One of the most important aids to the blind swimmer is the tapper.
Standing at each end of the pool is a person holding a long pole with a
soft circular ball on the end. As the swimmer approaches they are tapped
on the head.
It is a sign to the swimmer that the end of the pool is
approaching, and the confidence gained by the tapper's presence means
the swimmer can move at full pelt without fearing a painful crash at the
end.
"The pole looks a bit like a fishing rod," says Marcelo
Sugimori, one of two tappers in the Brazilian Paralympic team. Sugimori
used to tap for his sister Fabiana, who won gold in the 50m freestyle in
Athens 2004. He now works with the team's two other blind and partially
sighted swimmers.
"We tap the swimmer when they are between two and four metres from the end of the pool," he adds. "It takes a lot of training together, and a lot of trust."
There are several more interesting aspects of the paralympics detailed in an article at the
BBC today.
Very cool. My first experience with this was a few years ago when Notre Dame (where I work) had a blind Masters-level swimmer and several students designed a system to help her. ND ended up producing a short video about it. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWqbrbe8nRQ.
ReplyDeleteCheers!
Chas