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		Intrepid Edgley back on dry land after 
		swimming around Britain 
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		 [November 05, 2018] 
		By Martyn Herman 
 MARGATE, England (Reuters) - After 157 days 
		at sea battling storms, jellyfish and whirlpools, adventurer Ross Edgley 
		finally clambered on to dry land at Margate on Sunday to become the 
		first person to swim around the coast of mainland Britain.
 
 The 33-year-old from Lincolnshire began his epic swim from the same Kent 
		beach on June 1, spending 12 hours a day in the water on his 1,780-mile 
		quest clockwise around the coast.
 
 As he approached the English seaside town he was joined by 300 swimmers 
		for the last mile and two planes provided by Red Bull, who supported his 
		venture, etched a heart in the morning sky.
 
 In August Edgley, who only left the water to sleep and eat in his 
		support boat, broke the record for the longest stage sea swim of 73 days 
		set by Benoit Lecomte, who swam across the Atlantic Ocean in 1998.
 
 He said his initial plan was to set a new record for the world's longest 
		'current neutral' swim but after spending two days with the Royal 
		Marines was told that idea was "a bit lame".
 
 "One of the guys said 'man up and swim around Britain' and I thought 
		'yeah, that's got a ring to it'," Edgley told Reuters as three large 
		pizzas were delivered to him at Margate's iconic theme park Dreamland.
 
 "I met (boat crew skipper) Matt Knight and after a five-minute chat we 
		said 'let's do this'.
 
 "We left on June 1, probably a bit naive, and got to Isle of Wight, then 
		thought if we can get there we can get to Land's End, and if we can get 
		there we can get to Scotland."
 
		 
		
 JELLYFISH STINGS
 
 While racing across shipping channels and dealing with ever-changing 
		tides was challenging, Edgley, who in 2016 completed the world's longest 
		rope climb, equivalent to the height of Mount Everest, and once pulled a 
		car around a marathon, said the jellyfish stings were the worst, 
		especially at night.
 
 "That's when you don't even know what kind of jellyfish it was," Edgley, 
		who broke four world records during his journey, said. "I remember the 
		huge natural whirlpool in the Gulf of Corryvreckan, I got badly stung.
 
 "It was searing pain. I popped my head out to ask the crew what was 
		happening and they told me it was still attached to my face. Its 
		tentacles were caught in my goggles and it was slapping me in the face."
 
		Edgley also had to contend with a 'disintegrating tongue' caused by 
		immersion in salt water, chafing sores from his wetsuit which his crew 
		named "Rhino Neck" and near hypothermia.
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			Swimmer Ross Edgley reacts after completing his round-Britain swim, 
			on Margate beach, Britain November 4, 2018. REUTERS/Marian F. 
			Moratinos 
            
			 
            It was not all bad though. A balmy British summer helped and there 
			were only two 'named' storms to endure.
 He also got support, in various forms.
 
 "My favorite day was in the Bristol Channel near Lundy Island," he 
			recalled. "I had spent three days battling the strong tides when a 
			minke whale breached next to me. For five miles swam under me and to 
			the side of me.
 
 "It was a female and we think she thought she was guiding an injured 
			seal!"
 
 There was also a memorable cake delivery in Scotland.
 
 "In the Hebrides I was resting one morning when a lady named Iona, 
			swam out to the boat, with a cake resting on her head," he said. 
			"She had been following my swim and saw the boat from her house and 
			decided to bake a cake and swim out with it.
 
 "It was still warm, it was incredible. It didn't last long!"
 
 It made a change from bananas. Edgley estimates he munched 500 
			during his epic journey and burned 500,000 calories.
 
 (Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Toby Davis)
 
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