1506 love your goggles

It may sound like a silly question but…

Do you love your goggles?

Let me rephrase it…

Do you love being able to see clearly and comfortably when you swim?

It may sound like an obvious thing, or it may sound like no big deal. But care for your goggles is care for your eyes. It is a serious bummer to have the goggles fail in the middle of a swim, isn’t it? We start to realize how much we rely on our sight when we don’t have it.

You should fully test out your goggles under the conditions you intend to use them when it matters most. And you should take good care of them between practice and races, regardless of the price, as if they were a piece of delicate, expensive equipment.

150615 Cirali OWC 10 600x450First morning training session of our open-water camp in Turkey. Rough setting, eh?

I was prompted to write some advice about this because it has happened several times in our swim camps that someone has experienced a problem with their goggles after going a ways on a longer swim. But I realize prevention comes with experience so let’s share some of that experience to speed up the learning curve.

Common Problems

Some common goggle failures or problems:

  • the lenses fog up
  • the strap or other plastic part breaks
  • the lens is scratched/marred and view obscured
  • there is a leak

Now, these failures may not be a big deal when they happen at the pool in practice and you happen to have a spare pair in your bag (… and you do have a spare pair in your bag, don’t you?) But in a race, or away from shore, that spare pair isn’t available. What then?

When you enter a race with those same goggles, or go on the exercise holiday and are enjoying a long swim in the deep blue, you can’t afford to have them fail on you. Yeah, you’ll survive but it really makes for a frustrating race or an unpleasant swim.

Goggles may be regarded as relatively cheap – or at least that is the way I see many people treat their goggles – throw them in the swim bag to slosh around with whatever else is in there, lay them directly on the rocks or sand, wipe them out with a soiled corner of clothe or finger, etc. Yet when we find ourselves out in the water a ways from our start/finish point and our goggles are failing us, we start to really appreciate protected eyes and clear vision, and wonder how these goggles suddenly become so troublesome. When that failure happens from our own neglect we should take note and better care.

Now, I have always loved rugged and cheap gear – especially stuff that is going to get used hard and I might have to replace it often, like swim suits. I formerly felt this way about goggles. But I reflect back and see that I am habitual about caring for my gear – especially my goggles – and mine seems to last an unusually long time. I am now willing to invest in a more expensive pair if it will increase reliability and comfort.

I observe that most swimmers experience avoidable goggle failures. It may seem astounding but I have not had an immediately unsolvable goggle failure while swimming in many years. However, I still prepare for this possibility, because it is always a possibility regardless of how well I take care of them.

Goggle Advice

So there are two categories to my advice:

  • Prepare for failure.
  • Prevent failure (or lower the risk).

Prepare For Failure

  • Keep a spare pair in your swim bag – preferably the same kind as the ones you love and use.
  • Once you know your favorite goggle type, buy at least two pair at once.
  • Keep extra straps and nose pieces in your bag (salvage good parts from old pairs).
  • Practice swimming without goggles on – just in case you need to. Test the feeling of pool water and wild water on your open eyes just so you know what to expect and practice some ways to deal with it.
  • In open-water if being escorted by kayak or boat, keep a protected extra pair with your survival gear (water, snack, sun-screen, etc) on that support vessel.

 Prevent Failure

  • Always place goggles on a soft surface (towel, shirt, etc), lens facing UP.
  • Always store your goggles in your silicon swim cap or protective case.
  • Rinse them in fresh water after use, wipe drops from outer lens and let air dry (along with your swim suit).
  • Inspect the straps and plastic parts for cracks or wear spots – replace parts or replace goggles BEFORE they fail.
  • With dish soap, wash the pool chemical residue from the body and strap often (use an old soft toothbrush).
  • Use the same goggles in practice that you intend to use in the race or long swim.
  • If possible, kindly refuse to share your goggles with someone else – it is not likely that others will treat yours with the care you do.

Slip your goggles into your silicon swim camp before putting that into your  swim bag. The soft, clean, thick cap protects the lenses from getting scratched.

