Local Swimmers Plan Santa Barbara Channel Crossing in Memory of Friend Marcie Kjollerhttps://www.noozhawk.com/article/santa_ ... ie_kjollerThe group of women will swim in shifts from Santa Cruz Island to Oxnard Beach, raising money for Heal the Ocean." A group of local women calling themselves “Marcie's Mermaids” will swim 19 miles across the Santa Barbara Channel for charity this week in memory of a friend and fellow swimmer who died earlier this year (photo).
When Rachel Horn moved to Santa Barbara about eight years ago, she gradually met a group of accomplished “water woman” in the community.
They gravitated toward each other because of their love of treacherous open water ocean swimming.
“The ocean swimming love is unique,” Horn said. “It’s a different kind of person that wants to be out in the elements.”
Swimming in a pool isn’t the same, said Horn, who swam competitively throughout school and at Loyola Marymount University.
In the Santa Barbara Channel, there are unpredictable winds and variable ocean water temperatures, plus rip currents. It's also a major route for vessels.
Horn completed a 12.4-mile swim across the Santa Barbara Channel in 2016 as a charity fundraiser, after training in the waters off Santa Barbara’s East Beach on some Sundays with local swimmers, including 50-year-old Marcie Fuller Kjoller.
Kjoller, a former All-American collegiate swimmer, triathlete and teacher, died March 31 while swimming off East Beach. She had gone ocean swimming with a group of friends that morning and was in the water when her friends realized she was in distress.
They rushed to her rescue but, in spite of sustained efforts by first responders, Kjoller died at the scene.
Horn, 34, had planned to do another solo Santa Barbara Channel swim this year, but she changed her plans when Kjoller died. She wanted to support Kjoller and her family, and the community.
“My friends were there and went through that horrific, unfortunate day of realizing Marcie was gone,” Horn said. “We were all impacted.”
An aerial photo shows Rachel Horn during her 12-mile swim across the Santa Barbara Channel in 2016. Horn is among a group of local women swimming a relay this year to raise funds in Marcie Kjoller’s memory.
The relay group, named "Marcie's Mermaids,” will swim 19 miles across the channel on Thursday evening through early Friday morning (weather permitting), from Santa Cruz Island to Oxnard Beach, in memory of Kjoller and an effort to raise $10,000 in charity for Heal the Ocean.
As of Monday, the group has raised more than $7,500 on the official charity page.
The group includes Horn, Liz Boscacci, Hilary McAvoy, Chelsea Jones, Heather Royer, Emily Case, and Paige Kieding (support swimmer), who will all brave the cold waters without wetsuits. Most of the women swimming in the relay were present when Kjoller died, and some even had to pull her body out of the water, according to Horn, who was not at the beach that day.
“We are all in this together,” Horn said. “We are going to feel like we have Marcie with us in the channel — it’s something that will motivate us in those scary moments.”
Kjoller participated on six-person relay teams that swam across the Santa Barbara Channel from Santa Cruz Island to another mainland shore in 2007 and 2008, according to swim results on the Santa Barbara Channel Swimming Association website.
Heal the Ocean was one of her favorite local nonprofits, and Horn even recalls a supportive sticker on Kjoller's car.
During the channel crossing this week, two boats and a kayaker will accompany and observe the swimmers. The bystanders ensure compliance with rules and safety measures if the waters reach dangerous levels.
The swim starts at midnight and Horn expects this year’s journey taking between 10 and 12 hours, depending on conditions.
Swimmers will rotate in the same order every 30 minutes in the channel waters, and Horn estimates each woman will average about 1 mile every half hour.
Horn volunteered to go first.
“The most terrifying time is the beginning because it’s dark and you are swimming to touch an island in the middle of the night,” she said. “I have to touch the island and then it starts.”
In the middle of the water, Horn said, her mind can drift, thinking about the ocean depths and all the creatures underneath.
To stay focused during the challenge, Horn, a former yoga teacher, has a mantra she will repeat again and again — “Warm. Calm. Strong.”
“Those are the three things you can’t control in a channel swim,” she continued. “It’s going to be cold, so warm is the opposite... You tell yourself to be calm... You are going to feel weak no matter the distance.”
— Noozhawk staff writer Brooke Holland can be reached at
bholland@noozhawk.com. Follow Noozhawk on Twitter: @noozhawk, @NoozhawkNews and @NoozhawkBiz. Connect with Noozhawk on Facebook.