-
ZTL (limited traffic zone) in Paris: when will fines begin and how much?
Central parts of the city are now closed to many drivers
-
Taxi drivers in Toulouse stage ‘snail’ protests against sector deregulation
Travel towards the airport or main train station is set to be affected by
-
Hi-tech medical van concept that can serve rural France unveiled
New vehicle aims to provide medical services in areas lacking doctors, equipped with advanced diagnostic tools
US woman sets Channel swim endurance record
Cancer survivor becomes the first swimmer to cross the Channel four times non-stop
An American breast cancer surivor has become the first person to swim the Channel non-stop four times in a row.
Sarah Thomas, 37, was heard saying that she felt 'a little sick' when she walked up the beach in Dover, at the end of the fourth leg of her epic challenge.
Due to strong tides in the Channel, the open water ultra marathon swimmer covered a total 130 miles in 54 hours and 10 minutes, during her two round trips between Dover and Cap Gris-Nez.
A video at this link shows Ms Thomas reaching the beach at Dover for the final time.
She told the BBC afterwards that the most difficult thing during the crossings was the salt water, which burned her throat. She was also stung in the face by a jellyfish.
Endurance swimmer Lewis Pugh posted his congratulations on Twitter, describing her record as an "extraordinary, brilliant and superhuman" performance. "Just when we think we have reached the limit of human endurance, someone is beating the records."
Extraordinary, amazing, super-human!!! Just when we think we’ve reached the limit of human endurance, someone shatters the records. Huge congratulations to Sarah Thomas on swimming the English Channel 4x continuously!!! 🏴🏊♀️🇫🇷 🏊♀️🏴🏊♀️🇫🇷🏊♀️🏴 pic.twitter.com/kOa9QlereH
— Lewis Pugh (@LewisPugh) September 17, 2019
Four swimmers have previously crossed the Channel three times without stopping.
Before embarking on this sporting adventure, she wrote: "This swim is dedicated to all survivors. It is for those of us who prayed for our lives, who desperately wondered what was going to happen, who fought, in pain and fear, to win."
She completed her treatment for breast cancer last year.
Stay informed:
Sign up to our free weekly e-newsletter
Subscribe to access all our online articles and receive our printed monthly newspaper The Connexion at your home. News analysis, features and practical help for English-speakers in France