Sunday, May 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Kelowna, B.C., Teen Completes English Channel Swim, Raising Thousands For Charity

The Canadian Press, 24 Jul, 2017 11:37 AM
    KELOWNA, B.C. — While many teens spend summers relaxing, a 17-year-old from Kelowna, B.C., has been pushing her body and mind to the limits and raising thousands of dollars for charity in the process.
     
     
    Emily Epp swam across the English Channel earlier this month in a gruelling trek that took nearly 12 hours to complete.
     
     
    Wearing just a bathing suit, a swim cap and goggles, Epp braved less-than-ideal conditions, including chilly, choppy waters and oceans swells that left her nauseated for hours.
     
     
    She said her family and coaches on the pilot boat tried everything they could to get some fuel into the young swimmer's body.
     
     
    "For about an hour, all I ate was ginger ale and a few M&Ms!" Epp said in an email after the swim. "But I was able to shake it off and continue swimming, and I'm very thankful for that."
     
     
    The Channel Swimming Association says on its website that the English Channel is "considered by many to be the ultimate long distance challenge," because the approximately 32 kilometre stretch hosts a variety of difficult conditions, including cold waters, high waves and occasional debris such as seaweed and wood planks.
     
     
    Epp found that the waters are also home to a variety of sea creatures, including jellyfish that stung her several times during her swim.
     
     
    But the teen persevered and as she approached France, Epp saw something colourful in the sky.
     
     
    "We could see fireworks all along the coast for Bastille Day celebrations," she said. "My boat pilot teased me that he had set it up just for me!"
     
     
    Epp said swimming across the English Channel took nearly three years of training, including cold-water and endurance swims in Kelowna's Okangan Lake. She also mentally prepared through visualization and talking to a number of people who previously swam the English Channel.
     
     
    "I was very fortunate to have some incredible mentors help me," Epp said.
     
     
    In June, she put her training to the test, swimming about 30 kilometres around Bowen Island off the coast of Vancouver in just under 11 hours.
     
     
    "Her dad and I are super proud," Emily's mom, Cheryl Epp, said after the Bowen Island swim. "She blows us away with how determined she is and how hard she's been working."
     
     
    Epp has been working hard on dry land, too, using her epic swim to fundraise for a children's hospice that has provided crucial care for her family.
     
     
    "When I found out that most (English) Channel swimmers choose something to fundraise for, I immediately knew I would try to raise money for Canuck Place," Epp said.
     
     
    The family started receiving care there about five years ago for Emily's sister, Elan, who lost all of her motor control following a viral infection when she was 18 months old.
     
     
    "It was fun for me and my (youngest) sister, Erin, to be with other siblings of children who had life-limiting conditions," Emily Epp said. "Being in a place where my parents could have some help learning different ways to make Elan feel better that wasn't in a hospital setting, was something we had never experienced before."
     
     
    The teen's original goal was to raise $4,000 for Canuck Place. She has now brought in more than $44,000, and those funds will be matched by a Vancouver-based foundation.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Scooter Enthusiast's Round-the-World Trip Comes To Crashing Halt Near Calgary

    Scooter Enthusiast's Round-the-World Trip Comes To Crashing Halt Near Calgary
    CALGARY — A Polish man's effort to circumnavigate the globe on two wheels came to a screeching halt when his scooter was struck by a car on the TransCanada Highway east of Calgary.

    Scooter Enthusiast's Round-the-World Trip Comes To Crashing Halt Near Calgary

    Judge FindsCalgary Man Guilty Of Manslaughter In Wife's Strangulation, Burying Body In Basement

    Judge FindsCalgary Man Guilty Of Manslaughter In Wife's Strangulation, Burying Body In Basement
    CALGARY — A Calgary judge has rejected a man's argument that he acted in self-defence when he strangled his wife and buried her body in their basement.

    Judge FindsCalgary Man Guilty Of Manslaughter In Wife's Strangulation, Burying Body In Basement

    Opposition Parties Try To Block Trudeau's Pick For Languages Commissioner

    Opposition Parties Try To Block Trudeau's Pick For Languages Commissioner
    Conservatives and New Democrats accuse Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of picking Meilleur for the job without consulting them.

    Opposition Parties Try To Block Trudeau's Pick For Languages Commissioner

    Liberals Want Infrastructure Cash To Reduce Impacts Of Flooding, Amarjeet Sohi Says

    Liberals Want Infrastructure Cash To Reduce Impacts Of Flooding, Amarjeet Sohi Says
    OTTAWA — The federal infrastructure minister says the Liberals want more of the billions in upcoming project funding to be spent directly on flood and disaster mitigation.

    Liberals Want Infrastructure Cash To Reduce Impacts Of Flooding, Amarjeet Sohi Says

    Editor Of CBC's 'The National' Reassigned After Cultural Appropriation Flap

    Editor Of CBC's 'The National' Reassigned After Cultural Appropriation Flap
    TORONTO — The managing editor of CBC's "The National" was reassigned Wednesday for what the public broadcaster called "an inappropriate, insensitive and frankly unacceptable tweet" he made as part of a controversial debate over cultural appropriation.

    Editor Of CBC's 'The National' Reassigned After Cultural Appropriation Flap

    Transgender Community, NDP Urge Trudeau Government To Change Travel Regulations

    Transgender Community, NDP Urge Trudeau Government To Change Travel Regulations
    Doing away with the regulation is a cause the federal NDP has been pushing for five years, and one for which Justin Trudeau expressed support before becoming prime minister.

    Transgender Community, NDP Urge Trudeau Government To Change Travel Regulations