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These people are hooked on open water swimming in Hong Kong. Here’s why

These people are hooked on open water swimming in Hong Kong. Here’s why
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What does your Sunday morning look like?

For many in Hong Kong, it will be spent nursing a hangover or indulging in a lie-in. For California-born, Hong Kong-based art adviser and open water swimming sensation Edie Hu, Sunday finds her swim-suited on the beach at Repulse Bay at 8.15am, ready for 90 minutes in the sea with a group of like-minded early birds.

It is her regular date with the ocean that she never misses.

Discovering open water swimming changed her life, Hu, 49, says. She swam competitively as a child until she went to university, where she played water polo for her college.

Open water swimmer Edie Hu says discovering the sport changed her life. Photo: Edie Hu

Open water swimmer Edie Hu says discovering the sport changed her life. Photo: Edie Hu

But she “burned out” and, for the best part of 15 years, she stopped swimming as she climbed the corporate ladder with jobs at Citi Private Bank and Sotheby’s auction house.

She was introduced to open water swimming in 2009 when she took part in a two-kilometre (1.2-mile) race held annually in July in the Hong Kong village of Shek O, organised by Doug Woodring, founder of non-governmental organisation Ocean Recovery Alliance.

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