The day after the Ice-mile, the Arctic nautical mile, Marion Joffle’s fingers are “still numb”. We would be at least: Wednesday, May 4, the swimmer, originally from Lisieux (Calvados), spent almost half an hour in the icy waters of Longyearbyen, a small town in the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard, north of the Norway. A white paradise for ice-swimmers, those extreme swimmers. Marion Joffle was the only Frenchwoman to go to these ends of the world to take up the Arctic challenge: swim a nautical mile (1609 m) in water at -1°C, in a simple swimsuit.
The 23-year-old Norman, more familiar with one-kilometre races in these same conditions ” [tenait] to do the Ice-mile. My ice swimming association organized this excursion. It’s a week of adventure, with the greatest distance in the water”. After a photo shoot with her feet in the water, which an average Norman would hardly dare to reproduce in summer on the Channel coast, Marion Joffle threw herself into the water.
“In this discipline, you slow down as you swim, because the body is paralyzed a little. “Despite “incredible sensations”, the paralysis therefore ended up winning, after 1550 m: “At one point, my body no longer distinguished air from water. I had water in my lungs. The race team pulled me out of the water. I couldn’t have done it alone.”
1550 meters out of 1609. Challenge almost accomplished but a bit of frustration on arrival. With all the same the satisfaction of [s’être] outdated” and to have had a new and extraordinary experience. Marion Joffle, member of a group of high-level swimmers, does not find her account in traditional pool competitions. “It amuses me, while the others are completely in their bubble. I blossom less in there, confides the young woman. In ice swimming, we are one big family. I do a lot of enriching trips and I meet people from all over the world with whom I share the same fiber. In fact, I swim for challenges like that. It excites me. »