Austin ups the ante with up to $1,200 in bonuses for summer lifeguards

Austin ups the ante with up to $1,200 in bonuses for summer lifeguards

lifeguard short

The city of Austin is offering lifeguard bonuses this year. Pam LeBlanc photo

Austin pools need lifeguards – and the city just added a carrot in the form of up to $1,250 in lifeguard bonuses for those who work the stand this summer.

Applicants get an initial bonus of $500 to be paid mid-season. If they stay on through the entire summer, they get an additional $500. Employees with advanced certifications in open water lifesaving, swim instruction, or lifeguard instruction qualify for $250 more.

Applicants must attend a formal lifeguard training program. For more information about requirements, go here.

RELATED: Joan Khabele led the effort to desegregate Barton Springs

The lifeguard shortage is so bad this year that Barton Springs is closed during the day on Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday. (The pool remains open for unguarded swimming from 5-9 a.m. daily. Check the schedule here.)

Lifeguards aren’t the only ones who can get bonuses. Summer camp staff can earn up to $750 in incentives. Qualification criteria varies by position.

Lifeguarding jobs were highly coveted when I was a teen-ager. I got certified as a lifeguard when I was in high school.

Pay starts at $15 per hour for entry level positions and increases with experience. Staff get paid sick leave, a free bus pass, and flexible scheduling, according to a press release from the City of Austin.

Austin Parks and Recreation is hiring hundreds of candidates from diverse origins, orientations, identities, and abilities.

Find details about lifeguard bonuses and information about how to apply at AustinTexas.gov/SummerJobs.

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Deep Eddy closes Sunday for two weeks of spring cleaning

Deep Eddy closes Sunday for two weeks of spring cleaning

deep eddy

Deep Eddy Pool will close Jan. 4 for repairs. Photo courtesy city of Austin

Heads up, swimmers.

Deep Eddy Pool, that chilly oasis where horses once dove off diving board and a man once ate bananas underwater, will close from April 10 until April 24 for annual spring cleaning.

The pool will reopen April 25 for normal hours.

In the meantime, check the city’s pools and splashpads website for information about the city’s other aquatic facilities.

Besides Barton Springs, at 2131 William Barton Drive in downtown Austin, my favorite alternative is Big Stacy Pool at 700 E. Live Oak Street. But hours are tricky at pools right now due to a shortage of lifeguards.

Related: Deep Eddy’s colorful past includes diving horses

Barton Springs is open from 5-8 a.m. daily for “swim at your own risk” sessions without lifeguards. The pool is closed the rest of the day Mondays and Wednesdays and is only open from 8-10 p.m. Thursdays.  Lifeguards are on duty from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.

Related: Seven swimming holes and natural spots to splash into near Austin

Big Stacy is open for lap swimming from 6-9 a.m. weekdays. It’s closed for programming Monday through Thursday mornings from about 9 until noon, then opens for recreational swimming from noon until 8 p.m. weekdays and until 7 p.m. weekends.

 

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If you love to swim, explore the kettle ponds of Cape Cod

If you love to swim, explore the kettle ponds of Cape Cod

Pam LeBlanc wades into Sheep Pond on Cape Cod on Sept. 7, 2021. Chris LeBlanc photo

You can keep your chlorine-infused swimming pools and crowded ocean beaches.

When in Cape Cod, I head for the kettle ponds, shimmering pools of water formed when huge blocks of ice melted at the end of the last Ice Age, leaving behind depressions that eventually filled with water. In all, about a thousand such ponds pockmark the Cape, and if you love swimming as much as I do, they serve up the equivalent of an all-you-can-eat buffet.

I’m visiting a friend who has a family home midway up the Cape this week, and as I always do when I visit, I’m making it a point to take a dip in as many kettle ponds as possible.

If you prefer swimming in natural pools of water like I do, this is the stuff of dreams. It’s also nice to know that the burgeoning local population of great white sharks, drawn to Cape Cod by the exploding population of seals, never visits these inland ponds. (For the record, I’m a fan of sharks and scuba dive with them frequently. I just don’t like bobbing at the surface without gear on when they’re in the area.)

Pam’s favorite kettle ponds

A girl swings on a rope tied to a tree at Flax Pond in Dennis, on Cape Cod. Pam LeBlanc photo

In the three days I’ve been here so far this year, I’ve swum in four ponds – Flax Pond, a circular, pine-lined oasis of tea-colored water where you might find a kid swinging off a rope swing tied to a tree but you won’t find crowds; Upper Mill Pond, where you can glide out to a pair of floating docks and take a breather; Slough Pond, which you can swim directly across on your way to investigate a kids’ camp on the other side; or my favorite, Sheep Pond, a hidden gem of a swimming hole with a peaceful lagoon and some overly-friendly ducks.

