San Francisco Chronicle

Woman conquers Farallones Gulf swim

- By Sam Whiting Reach Sam Whiting: swhiting@sfchronicl­e.com

The marathon swim from the Golden Gate Bridge to the Farallon Islands is considered one of the hardest in the world, combining strong currents, fierce wind and frigid water frequented by great white sharks.

But UCSF nurse Amy Appelhans Gubser conquered it this weekend — when she got off work, took a quick nap and then swam into history.

It was early Saturday, 3:25 a.m., when Gubser jumped from a boat on the east side of the Golden Gate Bridge and went into her freestyle stroke headed west under the span and into the open water.

When she came back out, 17 hours later, Gubser was at the Farallon Islands, 29.7 miles away. She had become the first swimmer to complete the treacherou­s Gulf of the Farallones swim in the outbound direction and just the sixth swimmer to do it in either direction, according to the Marathon Swimmers Federation.

The westbound swim is harder because it involves fighting a punishing tide and wind most of the way.

“It was the toughest thing that I have ever set out to do,” said Gubser, 55, on Tuesday during her lunch break at UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital where she works as a nurse coordinato­r in the fetal cardiac unit. She is a mother of two, with two grandkids and a third on the way.

A Pacifica resident, Gubser swims at the South End Rowing Club on San Francisco Bay.

“I look out at those islands every day from Pacifica,” she said, of her motivation. “I joke with my husband all the time that I could swim there. It just draws me because it is so captivatin­g and eerie.”

The Farallones swim was done after years of training in cold water, including marathons in both Monterey Bay and the North Channel from Ireland to Scotland. But those were shorter and warmer swims.

During the Farallones Gulf swim, she hit the continenta­l shelf current and the water temperatur­e dropped to 43 degrees. She’d never before been in water colder than 47 degrees.

She does not wear a wetsuit — open water marathon swimmers are allowed only their swimsuit, cap, goggles and earplugs.

“I was pretty steady for the most part, but at the end we hit a strong current and the water got colder,” said Gubser. “My progress was slowed because I was chilled to the bone. I did not expect 43 degrees. That was nuts.”

Though Gubser started in the dark and finished at dusk, she was not out there alone the whole time. She had a support boat piloted by Chad Dahlberg of Pacific Rival Fisheries and a support team of SERC swimmers that included John Chapman, Abby Fairman, Kirk McKinney, Ken Mignosa, Sarah Roberts and John Sims. Roberts, McKinney and Mignosa each swam part of the way with her.

Roberts was the first, jumping in at the 15-mile mark, where water temperatur­es were in the 40s.

“No amount of training prepares you for the shock of how desperatel­y cold it is,’’ said Roberts, an accountant. “These swims are so long that after seven or eight hours it can start to take a toll on you mentally. You can get into a negative headspace, so it helps when you see someone you know and trust in the water beside you.”

But rules limit support swimming to one hour, with at least an hour in between. Otherwise she was on her own.

Gubser said she was in pain for every one of the 17 hours, but when she needed motivation, she thought of her stepbrothe­r, Dan Fine, 67, who is fighting Stage 4 pancreatic cancer. That kept her going.

Only once did she complain to her crew that she was cold — which scared them because she never does that.

But she said she was not about to give up. “I wanted my kids to be proud of me, and I wanted my grandkids to be proud of me,” said Gubser.

Also, she said, she was determined not to have to go through the ordeal again.

Gubser grew up swimming in the warmer ocean waters of Manhattan and Hermosa Beach, where she worked as an ocean lifeguard. One tower away was her future husband, Greg.

Also a pool swimmer, she swam the backstroke at the University of Michigan, which she attended on a scholarshi­p. She has stuck with pool swimming as a member of the Burlingame Aquatic Club Masters, two to three mornings a week.

To train for the Farallones, she swam two or three days a week, for two hours in the dark and against an incoming tide in the bay. She trained before work, which normally starts at 7:45 a.m.

When she completed her odyssey, she posted to Facebook. “I had a little swim this Saturday!”

Others took it as more than a “little” swim.

“I believe the swim between the Farallon Islands and the mainland is the toughest marathon swim in the world,” said Evan Morrison of Sydney, cofounder of the Marathon Swimmers Federation. “Amy’s endurance in cold water is unparallel­ed. There are no more than two or three people who could even have a chance at doing what she did. Her ability is world class.”

“It is absolutely amazing what she did,” said SERC member Marc Glomb, who was part of Gubser’s land support team. “It’s a superhuman feat by a superhuman.”

On Tuesday morning, Gubser was back in the bay, swimming out of SERC with her usual Tuesday morning group. She stayed within the bounds of Aquatic Park, which felt easy to her. Every swimmer on her crew has an open-water goal for the summer.

“I want to support other swimmers this summer to help them achieve their goals,” she said. “I just hope I can inspire others to challenge themselves.”

 ?? Photo courtesy of Sarah Roberts ?? Amy Gubser swam 29.7 miles, from the Golden Gate Bridge to the Farallon Islands, in 17 hours.
Photo courtesy of Sarah Roberts Amy Gubser swam 29.7 miles, from the Golden Gate Bridge to the Farallon Islands, in 17 hours.

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