and the Middle East, can all find a way to live together in peace.

If I can swim that river, then the Western Nations and the Nations of Iran and Iraq and Afghanistan, can find a way to live together in peace.

If I can swim that river, then the Chinese government can allow the sovereign of Tibet, the Dalai Lama, to return to his throne in his own country, and they can all live together in peace.

If I can swim that river, then the warring tribes in north and central Africa, who are squabbling over resources, land, and water, while their people starve and die, can find a way to live together in peace.

If I can swim that river, then the 8 most powerful and richest countries in the world can find a way to forgive the debts of the 15 poorest countries in the world.

This is the goal I have set myself and this is the challenge that I have put out there for the world’s leaders, and the religious leaders, the politicians, and the militia men, to rise up to. If I can achieve my goal, they can achieve this.

This is what I will have in mind in the darkest days of that swim, in the most arduous hours, that in some way I am helping to protect, not only myself from the hazards of the river, but the rainforest from the hazards of the rapid deforestation, exploitation, and pollution, that is threatening thousands of indigenous natives, the rainforest ecosystem, and our environment as a whole.

As you can see, it’s not just the rainforest but our whole world that needs to be protected. So that people can live together in peace without the fear of famine, and violence, and war. For all these reasons, I am going to swim that river.

I used to talk in terms of conquering rivers. But that’s not what happens at all. I haven’t conquered any rivers, what I’ve been conquering is myself. My own limitations, that are mostly in my head. This is, I believe, the only way forward for all of us. Each one of us has to find a way to conquer our pride, our vanity and greed, our corruption and striving for power. Find a way to live in peace and dignity with ourselves, and then we can live in peace and dignity with each other.

I’ve received so much good will and best wishes from people all over the world. And I wish to return those wishes and that goodwill with my own. Because this is not just about me surviving in that river, but of us, surviving on this tiny little blue droplet of water, suspended in the boundless void of space.

This place that we call our world, our home, the planet Earth.

Martin Strel

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Martin's endeavor will begin on Thursday, February 1st, when he jumps into the Amazon river at Atalaya, Peru, for his first 85 kilometer stage to Taurapa. His plan is to swim 77.5 km (48 miles) on average per day, without a singe resting day.

After 70 days, on April 11h, he is expected to arrive at the Amazon delta in Belém, Brazil. 

Good luck, amigo!

LivinginPeru.com will keep you informed about Martin's progress, his overall state of health, and when he reaches his final destination:  the Atlantic Ocean.

****UPDATE****

Martin attended a sunrise ceremonial dance with indigenous natives from the Yagua tribe today. This peaceful group wears shredded palms leaves over their privates and red paint on their face. The tribe, originally in the thousands, has seen their population diminish into the hundreds. Not coincidentally, they are one of few indigenous Amazonian tribes to use birth control. The Yagua tribe, native to the Iquitos area, has a custom in which the women are the primary breadwinners while the men spend their life pursuing leisure.

Late last night, Martin paid a visit to La Casa Del Arte, the home and gallery of famous Peruvian artist Francisco Grippa near Pevas. The two carried on like long lost brothers, sharing beers and cheese, exchanging gifts and even swapping shirts.

A sunny afternoon was interrupted by a wall of dark clouds. Strong winds kicked up out of the Northwest, bringing fierce lightning and sheets of rain. We pulled Martin out of the water, just as the wind ripped the sun cover off the top of our small boat and knocked the antenna from the top of the Cielito Lindo boat. The team sought shelter at the small pueblo of Santa Rita. Martin stopped swimming early, after covering only 87 km on the day. So far Martin has already covered 1853 kms or 1151 miles.

Live Video Streaming will be launched on Feb 23 in the morning around 9 am local time (EST, GMT-5).

Our T-Shirts and Postcards are now available to buy online at:
http://www.amazonswim.com/main.php?S=1&Folder=15&L=2/

****Update****


Hello Amazon Swim fans!

A two year old girl was sitting quietly near the shore while her mother did the family’s laundry in the river a few feet away. Looking up from her scrubbing board after hearing a commotion, the mother had her worst dreams come true. By the time she got into the knee deep dark water and grabbed her child by the wrist, it was already too late.

