The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Scotland’s

From exploring under ice in the Cairngorms to crossing the Firth of Forth in winter, Calum Maclean isn’t one to resist a dare. The film-maker, TV presenter and ambassador for The Outdoor Swimming Society chats to Gayle Ritchie

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A t 997m above sea level, Loch Coire an Lochain in the Cairngorms is Scotland’s highest loch.

It can hold ice for seven months of the year, so while impressive to look at, it wouldn’t be the obvious choice for a swim...for most us.

Enter Calum Maclean – a film-maker and TV presenter from Inverness, mad about outdoor swimming across Scotland.

Calum, 30, used a pickaxe to break the ice so he could take a dip – in just his trunks and a swimming cap – and reveals while it was “hoora cold”, the experience left him buzzing for hours.

“It was brutally cold but since the water was so blue and clear, it wasn’t intimidati­ng like dark water.” he muses.

“I’d gone there with the idea of making a film and taking photos so once I got past chest depth, I was fully focused and kind of forgot the cold.”

As well as swimming in some of Scotland’s coldest lochs, often walking miles through remote wilderness to reach them, Calum has devised a completely non-scientific water temperatur­e guide – The Scottish Water Temperatur­e Chart – for anyone attempting a dip themselves.

The brave soul – who has featured on various BBC Alba shows and whose films for the BBC’S The Social have racked up millions of views – is also an ambassador for The Outdoor Swimming Society, a worldwide collective of swimmers who share the joy, adventure and experience of swimming under an open sky

“I was never a competitiv­e swimmer, but I always loved being around water,” says Calum.

“Lots of family holidays involved being outdoors, so I’d often throw myself into whatever water was about.”

Calum got into the more adventurou­s side of wild swimming 10 years ago when he was in Tasmania. On a whim, he swam around a kilometre across the River Derwent early one morning. He didn’t tell anyone, which he admits “wasn’t the wisest”, but he found the buzz completely exhilarati­ng.

His first swim in ice was in Skye, five years ago.

Calum swims for many reasons, but mostly it’s about location – interestin­g, beautiful places, and places he’s never been to.

“I get bored swimming at the same places, and enjoy getting to places well away from roads, cars, noise.

“I think it’s natural to challenge ourselves if we enjoy something, so it’s about seeing how I am in colder waters, seeing if I can swim further, seeing what great locations I’ve yet to go and plunge into.

“Often a challenge will come to me just looking at a map or location, saying to myself, ‘I think I could swim that’, then working out how to do it.

“The thrill of completing a swim, even a short dip, is a great buzz. It’s that buzz that keeps me going back.”

Before Calum ventured into icy Loch Coire an Lochain in April 2017, he spent months acclimatis­ing, so he was confident he’d be able to do it.

“Since I rarely measure temperatur­e, I don’t know how cold it was but I suspect around 2 to 3C – hoora cold!” he laughs.

“I was only in for five minutes but I was buzzing afterwards!”

In January, he crossed the Firth of Forth for his BBC ALBA series Dhan Uisge when it was snowing.

“With having to stop to film pieces to camera, the swim took about 50 minutes,” he says.

“Conditions were a bit choppy and the water was murky, and as I stopped to talk, I swallowed one huge mouthful – pretty minging!”

Calum’s unique formula for charting water temperatur­e in Scotland is hilarious. His guide starts with “roasting” and shifts through “no bad” to “Baltic” or “hoora cold”, which he also refers to with some choice swear words.

His best outdoor swimming experience ever was last summer in Loch A’AN in the Cairngorms.

“It’s a beautiful loch, hemmed in by mountains, and the quickest way there is up and over a mountain,” he says.

“I’d run in one morning, in bright, brilliant sunshine and when I got the loch, plunged straight in.

“The water was very cold but incredibly clear and clean – I could see really far underwater.

“The combinatio­n of endorphins from the run and swim, being surrounded by mountains, cold water and then the bright sun warming me up was perfect.”

In terms of Courier Country hot (or cold) spots, Calum has swum in the Tay many times and hopes to make the journey down the river from Kenmore to Dundee, although he reckons he’d recce it using a paddleboar­d or canoe.

He’s also a fan of the Falls of Acharn near Kenmore.

“I swam there when there were icicles hanging off the trees, so I’d probably go there in summer next time!

The water was murky, and as I stopped to talk, I swallowed one huge mouthful – pretty minging!

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