The link for the Harbin Winter Festival isn't an official event
website but it does show you pictures of many of the large ice
sculptures there.
Some pictures of the Harbin swimmers can be found in the Photos
section of this group.
--- In LakeGeorgePolarPlunge@yahoogroups.com, "Craig" <crm365@...>
wrote:
>
> A slightly longer version of this story appeared in the Post-Star
> today.
>
> This one came from:
> http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/0312china-
> ice0312.html
>
> A link for the Harbin China Winter Festival is:
> http://www.rtoddking.com/chinawin2005_hb_if.htm
>
>
> China swimmers hit the ice
> Performers splash into holes during winter tourist show
>
> Audra Ang
> Associated Press
> Mar. 12, 2006 12:00 AM
>
> HARBIN, China - It's so cold it hurts to breathe, but Wu Jing
wears
> only a purple swimsuit and ruby-red high heels as she struts
around
> a pool cut into river ice 2 feet thick.
>
> In minutes, she will join a dozen other swimmers in the frigid
> Songhua River, part of a twice-daily show where performers ham it
up
> on diving boards made of ice blocks covered in hemp sacks before
> splashing into an 80-foot by 30-foot hole cut into the ice.
>
> Wu waves to warmly dressed people who paid the equivalent of $3.50
> each to watch the show. It's zero degrees Fahrenheit under the
> morning sun. advertisement
>
>
>
>
> "How are you today?" she calls, smiling and tossing her long black
> hair as the spectators snap photos. "Welcome!"
>
> Harbin is a hot destination when it's cold, drawing millions of
> tourists each year to a winter festival whose highlights include
> replicas of world monuments modeled out of ice. Think Arc de
> Triomphe and Big Ben look-alikes.
>
> There's an ice carving competition, a Siberian tiger park,
sledding
> and a restaurant made of ice, where customers cook meat and
> vegetables in boiling broth at the table.
>
> Then there's ice swimming in the Songhua.
>
> Winter swimming began in China in the late 1940s and has
> unexpectedly taken off, said Lin Senlin of the China National
> Swimming Association's Winter Swimming Committee. He said there
are
> now about 200,000 registered amateur ice swimmers in China, mostly
> retirees, although there are likely more unofficial participants.
>
> "It's become more and more popular each year," Lin said.
>
> The purported health benefits are the main draw, he
> asserted: "Through practice, diseases like high blood pressure and
> heart disease can be eased, even cured."
>
> There are annual winter swimming championships and even
> international competitions that spotlight interest in ice swimming
> in parts of the United States, Canada, Finland and Russia.
>
> Unlike other Chinese and foreign cities where people get together
> informally for "polar bear swims," there's a fee to watch the
> swimmers in Harbin.
>
> With an announcer yelling a running commentary through a
megaphone,
> the show is short - and a bit anticlimactic.
>
> The swimmers, mostly aged 50 to 70, jog out from a rundown
building,
> stretching and flailing their arms. Some wear white swim caps with
> the Chinese flag. Others have canvas shoes and rubber gloves.
>
> One by one, they jump, dive or slowly climb down a ladder into the
> water. They dip their faces in, blowing and sputtering like whales.
>
> They climb out after swimming a length or two, staying in a minute
> and a half at the most. And the show is over.
>
> The Harbin swimmers perform between December and March, and are
paid
> 75 cents for each show. One of the rare times the show was
disrupted
> was in November, when a toxic chemical spill polluted the Songhua,
> forcing officials to cut off running water to the city for five
days.
>
> Wu Jing, the 52-year-old "Queen of Ice Swimming," said the
activity
> helped her get over a divorce and realize her dream of being in
the
> spotlight.
>
> "At first, it helped me to get rid of my bad mood. Then I felt it
> was good for my health and good for society," said Wu, who wears
> thick mascara and a slash of bright red lipstick.
>
> She said she got her nickname from Russian ice swimmers when she
> beat them in a competition in the 1990s.
>
> For 78-year-old Fan Xuetong, ice swimming is the best way
to "raise
> the body's resistance."
>