Thousands of Dutch take icy New Year’s dip

Agence France-Presse

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The Dutch welcome the New Year through their annual dive

TRADITION. People run to take part in the traditional sea bathing to mark the start of the new year on January 1, 2014 in Scheveningen. AFP Photo

THE HAGUE, The Netherlands – Tens of thousands of revelers across the Netherlands braved the chilly winter weather on Wednesday, January 1, to take a traditional New Year’s plunge in the North Sea’s icy waters.

Around 10,000 swimmers – most dressed only in shorts and bikinis – stormed the waves at The Hague’s historic Scheveningen beach, while around 36,000 others did the same in 125 locations around the country, organizers said.

The so-called “Nieuwjaarsduik” (New Year’s Dive) started in 1960 when a few friends decided to go for a swim to herald in a fresh start to the new year, the organizers spokeswoman Esther Okker told Agence France-Presse.

Since then it has grown into an annual tradition, with swimmers receiving a coveted orange beanie hat and a tin of Dutch pea soup as a reward from the event’s sponsors.

In total some 12,000 liters of pea soup had been handed out, Okker said.

She added conditions were “relatively warm” this year with the ocean around 7.5 degrees Celsius (45.5 degrees Fahrenheit) and outside temperature at around 8.0 degrees.

However, the omnipresent wind on the beach chilled things down to around 3.0 degrees, she added.

“You have to do it at least once in your life,” said Dennis Smit, 20, who was “sunbathing” with his girlfriend Nicole Timmerman, 17, after returning from the water’s edge.

Brothers Beau and Jarvey de Graaff, who was dressed in a tiger outfit, told Agence France-Presse it was the first time they were taking part in the swim.

“Yes, we may be crazy, but we are Dutch and this is tradition,” Jarvey de Graaff, 22, said.

“It may be tradition, but it still was very, very, very cold,” a shivering bikini-clad swimmer who declined to give her name, quipped afterwards before running into a heated tent to get dressed. – Rappler.com

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