Dr. J. Michael Murray, who has swum Na Pali Coast and trained for five years before Sunday becoming the first person known to have swum from Kaua’i to Ni’ihau, is also the first to tell others he wouldn’t recommend the
Dr. J. Michael Murray, who has swum Na Pali Coast and trained for five years
before Sunday becoming the first person known to have swum from Kaua’i to
Ni’ihau, is also the first to tell others he wouldn’t recommend the roughly
20-mile swim.
“It’s was brutal,” said Murray, 50, who was back in his
Kaua’i Medical Clinic office in Koloa yesterday, seven pounds lighter after 12
hours in the water the day before.
“Nobody’s ever done it before, and
there’s a reason,” said Murray, listing the exhaustive distance and conditions
including sharks, jellyfish and currents.
Sunburned and suffering from the
effects of numerous jellyfish stings which left his legs cramping and swollen
during the swim, Murray explained that his age (50), the year (2000) and
something his children will be able to tell their friends and their children
all drove him to take the plunge from the Navy’s Pacific Missile Range Facility
around 7 a.m. Sunday.
“I guess it was the challenge of the unknown, the
physical and mental challenge,” said Murray, who hopped into the ocean without
fins near a base surf break known as Middles to take on the Kaulakahi
Channel.
Local fishermen, even Murray, know the area to be frequented by
sharks. But he was joined about mid-channel by three small baitfish, around 10
inches long, and for some reason he felt safe as long as they were with
him.
“They were my ‘aumakua (personal or family god). I knew, as long as
they were there, I didn’t have to worry about sharks,” Murray said.
When he
went to the escort boat (Terry Donnelly and Murray’s family were aboard the
Blue Dolphin) to get some fresh water and food for himself, the fish didn’t
follow. When he resumed the swim, they returned, staying with him nearly all
the way to Ni’ihau.
Fergus “Fergy” Macomber paddled with Murray the entire
way on a 13-foot paddleboard, and Murray’s son, Christopher Murray, an
18-year-old senior at Kaua’i High School, paddled next to his father on a
surfboard for much of the crossing.
The elder Murray suffered from
seasickness, cramping, “a lot” of jellyfish stings and nausea associated with
swallowing seawater. He said he was vomiting mid-channel, suffering from
seasickness and nausea for around two hours, then felt fine after that
episode.
Rollers he estimated to be 10 to 12 feet high were experienced
mid-channel, but no breakers he might get caught in, he said. The weather was
perfect for the swim, with light winds and bright sun the entire day. By the
time he approached Ni’ihau, though, it was dark.
Out of respect for the
Native Hawaiian inhabitants of Ni’ihau, he did not go ashore, stopping his swim
in around eight to 10 feet of water close enough to Ni’ihau’s shore to be able
to see sheep staring at him, he said.
His family cheering him on from the
boat and in the water, and a cellular telephone call from surfers competing in
a surf meet at PK’s (Prince Kuhio’s) at Kukui’ula saying they were praying for
him, kept him going, he said.
In his mind, he kept thinking he wanted his
children to be able to stand on shore on Kaua’i, face Ni’ihau and tell whoever
would listen and believe that their father conquered the channel with just his
muscles.
He swam front crawl (freestyle) the entire way and trained for the
crossing for five years. Murray, who has swum Na Pali Coast, routinely swims
about three miles a day, during lunch, in the Hyatt Regency Kaua’i Resort and
Spa’s 25-yard lap pool. He trained also by swimming in the ocean off the South
Shore.
He didn’t get cold during the cross-channel swim, he related, and
the jellyfish stings happened only when he was within four or five miles of
either island.
During the swim, he ate yogurt, canned peaches and Tiger’s
Milk high-energy candy bars, and drank lots of water and Gatorade.
The day
before the swim was spent loading up on carbohydrates, including pastas, which
his wife prepared for him, he said.
Staff writer Paul C. Curtis can be
reached at 245-3681 (ext. 224) and pcurtis@pulitzer.net