Bancroft Monday Night Swim for Life Swimming Lessons

$0.00

Swim for Life Swimming Lessons are held Monday nights starting January 5th and will run for 8 weeks at the Bancroft Sword Motor Inn. Lessons will run afterschool in half an hour increments from 4pm onward. Please indicate on your registration form what time you will be able to attend lessons and I will try to accommodate. I will contact you with your swimming time a few days prior to the start of the session. All ages and abilities are welcome. The cost for the session is $230 payable on the first night of lessons after the schedule is confirmed.

Swim for Life Swimming Lessons are held Monday nights starting January 5th and will run for 8 weeks at the Bancroft Sword Motor Inn. Lessons will run afterschool in half an hour increments from 4pm onward. Please indicate on your registration form what time you will be able to attend lessons and I will try to accommodate. I will contact you with your swimming time a few days prior to the start of the session. All ages and abilities are welcome. The cost for the session is $230 payable on the first night of lessons after the schedule is confirmed.

Swim program modules

There are 5 modules in the Lifesaving Society Swim for Life® program:

  • Parent & Tot for parents and children up to 3 years of age

  • Preschool for children 3-5 years

  • Swimmer for children 5 years and older

  • Adult Swimmer for people over 16 years

  • Fitness Swimmer for people of any age who want to improve their overall physical fitness

Parent & Tot 1, 2, 3

Parent & Tot 1: Designed for the 4 to 12-month-old to learn to enjoy the water with the parent. Tots will float and splash, and parents will learn how to enter and exit the water safety with their baby.

Parent & Tot 2: Designed for the 12 to 24-month-old to learn to enjoy the water with the parent. Tots will learn to blow bubbles and get their face wet.

Parent & Tot 3: Designed for the 2 to 3-year-old to learn to enjoy the water with the parent. Tots will learn how how to jump in, hold their breath, and do advanced floats.

Preschool 1, 2, 3, 4, 5

Preschool 1: We encourage the parent to participate until their child lets them know they can do it themselves (thank you very much). These preschoolers will have fun learning to get in and out of the water. We'll help them jump into chest deep water. They'll float and glide on their front and back and learn to get their faces wet and blow bubbles underwater.

Preschool 2: These preschoolers learn to jump into chest-deep water by themselves, and get in and get out wearing a lifejacket. They'll submerge and exhale underwater. They'll also glide on their front and back wearing a lifejacket.

Preschool 3: These youngsters will try both jumping and a sideways entry into deep water while wearing a lifejacket. They'll recover objects from the bottom in waist-deep water. They'll work on kicking and gliding through the water on their front and back.

Preschool 4: Advanced preschoolers will learn to do solo jumps into deeper water and get out by themselves. They'll do sideways entries and open their eyes underwater. They'll master a short swim on their front wearing a lifejacket and gliding and kicking on their side.

Preschool 5: These youngsters get more adventuresome with a forward roll entry wearing a lifejacket and treading water for 10 sec. They'll work on front and back crawl swims for 5 m, interval training, and get a giggle out of whip kick.

Swimmer 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6

Swimmer 1: These beginners will become comfortable jumping into water with and without a lifejacket. They'll learn to open their eyes, exhale and hold their breath underwater. They'll work on floats, glides, and kicking through the water on their front and back.

Swimmer 2: These advanced beginners will jump into deeper water, and learn to be comfortable falling sideways into the water wearing a lifejacket. They'll be able to support themselves at the surface without an aid, learn whip kick, swim 10 m on their front and back, and be introduced to flutter kick interval training.

Swimmer 3: These junior swimmers will dive and do in-water front somersaults and handstands. They'll work on 15 m of front crawl, back crawl, 10 m of whip kick, and increased flutter kick interval training.

Swimmer 4: These intermediate swimmers will swim 5 m underwater and lengths of front, back crawl, whip kick, and breaststroke arms with breathing. Their new bag of tricks includes the completion of the Canadian Swim to Survive® Standard. They'll cap it all off with front crawl sprints over 25 m and 4 x 25 m front or back crawl interval training.

Swimmer 5: These swimmers will master shallow dives, cannonball entries, eggbeater kicks, and in-water backward somersaults. They'll refine their front and back crawl over 50 m swims of each, and breaststroke over 25 m. Then they'll pick up the pace in 25 m sprints and two interval training bouts: 4 x 50 m front or back crawl and 4 x 15 m breaststroke.

Swimmer 6: These advanced swimmers will rise to the challenge of sophisticated aquatic skills including stride entries, compact jumps and lifesaving kicks like eggbeater and scissor kick. They'll develop strength and power in head-up breaststroke sprints over 25 m. They'll easily swim lengths of front crawl, back crawl, and breaststroke, and they'll complain about the 300 m workout.

Rookie, Ranger, Star

Rookie Patrol (8-10 hr.): Swimmers continue stroke development with 50 m swims of front crawl, back crawl and breaststroke. Lifesaving Sport skills include a 25 m obstacle swim and 15 m object carry. First aid focuses on assessment of conscious victims, contacting EMS and treatment for bleeding.  Fitness improves in 350 m workouts and 100 m timed swims.

Ranger Patrol (8-10 hr.): Swimmers develop better strokes over 75 m swims of each stroke. They tackle Lifesaving Sport skills in a lifesaving medley, timed object support and rescue with a buoyant aid. First aid focuses on assessment of unconscious victims, treatment of victims in shock and obstructed airway procedures. Skill drills develop a strong lifesaving foundation.

Star Patrol (8-10 hr.): Swimmers are challenged with 600 m workouts, 300 m timed swims and a 25 m object carry. Strokes are refined over 100 m swims. First aid focuses on treatment of bone or joint injuries and respiratory emergencies including asthma and allergic reactions. Lifesaving skills include defence methods, victim removals and rolling over and supporting a victim face up in shallow water.