Extreme adventurer Ross Edgley is set to take on one of his most demanding challenges yet – a 48-hour non-stop swim in Scotland’s Loch Ness.
Mr Edgley is no stranger to the cold waters surrounding the UK after he was the first person to swim around the island without touching land in 2018.
Having previously vowed to hang up his goggles after his Great British swim in 2018, Mr Edgley said he would do it again “for a really good cause”.
He takes the plunge on Wednesday and is also hoping to raise more awareness of the beauty and fragility of the sea forests beneath the oceans across the world as part of a partnership between Talisker & Parley For The Oceans.
Ross Edgley is hoping to break the record for the longest non-stop swim in Loch Ness (JSHPIX.CO/Red Bull Media House/PA)PA Media - JSHPIX.CO/Red Bull Media House
“I just sort of went, you know what, I like it, I’ll get my goggles. I’ll make a swimming spectacle of myself and we’ll try and raise awareness as much as we can – like David Attenborough said,” he said.
His latest attempt to break the record for the longest ever tideless open-water swim, however, is “just another day at the office”.
The 36-year-old has gained almost a stone in weight by following a 10,000-calorie per day diet after arriving for training in Scotland a month ago.
He revealed he had been feasting on typical Scottish delicacies including haggis and rowies (savoury bread roll) in order to gain weight to keep him warm in the cool waters of Loch Ness.
Ross Edgley will be trying to beat the record of the longest consecutive swim (JSHPIX.CO/Red Bull Media House/PA)PA Media - JSHPIX.CO/Red Bull Media House
He said: “I’ve been here a month now and I turned up 87 kilos and felt really good.
“I was lean, had a six pack and I was fast in the water. It was amazing.
“But I couldn’t stay in Loch Ness for much longer than a few hours.
“I was so lean. So the scientists at Loughborough uni, were like: ‘Ross, you just need to get fat’.”
He asked the world’s strongest brothers, Luke and Tom Stoltman – who live in Invergordon, for their expertise.
They have both won the World’s Strongest Man and Europe’s Strongest Man contest on numerous occasions.
He added: “They just said: ‘Oh, you need to put on fat. No problem. Come over here.’
“So I’ve been training and eating with them. They tuck away easily 10,000 calories they took me to all of their favourite places to eat in Scotland. And we’ve just been eating haggis, rowies, everything.
“Now I’m 100 kilos. I put on 13 kilos in a month.”
Locals in Stonehaven have also been deep-frying Mars Bars for him and elderly women have been handing him bars of Scottish sugary favourite – tablet.
“This is why I love Scotland,” he said.
“I was doing the GB swim, and I came into Stonehaven, and they were just like: ‘You’ve got to do 10,000 calories? No problem.’
A view of Loch Ness (Yui Mok/PA)PA Archive/PA Images - Yui Mok
“People deep fried chocolate. It was immense.
“I think there is something quite special about the Scottish diet I think and it’s so wholesome as well.”
Mr Edgley says the biggest challenge will be the unpredictable nature of Loch Ness and told the PA News Agency locals warned him to expect typical Scottish weather: four seasons in an hour.
He said: “The water is just completely different because it’s obviously it’s so big, it just doesn’t get warm.
“Not only that, it’s 37 kilometres in length and when you get the winds just funnelling through there you can get these four-metre waves that will just rival even some of the harshest seas.
“At least at sea, you get these huge gentle swells that can be predictable.
“I’ve been speaking to people who have basically just lived there their entire lives and they’re saying ‘Oh, you can get four seasons in an hour. It’s just obscene’.
“So it’s just getting used to that Loch Ness. It’s an amazing place. But it’s I’ve never been in a swimming pool like it.”
Swimming non-stop in the cool Scottish waters with temperatures of around 10C, Mr Edgley has fears about hallucinations and hypothermia.
He said: “People have asked me ‘Is this going to be harder or easier than swimming around Great Britain?’
“And I’m like, I don’t know. I think it’s just different.
“It’s a new challenge.”