Aquathlon Path

Req 4c1 — Aquathlon Swim Skills

4c1.
Swimming

Aquathlon begins in the water, so the swim foundation still matters. This page mirrors the key swim ideas from the triathlon branch because the same safety rules apply.

Requirement 4c1a

4c1a.
Before doing requirements 5 through 8, earn the Swimming merit badge.

The Swimming merit badge gives you the safety, stamina, and confidence needed before you add multisport transitions and race pressure.

Swimming Merit Badge (website) Review the official Swimming merit badge page to understand the water-safety foundation this branch depends on. Link: Swimming Merit Badge (website) — https://www.scouting.org/merit-badges/swimming/%20

Requirement 4c1b

4c1b.
Explain the components of the Scouting America Safe Swim Defense guidelines and how you will ensure they are in place when you swim.

Safe Swim Defense means qualified supervision, a safe area, trained response, ability groups, buddy checks, and clear discipline. You should be able to explain how these show up in your actual swim setting, not just recite them from memory.

Requirement 4c1c

4c1c.
Explain to your counselor the difference between a pool swim and an open water swim, including at what water temperature it is appropriate to wear a wet suit.

Pool swims are controlled. Open water swims require more navigation, more comfort with uncertainty, and more awareness of temperature and conditions.

4 Things To Know Before Your First Open Water Swim (video)
The Dangers of Cold Water Immersion (video)
How Do Wetsuits Keep You Warm? (video)

What changes in open water

Points to explain to your counselor
  • Navigation: you may need to sight where you are going
  • Conditions: wind, waves, and current can change effort quickly
  • Temperature: cold water can affect breathing and control
  • Exit strategy: you need to know where and how you will finish the swim safely

Next comes the run section, where you learn how to carry your effort from the water onto the course efficiently.