These ponds feed my insatiable desire to swim in natural bodies of water, where strands of aquatic plants tickle my toes, and a fish might nibble my kneecap at any moment. I love the adventure of it, and the feeling of getting close to nature. I’ll swim to the center of one of these ponds, spin slowly around to admire the surrounding screen of trees, then dive beneath the surface before surfacing like an otter.

Something about swimming this way, in a deep, kettle-shaped pool designed by nature, without stripes on the bottom to guide me or walls to constrain me, makes me happy to the core. It feels old-school, and I bet it hasn’t changed much in the last 100 years.

So many visitors to Cape Cod are bent on finding the ocean. I like the occasional swim there, just for fun, but when I really want to log some distance, I’ll take the ponds every time. Next time you’re in Massachusetts in the summer, you should too.

Sailboats are anchored at Upper Mill Pond on Cape Cod. Pam LeBlanc photo

 

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Deep Eddy closes Sunday for two weeks of spring cleaning

Deep Eddy closing for cleaning and maintenance

Deep Eddy Pool will close April 11 through May 2. Photo courtesy city of Austin

Deep Eddy Pool will close April 11 through May 2 for its annual spring cleaning.

The closure will last a week longer than normal so crews can fix cracks in the pool shell and address some unexpected problems due to the recent winter storm.

Barton Springs Pool, 2201 Barton Springs Road, will remain open while Deep Eddy, 401 Deep Eddy Avenue, is closed. Barton Springs hours are 5 a.m. until 8 a.m. for swim at your own risk; guarded swim hours are 8 a.m. until 10 p.m. Tuesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Check AustinTexas.gov/Pools for the hours of operation for all city pools.

For more information, call Austin Parks and Recreation Department’s Aquatic Administration and Training Center at 512-974-9330.

 

 

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This Austin man kept his daily swim streak alive by kicking in a bathtub during Snowpocalypse

This Austin man kept his daily swim streak alive by kicking in a bathtub during Snowpocalypse

Keith Bell has been swimming every day for more than 30 years. Sandy Neilson-Bell photo

Think you’ve got an impressive exercise streak going?

I checked with Austin swimmer and sports psychologist Keith Bell, whom I last wrote about in September 2019, when he logged his 11,111th day – that’s about 30 years – in a row of swimming. (Read that entry here.) I wondered how he fared during last week’s Snowpocalypse, which delivered 6.5 inches of snow across Austin and knocked out power and water to people all over Texas.

Bell, indeed, managed to keep the streak alive. But instead of logging the usual 4,000 to 8,000 yards (roughly between 2.25 and 4.5 miles) in a pool or lake, he kicked and sculled his way through swim practice – in his home bathtub.

“It’s no big deal, it’s just me, it’s just what I do. I eat every day, too,” he said, as if we all have been exercising every day for three decades straight.

Keith Bell swims in Lake Travis. Sandy Neilson-Bell photo

Nope, the tub wasn’t as good as Deep Eddy, Barton Springs or Lake Travis, a few of his usual haunts. It wasn’t even good as the YMCA, where he did monster kicking sessions while recovering from shoulder surgery. (He swam the morning before surgery, then positioned himself at the edge of the pool so he could keep his shoulder dry while kicking in the water starting the next day. “I worked up to at one point kicking for two hours pretty darn hard with fins and doing sprints in middle,” he said.)

Bell’s swim streak began in April 1989. He didn’t intend to start something big, but about 6,000 days into it, his son took notice.

“I’m closing in on 12,000 days now,” he said this week.

He prefers cold water (he broke down and put on a wetsuit to brave the 50-something degree waters of Lake Travis recently), and in the summer tends to swim in the lake late at night, after dark, when it’s cooler, with his wife paddling a kayak alongside him.

Why such a dedicated routine, you might ask?

“I love everything about it,” he said of swimming. “In some ways it’s like meditating. It’s relaxing and there are always different challenges. You learn a lot about yourself and the decisions you make, and the water just plain feels good.”

Bell, 72, who swam at Kenyon College in Ohio, served as an assistant coach of the men’s swim team at the University of Texas, then coached the first intercollegiate women’s team there. He has also coached U.S. Masters programs and high school teams. He is married to Sandy Neilson-Bell, who won three gold medals in the 1972 Munich Olympics.

And while those bathtub workouts were memorable, he’s back in deeper water again. Neilson-Bell says he took a dip in 52-degree water this week.

 

 

 

 

 

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