
Escape to Alacatraz: swimmers and workers face turning tide
Treacherous currents abound in the San Francisco Bay area. Container ships and whales, sailing boats, sharks and sea swimmers all tackle the tricky tides.
The two sea-swimming clubs sit cheek by jowl in Victorian wooden clubhouses on the harbour of the city's aquatic cove. The Dolphin and the Southend share a small urban beach and allegedly a mutual enmity. They have seen a surge in use since the pandemic in spite of the chilly North Pacific waters. Well, they say chilly, but we would just call it grand.
As is tradition with wars, there are occasional ceasefires. Every Friday evening peace comes to the small beach with cocktails on the veranda, the two clubs suspending animosities to mingle with clinking glasses. But both shoals have a mutual target in fog-wrapped sight of the horseshoe cove.
Alcatraz.
READ MORE
I first heard of this aquatic Everest from Gerry, a 20-something software engineer from Dublin, standing outside a precipice-perched wine bar in his flip flops and shorts, his dog sleeping at his feet. 'I was training for Alcatraz,' he declared, 'earlier', athletically waving a goblet of Pinot Noir toward the foggy island off in the distance. 'A mile and a half; should take 45 minutes'.
It's been in
the national news recently but in this city it is omnipresent
. The Rock's distinctive shelled-out buildings and defunct water tower loom out of the gloom at dawn and dusk. The city's first lighthouse, once a penal institution that housed Al Capone, was occupied in the 1970s by a Native American tribe, and their graffiti, visible to passing ferries, still claims its indigenous heritage.
Ira is stretching athletically on the deck of the Dolphin Club. She has been a member here for 48 years, since she arrived in San Francisco in 1977 at the age of 21, from Iran, one year before the Islamic Revolution.
'I paddled in the Caspian Sea as a child, I wanted to learn to swim so I came to the city on the bay,' she explains, her feet stretched up above her head against the rickety wooden fence.
'Three months later on New Year's Day 1978, I swam from out there, Alcatraz, back to here. I jumped in and swam, the water was 47 degrees – and no wetsuit, in a leotard!'
Outside the busy ferry terminal for Alcatraz stand a number of ad-hoc food stalls, selling hot dogs, fruit cups and souvenir trinkets to the thousands of visitors to the Rock. I am in a co-working space just opposite so they are a familiar site to us all, South Americans frying onions, chopping fruit − the original gig economy.
A few weeks ago, there was a noisy kerfuffle outside as the vendors suddenly packed up and took off en masse helter skelter down the waterfront Embarcadero, seemingly spooked. Two figures in dark clothes and high-vis jackets came strolling along menacingly.
'Man that sucks, leave them alone,' said a young San Franciscan, Jim, who works with a local sports NGO, shaking his head as he watched.
It was a false alarm but a timely reminder of the precarious nature of life here for some. And it was one of the few comments I have heard here on the evolving national situation. Jim is one of the few younger people to speak openly; 'What can we do?' he shrugs. 'It feels hopeless, I mean, are people out there laughing at us?'
If anything it is the older citizens who can be heard commenting, swimming against the tide. Maybe they have seen it all.
In Washington Square an elderly man in a T-shirt and military veterans hat, stands at a packed shopping trolley, proselytising the picnickers. 'Tell your neighbours, shout it out, watch the stocks, there's a showdown coming with China, in Chinatown, San Francisco.'
In Cafe Trieste, where
Francis Ford Copolla
is said to have written The Godfather screenplay, among the vintage coffee drinkers, a man in a Grateful Dead T-shirt says he is 'just checking the stocks − up 500, S&P up too. He must have done a deal with Zelenskiy'.
He shakes his head and returns to his cappuccino.
A barman talks at night in the quiet.
'The shoe is going to drop soon man, the next few weeks, you can ignore the news all you want but when the shelves start emptying, that's when the shoe drops.'
I bump into Iranian Ira again down at the swimming club, looking out at Alcatraz.
She has swum from it 12 times in her 48 years in the city on the bay, a stretch of water with some of the most treacherous currents, not to mention the odd whale or shark.
