Midmar Mile & Charity Challenge
Event overview
The Midmar Mile
The Midmar Mile is the world’s largest open water swimming event, a swimming race held at the Midmar Dam north of Pietermaritzburg, South Africa. Each year, it draws thousands of competitors, from serious international athletes and Olympic medallists to purely recreational swimmers.
It gains its name from the location (Midmar Dam) and the distance (roughly one mile). A unique feature of the race is that while the distance covered is always a mile, depending on rainfall and the water levels in the dam, the distance swum varies from year to year. In years with poor rainfall, competitors are subject to the infamous Midmar sprint start: a bedlam of bodies sprinting across the muddy lake-shore and through the shallows until the water is deep enough to swim.
In order to handle the vast number of competitors, the swimmers swim out in several groups at two-minute intervals in 8 batches over two days; the group division is based on a qualifying time in a previous event, with the fastest group leaving first.
Charity Challenge
Since 2016, aQuelle Midmar Mile has been raising funds for charitable causes. With only 120 swimmers in that first year, just over R1million was distributed to 7 large and 11 smaller charities.
In 2023, the initiative gathered 212 individual swimmers for Charity 8 Mile and 21 individual swimmers for Charity 16 Mile. For the 50th Edition we also had 8 teams raising funds across the charities.
The event details are based on the publicly available information from the organiser.