Or, take a firm plastic water bottle and cut off the top, with a little of the taper remaining, and store your goggles in that, inside your swim bag.

I strongly advise that you never use new equipment in a race or long (unassisted) swim. (I wrote some about this in the post – Preparing For Your Open Water Race.)  You should test the durability and comfort of your goggle seal in practice as you intend to use them in open-water. If you plan to go for an hour-plus swim on a swim holiday or race, then you should wear your goggles in practice for over an hour without removing them to see how it will feel after so much time, and if they will start to leak under such swimming conditions. Thoroughly test the gear you intend to use on the big swim so there will be no unpleasant surprises for you when are in the middle of it.

Anti-Fog Help

When I buy a new pair of goggles and it says it has an anti-fog coating on it, the first thing I do is carefully rub off this coating with dish soap and a soft clothe. It may be fine for a few days, then it may not work so well. When it wears off in places from trying to rub it clear with your finger it may further obscure the clear view.

My tried and true solution is to coat the lens with baby shampoo. I have the application technique dialed in and I can rely on it during long swims. They key is to leave the thinnest moist film of shampoo-water on the lens, put those goggles on, and don’t take them off for the remainder of the swim. Once you rinse the solution out, or let the lens dry and you have to reapply. But otherwise, I have had this work for me up to 3 hours continuously with NO fog at all. (I am searching for the ideal tiny ampule container to store a few drops of soap that I can then tuck into my swim suit, just in case I need a cleaning mid-swim).

Before a race, I clean my goggles really well and inspect. But I don’t apply the shampoo yet. At the line, while waiting for the start I keep a very small piece of moistened kitchen sponge soaked in baby shampoo-water under the seam of my suit. I pull that out a half minute before the gun, apply to my goggles, put the goggles on and leave them on – then pray they don’t pop off during the jump in. There are techniques for lowering the risk of goggle loss at entry too.

Goggle Recommendations

Lastly, here are my favorite goggles, just in case you wanted some ideas. However, goggles are a matter of personal fit, so hopefully you can test a friend’s goggles to feel them before you take a risk to buy a (more expensive) pair.

1506 image 07Arena Viper

I just started using these. I needed some goggles for longer swimming (1+ hours) that fit outside my eye sockets to reduce soreness from extended pressure. The swim-mask type just do not sit well on my smaller face (yes, I even tried womens, childrens, and a few different brands). So far, these Vipers are sitting on my face well, no leaks and nice wide view. I feel like the big lenses are really vulnerable to scratching but it will be a test for my goggle-protecting habits.

1506 image 08Speedo Vanquishers

I have been using these for several years, in a variety of colors (I use the womens version because they are slightly smaller). They set well in my eye sockets, and a pair will lasts me easily over a year. The only near-failure has been in the plastic nose pieces, but I inspect and replace it (with the included spare, in multiple sizes) when I notice a crack or wear spot from bending. The straps are tough and easily adjustable. Beware though, that nose piece is a bugger to change and risks breaking the goggle.

1506 image 09(Beloved) Swedish Goggles

That is a name of the type of goggle, and are made by many companies. I have loved these since high school. They are both durable and cheap. But they take getting used to because they fit snugly inside the eye socket with no padding – your skin in the padding, and that may be the secret to their leak-proof success. When trying a pair, give it a week because it feels like the face needs a few days to mold to the goggles – but if after a few days they feel great and you have no leaks, you may become a Swedish Goggle lover too. But if not, they may not be for you. They are cheap enough to buy and test out.

I wouldn’t use these for longer swims (more than 30 minutes), but in the pool where one would pull them on/off periodically or for in-water coaching, they are great. And, you can crank them down and dive in from the blocks in a pool race with probably the least risk of loss of any goggles – they have extremely low profile. That may be a reason you see these on many Olympic swimmers in the big races.

Because they are cheap, they beg neglect though. They are light and scratch easily which quickly renders the lens obscured. But I would buy a handful of them in many colors and change around – I liked the way I could change goggles to associate different intensity levels of swimming with a different color lens (for a fun experiment).

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