What about the latest late night-announced grand plan from Washington, or rather Florida: to reopen the prison on The Rock.
'Oh Trump, him?' she replies.
'It'll never happen, too expensive, no water over there. But I'll tell you, it keeps people's minds busy, that it does'.
The sun is shining, the swimmers are out, the sailboats skim the waves past The Rock and container ships glide by, only half as full as they were a few weeks ago.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
21 hours ago
- Irish Times
United Airlines expands capacity on routes from Dublin to US
United Airlines will now operate its daily non-stop Dublin to Chicago routes on a year-round basis and has also expanded its second daily New York/Newark route into the winter months. On Friday, the American airline said it will now offer more flights and seats from Dublin Airport than any other US airline. 'This significant expansion further underlines the importance of Dublin within United's global network,' Karolien De Hertogh, United's UK and Ireland sales director, said. 'Our customers in Ireland will benefit from even greater travel choice in the winter season, with the possibility to seamlessly connect via our hubs in New York/Newark, Chicago O'Hare and Washington DC to over 140 destinations in the Americas.' READ MORE It follows the airline's decision to double the number of flights it operates between Dublin and Washington DC this summer from once to twice daily. [ United Airlines to resume Dublin-Washington DC route Opens in new window ] United also recently increased capacity on its Dublin-Chicago route after introducing a new Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner aircraft. 'More capacity on United Airlines' services from Dublin to New York's Newark and Chicago O'Hare airports is great news for our passengers,' said Gary McLean, Dublin Airport managing director. 'The move to almost year-round operations for the second daily Newark service and year-round for the daily Chicago flight is a clear signal of the strong demand from our American customers.' United said its expansion will increase its overall seat offering from Dublin to the US by 50 per cent for next year, compared with 2024. The carrier also recent announced new routes from New York/Newark hub to Greenland, Bilbao, Palermo and Madeira Island, all of which are currently not served by other US airlines.


Irish Times
2 days ago
- Irish Times
Rory McIlroy gets back on an upswing with opening 64 at Travelers Championship
Rory McIlroy was more like his old self, the club twirl, the club drop. The eyes squinting and, then, the power walk. The Masters champion – so out-of-sorts since scaling the heights with his green jacket win back in April to seal the career Grand Slam – walked the walk in the opening round of the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands with a bogey-free 64, to jump right into contention. American Austin Eckroat claimed the clubhouse lead with a superbly crafted 62, but McIlroy – the galleries drawn to him like a magnet to iron having missed the past two years of the tournament in Cromwell, Connecticut – lived up to his star appeal with an impressive round, which will finish his competitive outings stateside until after next month's 153rd Open at Royal Portrush. McIlroy is headed to Europe next week – getting the keys to his new mansion in Wentworth, taking in Wimbledon and then moving on to competing in the Scottish Open and, then, the big one at Portrush. And he continued the momentum of that final round of the US Open which had pushed him into a top-20 finish at Oakmont. On the more birdie-friendly course at TPC River Highlands, McIlroy – playing alongside US Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley – claimed six birdies without dropping a shot. READ MORE 'This is a nice tonic compared to last week [at Oakmont] in terms of it's a slightly more benign golf course and the penalty for missing isn't quite as severe. You can give yourself plenty of chances for birdies, which Keegan and I did. Overall it was a good start to the tournament, and I think when you're in a two-ball like that and we can sort of feed off one another a little bit, too, that's nice, as well,' said McIlroy. 'I just want to see some good golf and see some better shots. I think if you concentrate on that and you're concentrating on your quality of golf and concentrating on just trying to play to the best of your ability, the result will take care of itself. 'There's no point in thinking about the result right now. I'm just trying to play as good as I can and make good swings, and if I do that enough, more than likely I'll find myself in a position to have a chance to win.' Ireland's Leona Maguire of Ireland drives on the first hole during the first round of the KPMG Women's PGA Championship at Fields Ranch East in Frisco, Texas. Photograph:In the KPMG Women's PGA Championship at Frisco in Texas, Leona Maguire made a very solid start to the third Major of the season with a level-par 72, a round which featured two birdies and two bogeys on the tough Gil Hanse-codesigned course. Thailand's Jeeno Thitikul claimed the early clubhouse lead with a 68, while world number one Nelly Korda opened with a 72. On the hotelplanner Tour (formerly the Challenge Tour), Royal Dublin's Max Kennedy shot a magnificent course record 60, 10 under par, to assume the first-round lead in the Blot Play9 tournament in Pleneuf, France, to take a four-shots lead over England's James Morrison. Kennedy, a 23-year-old Dubliner and alumni of the University of Louisville, featured two eagles in a blemish-free round. In the Amateur Championship at Royal St George's in Kent, Co Louth's Gavin Tiernan – the only Irish player remaining in the championship – impressively claimed a 3 and 2 win over Frenchman Gaspar Glaudas to move into the quarter-final of the matchplay, where he will face Estonia's Richard Teder.


