An invitation to all KLPA members from lifeguard Jane Smith:
Join us for the 2019 Ladies’ Pond Chatathon on Saturday 14 September. Meet at 08.30 at the Lido for a swim then walk to the Mixed Pond for another swim, then walk to the Ladies’ Pond to swim and eat a shared brunch. It’s easy, fun and free. Bring food to share!
ALSO, join us to celebrate Autumn Equinox. Gather at the Ladies’ Pond at 07.15 prompt, Friday 20 September, for a special moment. Swim and bring food for a shared breakfast.
As some people will already have discovered, the Ladies’ Pond is currently experiencing a bloom of blue-green algae and you will find warning notices on the gate and the swimming deck. The water quality is being monitored and aerators and barley straw bales are being used to disrupt the growth of this naturally occurring organism.
At the moment, it is still considered safe to swim BUT please be aware that such blooms can be toxic to humans and have been known to cause rashes after skin contact and illness if swallowed. It is particularly important to avoid swallowing water and to shower thoroughly immediately after swimming.
Please talk to the lifeguards if you are concerned.
Daunt Publishing’s anthology of writing about the Ladies’ Pond was published last month to critical acclaim. Copies are available from Daunt bookshops and other online and bricks and mortar booksellers. More details here.
Some of you will be aware of the London Waterkeeper, a charity dedicated to protecting London’s rivers, and you may even have participated with other KLPA members in swimming in the Thames with the charity’s founder, Theo Thomas.
Swimmers may also be interested in signing this petition, which the charity is currently promoting, calling on OFWAT and the Environment Agency to step up action to stop pollution in London’s rivers.
As swimmers and sunbathers flock to the water – including the Ladies’ Pond – regular swimmer and former KLPA committee member, Cath Cinnamon, has suggested that members might be interested in this article about sunscreens.
The City has organized a lifeguard training session at the Ladies’ Pond next Wednesday, 3 July.
The Ladies’ Pond and the meadows will be closed from 10.30am until 1.30pm on that day. The Lido and the Mixed Pond will remain open as usual during this time.
This year’s Highgate Festival, 14-23 June, will include a small exhibition on the history of the Ladies’ Pond at the Omved Gardens gallery. The director of the festival, KLPA member Alicia Pivaro, is inviting swimmers to share their thoughts about and memories of the Pond on a ‘Pond Postcard’ which may be included as part of the display and will then be donated to the KLPA archive.
There is a supply of postcards attached to the KLPA noticeboard in the changing room and beside it an orange folder in which to ‘post’ completed cards. Alternatively you can download a card here and, if you can’t get to pond, feel free to scan and email your message to klpamailbox@gmail.com with the subject line POND POSTCARDS so that we can forward it to Alicia.
KLPA members were immensely saddened to learn earlier this week of the recovery of the body of a swimmer from the Men’s Pond. Our thoughts are with the family and friends of the deceased to whom we send our sincere condolences.
We have been pleased to welcome swimmmers from the Men’s Pond between 07.00 and 09.00 each morning while their pond has been closed. This arrangement will continue until the City of London are in a position to reopen the Men’s Pond.
The Men’s Pond has been closed since the afternoon of 1 June with police searching for a missing person. The pond will remain closed until the search has been completed.
To reciprocate the generosity of the Men’s Pond in welcoming us to swim with them early in the morning when our pond has been closed, male swimmers will be allowed to swim in the Ladies’ Pond from 07.00-09.00 on Monday 3 June and later in the week if the closure continues. Last entry to the water for men will be 09.00 and they will be asked to be off the premises no later than 09.30. After 09.00 men will be directed to the Mixed Pond and the Lido.
Many of us will have enjoyed seeing ‘The Ponds’ on television on Monday evening 20 May but the KLPA was surprised and delighted to receive an email from a gentleman named John Thurley telling us how much the film meant to him. His mother, Sylvia Mary Thurley (née Corfield), who died last year at the age of 93, was a regular swimmer at the Ladies Pond throughout her life and he wanted us to know how much she would have enjoyed the film and how much she would have appreciated us “keeping the ponds alive”.
Sylvia (seen in the photo above) was born in northwest London in 1925 and was “very sporty” and “competitive” with a passion for swimming. Although she often swam in local swimming pools, Kenwood Ladies’ Pond was her favourite place and as a young woman she was featured in the local newspaper “breaking the ice to train”.
John says that Sylvia loved the Heath so much that “her wish was always to go home”, and that when she died he scattered her and his father’s ashes on Kite Hill overlooking St Anne’s where they were married.
John no longer lives in London but plans
to bring his family to swim later this summer.