Waterlog: A Swimmer's Journey Through Britain by Roger Deakin
335 pages
Published 1999
Read from May 31 to June 9
Rating: ★★★★ out of 5
It's
hard to imagine anything more eccentric and British than this: A writer
sets out to swim throughout the British Isles, dipping into ponds and
estuaries, lochs and ocean littoral, trout streams, fens, abandoned
moats, canals, flooded quarries, harbors, industrial rivers, hidden
becks, a cave, even heated swimming pools. Along the way, Deakin gives
rich details of the natural places and human characters he meets:
"Making my way back along the bank in the wetsuit through a field of
cattle, carrying my flippers, mask, and snorkel, I met the farmer, who
said he had fished the Dart for thirty years. He wore tweed, I wore
rubber and stood dripping, but he seemed not to notice, or was polite
enough not to say anything, and we chatted away on the bank about otters
and salmon for some considerable time." Attempting an illegal swim
across a harbor channel, he is accosted by the coast guard: "Oh God, not
you again!" As with Wildwood, the Deakin book I read in April, the charm and appeal of Waterlog
is in the sensual, sensory detail Deakin lavishes upon each encounter,
each hidden pool and remote stream bank. Read all at once, the effect
can become monotonous, but the rich descriptive beauty of his ineffably
British peregrinations is enchanting in small, measured doses.
I
can't set this book aside without noting the annoyance I felt toward
Deakin's casual scientific ignorance. Dating the Cambrian to "a hundred
million years ago" is inexcusable; it would take five minutes to look up
the actual time period on the internet or in an encyclopedia. His
digression in support of the "aquatic ape" hypothesis, while suitably
poetic from a romantic swimmer's perspective, is baffling; that "theory"
was discredited from almost the moment it was first published, and its
continued currency among literate but nonscientific circles is
frustrating. Every crackpot seems to have their own pet theory of human
evolution; a physics professor at my old university, of all people,
derailed a lecture to advance the idea that the ability to throw rocks
was the primary impetus of human evolution. You can say this is a pet
peeve of mine. Granted, Waterlog isn't a treatise on human
evolution, but it would have taken one phone call for his editor to say,
"Hey Roger, can we tweak this section a bit? No one has taken that
hypothesis seriously in like fifty years, if ever." Missed
opportunities.
Oh well. This was still a beguiling and lovely
read. Incidentally, I feel a tad bit responsible for this book; I
inadvertently caused my library to purchase it, and I'm the first person
to get my hands on it after they put it into circulation. I hope plenty
of library patrons after me find its eccentricity as captivating as I
did.
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