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Ultra-swimmer inspired by Thor actor Chris Hemsworth to take on Iceland swim
Ultra-swimmer inspired by Thor actor Chris Hemsworth to take on Iceland swim

ITV News

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • ITV News

Ultra-swimmer inspired by Thor actor Chris Hemsworth to take on Iceland swim

An ultra-swimmer has said he was inspired by actor Chris Hemsworth 's role as Nordic God Thor to take on a mammoth swim around Iceland. Ross Edgley joked the challenge will be 'the closest thing yet to swimming around Asgard' – the home of Thor – as he plans to swim 1,000 miles around the whole of Iceland in a challenge expected to take three months. The 39-year-old, from Cheshire, said the idea for his challenge was inspired by Marvel's Thor star Hemsworth, who introduced him to Nordic folklore after they met during the production of Thor: Love And Thunder. 'I was always just full of questions, just saying, 'why are you doing that? Why does Thor do this?' and we just got chatting,' the ultra-swimmer said. 'His (Hemsworth) knowledge of Nordic folklore is amazing. He's like an encyclopaedia of it. We got chatting about that and then he sort of explained (the folklore) to me.' 'I just thought Iceland, which inspired Tolkien and various other Nordic folklore, is the closest thing yet to swimming around Asgard.' The athlete will begin his journey, named the Great Icelandic Swim, on Friday, where he is expected to face choppy waves, killer whales and temperatures as low as 3C. His swimming pattern will consist of swimming for six hours and resting for six hours, which will be repeated every day for around three months. Mr Edgley is no stranger to difficult challenges after he swam more than 1,791 miles in 157 days around the coast of Great Britain and earned a Guinness World Record for the longest distance assisted adventure swim after covering 317 miles along the Yukon River in Canada. He said the Iceland challenge is likely to be 'twice as hard' despite it being almost 'half the distance of the Great Britain swim' because of the colder temperatures. 'Usually in England, when you get out of a frozen lake, you're running somewhere where there's a hot chocolate and you can get around the fire, but out there it's just Viking countries,' he said. 'The wind chill is a different sort of cold and that was a wake-up call for me.' The 39-year-old said he is aiming to get 'as fat as possible and as fit as possible' in order to combat the cold temperatures. 'Body fat is insulating, so the more of it you have the more insulated you are… you just kind of want to be almost seal-like,' he explained. The swim is also being completed in the name of science as he has teamed up with the University of Iceland and the Marine and Freshwater Research Institute of Iceland to take daily water samples. The samples are designed to help build a picture about the biodiversity around Iceland's coast and help towards researching the environmental DNA (eDNA) in the water. 'It allows us to take an incredible picture of the biodiversity all around Iceland,' Mr Edgley said. 'It would allow us to take eDNA samples all around the coast, so we would be able to map the biodiversity of Iceland in a level of detail that's never been seen before.' He hopes the public will follow and support his Great Icelandic Swim as he shares updates via social media. While he acknowledged his followers may tune in to 'see my tongue fall off because of the salt water', he also hopes the challenge will educate people about Iceland's biodiversity. 'Come along, see my tongue fall off, see killer whales and seals… but ultimately, it'll be brilliant to communicate the science as well,' he said.

First man to swim around Great Britain announces his next challenge – and it might be his biggest test yet
First man to swim around Great Britain announces his next challenge – and it might be his biggest test yet

The Independent

time23-04-2025

  • The Independent

First man to swim around Great Britain announces his next challenge – and it might be his biggest test yet

Ross Edgley isn't your average athlete. Adventurer is more apt, but this term still doesn't quite cover it. In 2016 he pulled a car 26.2 miles, climbed ropes equivalent to the height of Everest and completed a triathlon with a 45kg tree attached to him. His crowning achievement came in 2018 when he became the first and only person to swim around Great Britain, then in 2024 he swam 317 miles along the Yukon River in Canada to claim the longest non-stop river swim record. Now, in 2025, he has his sights set on a new world first: swimming around Iceland's entire coastline. Sponsored by BMW and starting on May 16, the challenge will see him cover more than 1,000 miles, facing down towering waves, strong winds and sub-zero temperatures while sharing the water with killer whales. to successfully complete it, he needs to cover more than 30km per day – roughly the span of the English Channel. 'Iceland has an amazing history of sailing and adventure,' Edgley says. 'I grew up with my grandad telling me stories of great explorers navigating every fjord, bay and beach for the first time in the late ninth century. Now I'm a little older, I would love to follow in their footsteps, but since I'm not much of a sailor, swimming around it seemed like the next logical choice.' Not only will Edgley tackle this mammoth swim, but along the way he aims to aid conservation research by collecting water samples. He is collaborating with researchers from the University of Iceland and the University of Victoria in Canada, supported by Future Oceans International, to analyse and map microplastic distribution in the waters around Iceland. He is also joining forces with the Marine and Freshwater Research Institute of Iceland, as part of a mission to map biodiversity and identify what marine creatures are present in Iceland's waters. 'Iceland is one of nature's great masterpieces, and swimming around it represents a unique opportunity to fuse sport, adventure and science,' Edgley says. 'We're working with some incredible researchers from the University of Iceland and the Marine and Freshwater Research Institute to conduct pioneering research that will help preserve and protect our oceans.' Christophe Pampoulie, research director of the Marine and Freshwater Research Institute of Iceland, adds: 'Coastal areas are rarely studied in Iceland due to the lack of small research boats. The collection of environmental DNA by Ross and his team will drastically improve our knowledge on species distribution and biodiversity.' Ahead of the challenge Edgley will be training to build strength, endurance and a unique set of skills to see him safely around the coastline, setting a new record this spring.

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