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Canadians celebrate the New Year with polar bear swims across the country

91ƵI always refer to it as a reboot, you sort of reboot your system like a computer91Ƶ
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People run into the frigid water in the Northwest Arm off the Atlantic Ocean in Halifax on New Year91Ƶs Day, Monday, January 1, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese

Thousands of people across Canada shrieked, shivered and smiled their way into a new year on Monday as they took part in the long-standing tradition of Jan. 1 polar bear dips.

Canadians have been marking New Year91Ƶs Day with plunges into lakes, oceans and rivers made frigid by typical January conditions since at least 1920, and scheduled events in cities spanning Halifax to Vancouver were poised to maintain the ritual.

Joanie McNally, from Sackville, N.S., lost no time in kicking off this year91Ƶs polar dips when she ran into the icy ocean water at Queensland Beach on Nova Scotia91Ƶs South Shore at 9 a.m. Monday morning. In doing so, she also fulfilled a long-standing personal goal.

91ƵWe91Ƶre always at this beach, but this is the first time (swimming) when it91Ƶs on the more frigid side,91Ƶ she said moments before taking the plunge.

91ƵIt91Ƶs a bit of a challenge to start the new year on the right track.91Ƶ

The temperature sat around -5 C as McNally and 11 other swimmers stripped off their winter jackets, mittens and hats and went off into the icy waves.

McNally91Ƶs husband and daughter, along with a handful of other spectators, cheered and hollered for the group as they ran from the frozen sand to the chilly water.

Dave Morash, also from the Sackville area, said it was the coldest polar plunge he91Ƶs done in at least six years.

Morash and a small group of fellow high school teachers have been doing the plunge together since 2018, but he says this was the first time since then that the temperature has been below zero on New Year91Ƶs Day.

91ƵIt91Ƶs invigorating, it91Ƶs like all of your nerve endings start tingling,91Ƶ he said immediately after the dip.

91ƵI always refer to it as a reboot, you sort of reboot your system like a computer. So here we go, here comes 2024,91Ƶ he said with a laugh as he dried off.

Monday91Ƶs swim, while launching new traditions for some, also marked a departure from New Year91Ƶs Days past in Halifax.

For many years, swimmers jumped into the ocean from a city wharf as part of the Herring Cove Polar Bear Dip. The non-profit organization that put on the event since 1994 cancelled the 2021 dip due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and it has not resumed since.

A recent social media post from the Herring Cove Polar Dip organization said it is 91Ƶhoping to look at options going forward91Ƶ for future events and asked for volunteer support.

When Halifax resident Darrell Robert found out there would not be an organized dip yet again this year, he suggested in comments on social media that people meet at Queensland Beach for an impromptu swim.

91ƵIt91Ƶs nice to corral people and motivate each other to do something new on a new year,91Ƶ he said, adding he was pleased to see so many faces show up at the beach Monday morning.

91ƵI like to see people get together as a community, I think it91Ƶs great and it91Ƶs a great start to the new year.91Ƶ

Small groups of cold-water swimmers were expected to do their own polar plunges throughout Nova Scotia. More than 20 swimmers in Halifax took an icy plunge into the Northwest Arm at Sir Sandford Fleming Park.

The weather was warmer and the crowds were substantially larger on the other side of the country where thousands of people plunged into Vancouver91Ƶs English Bay.

Outside temperatures for the city91Ƶs 104th event sat at 6 C and organizers said the water was about two degrees warmer, as participants, some dressed as Elvis or wearing hats shaped like rubber ducks, took the plunge.

This year was Anne Rainbow91Ƶs 20th polar bear swim. She said past New Year91Ƶs dips have come with snow on the ground.

91ƵThat91Ƶs when I learned to wear shoes,91Ƶ she joked, noting the red, bare feet of other participants who had just exited the water.

She said the relatively warm weather this year meant she was able to go in for a second dip.

91ƵI91Ƶm addicted to it. I love it,91Ƶ she said. 91ƵJust the energy, the cleansing. The feeling of making you feel like you91Ƶre ready to start a new year.91Ƶ

Rainbow91Ƶs friend Cindy Wells has watched the event in the past but decided to participate for the first time this year.

91ƵI needed to start new for 2024. It was a crazy 2023,91Ƶ she said.

Similar events, many of which were intended to raise money for charity, were set to take place in locations including Charlottetown and Saint John, N.B.

In Oakville, Ont., a city just west of Toronto, the return of sub-zero temperatures following days of unseasonably mild conditions proved no deterrent for the roughly 850 people who took part in a plunge at Coronation Park. The swim in Lake Ontario was intended to raise money for charity World Vision Canada.

CEO Michael Messenger said this year91Ƶs dip has so far raised $100,000 towards projects that help provide clean water in developing countries.

The 39th annual Oakville plunge marked the first such dip for 11-year-old Luca Tarabokia.

91ƵI91Ƶm pretty excited for it because the waves look awesome and I like the waves,91Ƶ Tarabokia said.

91ƵIt91Ƶs my first time. I want to do it again next year if it goes well.91Ƶ

His mother, Jane Moran, called Tarabokia the 91Ƶcold water representative91Ƶ for their family.

91ƵYou91Ƶve got to have a certain fortitude to be able to do this and I really, really admire those who are able to do it, but I91Ƶm not one of them,91Ƶ she said with a laugh.

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