A cross-Channel swimmer is facing a new challenge in her latest record-breaking feat – quarantine restrictions between France and the UK.
Australian Chloe McCardel’s planned ten-hour swim starting on Saturday night will be her 35th Channel crossing, breaking the men’s record.
But she hopes her short stay on French soil will not require self-isolation.
“Literally, I reach the shore and stand up on land for a couple of minutes,” she said.
The 35-year-old is due to start from Dover at 20:00 BST on Saturday, with the 21-mile crossing to Calais expected to take her until Sunday morning.
She said that when she arrives, she will spend only a few moments on the French shore before swimming back out to her support boat for the return journey.
“We don’t go anywhere near the border officials or passport control, so I’m hoping technically the quarantine thing won’t apply,” she said.
“I’ve got a little celebration planned in England with the support crew, the team, the volunteers who have been so supportive throughout this.
“So I am hoping the government allow us to do that without having to quarantine.”
The Department of Transport said Ms McCardel should seek legal advice.
Ms McCardel already negotiated special dispensation from the Australian government to travel to the UK for her record attempt.
In recent weeks she has completed three Channel crossings, taking her level with British swimmer Richard Murphy, the current men’s record holder on 34 crossings.
She told the Daily Telegraph that she hopes that her latest feat can help to raise awareness about domestic violence, revealing that she is a survivor who has been diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
“What I’m doing might seem like a superhuman feat, but I’m just a normal, everyday person who’s had huge challenges,” she told the paper.
“For those going through that recovery process, stay strong, and remember there are others out there who have been through the same thing. There is light at the end of the tunnel. France is still there on the other side.”
Equalling the women’s record will be a greater task, however – Alison Streeter, the “Queen of the English Channel”, has swum the distance 43 times.
Ms McCardel holds multiple records for endurance swimming, including the longest ratified unassisted ocean swim in 2014, when she covered 77.3 miles (124.4km) in 41.5 hours in the waters around the Bahamas.
In 2017, she became the first person to attempt a quadruple non-stop crossing of the English Channel, but she was not successful in completing the 84-mile journey.
The feat was finally achieved by Sarah Thomas, from the United States, last year – one year after she was treated for breast cancer.