Irish Times
2 days ago
- Irish Times
Travelling to the US and need to detox your phone? Here's how
Enter your name into any search engine and you'll quickly find dozens of results. In the online era, our social media handles, place of work, even family members and addresses can easily be uncovered within a couple of clicks. A few minutes of digging and the jigsaw puzzle of your life is pieced together and laid bare for all to see. Digital footprints have become a bigger-than-ever talking point for those looking to visit the US. Recent developments allow for Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents to carry out searches of mobile phones at checkpoints. It was announced today that students will be asked to unlock social media profiles to allow officials to review their online activity before being granted educational and exchange visas. Failing to do so means being suspected of hiding activity from US officials. Among the reasons for checks being carried out are 'any indications of hostility toward the citizens, culture, government, institutions, or founding principles of the United States'. Online forums are blowing up with questions about how to sanitise devices and digital footprints in advance of visa requests or before entering the country. Here are a few steps you can take to reduce the risk of being turned away. READ MORE Now that you've hopefully taken a few deep breaths, assess your surface-level online presence. Consider deleting any social media posts that raise red flags. A simple principle to go by with your device is 'out of sight out of mind'. Don't underestimate the power of a printed boarding pass, and carrying travel documents with you in paper format. Turn your phone off and stow it away in your bag or pocket before approaching a CBP agent, cross your fingers and hope to fly under the radar. However, it's advisable to be more thorough with your methods. Expert suggestions range from pre-screening and making modifications to your personal smartphone before travelling – including deleting incriminating photos, messages and inessential apps – to investing in a clean travel device. When it comes to modifying your current phone, Apple and Google have recently made it possible to add an extra shield of authentication to apps you may want to hide by placing them in a separate folder. [ Direct flights to Cancún may say more about the US than Mexico Opens in new window ] Android's 'private spaces' can also be turned on in the security and privacy settings menu of your phone, while prolonged pressing of an app on iOS will present the option to place it in a hidden folder. Do with that information what you like. Now it might sound extreme, but privacy and digital rights advocates largely favour building a travel device from scratch. In saying that, it's important to beware that a phone that is too squeaky clean can arouse suspicion, doing more harm than good. [ 'My sister is ill in Ireland, but we are suspending our travel plans': Irish in US voice fear over border arrests Opens in new window ] Starting off with a clean slate is one way to practise 'data minimisation', reducing the data available to another person. Put just what you'll need for a trip on the phone; maybe you want to include alternate social media accounts [ie a 'finsta' – a fake Insta(gram) account where you haven't posted anything that could be deemed controversial] and a separate account for end-to-end encrypted communications using an app like WhatsApp. By building from the ground up, you're able to be selective with what can potentially turn up during a manual search. In cases where CBP deems 'reasonable suspicion' of a crime, it may say a more thorough 'advanced search' could be carried out. This is where a device is connected to external equipment and its contents can be reviewed, copied, or analysed. Digital rights groups like San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation have developed a range of in-depth tool kits dedicated to promoting ' surveillance self-defence '. While it is yet to be seen how hard US border control will be clamping down, it's better to be safe than sorry.