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Budget Swimrun Gear Setup

Budget Swimrun Gear Setup

Published 5 years, 6 months ago
Description

Welcome to another episode of Gear Talk with Annie and Brooke from Swimrun Labs.

In this episode, we break down the different parts of the Swimrun kit with an emphasis on keeping it under a budget of $350 for those interested in getting into the sport of Swimrun but want to dip your toe in and not go full cannonball. We’ll talk more about that later in the show.

Gear Updates/First Impressions

Annie is still loving her Arc’teryx Norvan SL shoes. She’s now used them on a variety of endurance expeditions and they are holding up great! These are quickly becoming her favorite Swimrun shoe.

Brooke recently picked up an Ark Sports Women’s Ark KORP wetsuit. This was her first new suit in several years and said that running in the suit was totally amazing. Some water did get into the suit while swimming but she thinks that it could be a sizing issue. Overall, first impressions were mixed but optimistic.

Budget Swimrun Kit Roundtable

To frame this discussion, Chipper came up with a prompt and a goal that we used to come up with our recommendations. 

Prompt: You are new to Swimrun. You run on trails on the weekends, but other than shoes you don’t really have any of the gear. You’re doing a race in 6 months and don’t want to invest too much money. 

Goal: Create a budget-friendly Swimrun gear setup (not counting shoes, tether, nutrition, etc.) to get you started and stay under $350

With these cues in hand, we broke down the different elements of the Swimrun kit and talked about each gear category (goggles, pull buoy, etc.) and gave our thoughts on the best/cheapest gear to get you started. We also made recommendations on where you should splurge and where you can save some money. Most prices are approximate. Below is the breakdown of our choices:

Chipper: (Total $347)

Chris: (Total $267)

  • Googles: whatever you already have. Don’t own goggles, I’m a fan of Aquasphere Kayenne ($28)
  • Wetsuit: Orca Core ($169)
  • Pull Buoy: Definitely spurge on this and get the Ark Sports Keel ($47)
  • Socks: use what you have (something with synthetic fibers. Cotton is not your friend.
  • Paddles: If you’re already training with paddles use those, if you’re not training with them, start with something manageable like the Speedo Power Paddle Plus ($20)

Annie: (Total: $198)

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