This story was relayed to us by the father of the baby who was killed. He pulled up in a dugout canoe to sell us fish after watching the team anchor in the slack-water near his family hut. Appalled to see a man swimming in the area, he warned us the area was loaded with flesh eating piranhas, and pleaded with Martin to only swim in the swiftest part of the river. Later, to test his story, I threw out a chunk of meat on a fishing line. My 25 pound test Spiderwire was instantly shredded. A feeding frenzy ensued every time the meat hit the water.

Martin took another pounding in the whitecaps most of the day, while the crew on the boat battled seasickness. The wind finally abated for the last two hours before sunset. Although the wind is continuing to be a major obstacle, the current is still quite strong, and Martin was able to fight his way another 71 km toward Belem. The team is currently anchored on a small inlet downstream from Praina.

- related articles and websites -
separator
Amazon Swim 2007
Amazon river
The Daily Stages
University of Arizona Doctor Leads Virtual Medical Team for Amazon Swimmer (by LIP, Jan. 19, 2007)
Amazon swim plan: Buckets of blood (by CNN.com, Jan. 19, 2007)
A man, a dream and the Amazon River (by Arizon Daily Wildcat, Jan. 10, 2007)
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8 Comments

# cassi peck says :
2 February, 2007 [ 07:02 ]

We are FASCINATED by what you are doing and your great web site to follow this.  We would like to find a good map to follow you each day, that includes all the places you start and end in a day.
thanks

# Muamer Tanovic says :
2 February, 2007 [ 09:34 ]

When I saw your picture jumping into the river of Amazon and wrote few words about your intentions, I thought that you were insane.

But after I found this web page and read things that you wrote, I was fascinated. I wish there were many people thinking like you do. Good Luck and have a nice trip!

# Wolfy says :
5 February, 2007 [ 07:50 ]
- Update -

The Amazon Swim 2007 is under way!

"The jungle is crying because you are leaving." The words of one local summed up the mood in Atalaya as Martin prepared to begin his 70 day swim in a heavy downpour. Despite many whirlpools and floating debris, Martin muscled his way through 102 difficult km last Thursday, Feb. 1st.

 

While swimming near a sloppy bank shaded by huge Lupuna trees, Martin disturbed a six foot Lagarto Alligator which quickly broke its slumber and disappeared below the dark waters.

A stormy morning surrendered to a tranquil afternoon of light breezes and mysterious animal noises. The foothills of the Andes were shrouded in cotton balls as Borut, Jamie and Matthew took turns paddling a small support boat with local guides Geraldo, Arturo, and Javier. A freshwater dolphin magically appeared at dusk to lead Martin downstream.


>> see photos here >>
 
# Wolfy says :
5 February, 2007 [ 07:55 ]
Martin swam 114 km on Saturday and is ahead of schedule. On Sunday afternoon he swam through the deadly confluence of the Pachitea and Ucayali Rivers. A small boat went ahead to scout the area and chose the best route.
# goldy tenreiro says :
17 February, 2007 [ 05:26 ]
i think that what martin is doing is great. he believes and loves something and is going for it. sure maybe he is risking his life but i think he is an amazing man and even if he does die i hope that he goes down in history, because in my life no matter what he will go down in history.martin had inspired me to follow my dreams and i thank him for that very much.Laughing
# Alondra Alvardo says :
22 February, 2007 [ 05:31 ]
wow you are sooo cool and i am in the 6th grade and i am learning aout you my teacher name is mr.otto and we have leard that you have blisters and i hope you get better love Alondra Cool you rock
# Mercedes Nilsen says :
19 June, 2007 [ 07:00 ]
Good Luck to you!!! but one thing I know is that proud to be peruvian, and la selva negra and certain areas in the amazonas should kept clean and virgen because that's the last thing that should be kept on earth!!! Peruvians are tired that other people take over and have other interest. In the world, we all know what the rainforest mean???? It's spectacular that God created!!! and proud to be peruvian, and for the years I lived in Europe and in the american continent, no compare the rainforest is the only and the best on earth!!!!
# eve mohlke says :
2 October, 2007 [ 01:47 ]
"the man who swam the amazon"by matthew mohlke is available at amazon.com

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