The Harrogate open water swimmer set to take on the English Channel

Harrogate’s Millie Bell is addicted to swimming.

The 24-year-old open water swimmer has represented Great Britain at major competitions and now has her sights set on bigger achievements.

Next year, she will take on the English Channel – one of the major endurance tests for swimmers which spans 21 miles.

For Millie, the feat will be a big task, but it is also one that she feels she needs to do.

Starting out

Millie did not start out as an open water swimmer.

Instead, she used to run triathlon while studying at the University of York.

But, soon she was bitten by the swimming bug and never looked back.

The move was organic rather than by design. In 2018, the 24-year-old went to a beginners course at Blue Lagoon in Pontefract to test the waters.

She soon found the open water swimming addictive.

“I was pretty scared when I got in, but I soon got used to it.

“That was the start of everything. I fell in love with open water swimming, the community and everything that came with it.”

Millie swimming from Jersey to France as part of her English Channel training.

Millie swimming from Jersey to France as part of her English Channel training.

Races in open water swimming can range from one mile to marathon lengths of 10 miles.

The competitions are feats of endurance which test the patience and stamina of those who participate.

Millie competes in marathon races and her biggest feat has been Windermere Lake, which stretches for 10 miles and took her five hours to complete.

When asked why the lengths are so enticing for her, Millie said it boils down to her urge to test herself and push her body to the limit.

“I’ve always wanted to challenge myself and see what I’m capable of.”

Winning bronze

Millie’s development as a swimmer has been dramatic.

In January this year, she competed with Great Britain at the World Ice Swimming Championships in the French Alps.

She won a bronze medal in each of her three events.

“Going into it, I didn’t think I stood a chance of getting a medal. 

“I swam my first race and I was really happy with my time. When I saw my results and that I’ve got a bronze, I was really quite emotional. I never thought that I would get to compete internationally, never mind get a podium.”

But, for Millie, the next challenge was always around the corner.

In fact, the set piece event is in August 2024 when she will take on the English Channel.

Taking on the channel

The idea to swim the channel has always been there for Millie.

She describes it as an “itch”, but did not fully explore the idea until 2021.

“I remember one day I bought this book about it. I was reading this book and it was about this crazy woman who swam through winter and swam for hours upon hours on end.

“I read a chapter of it and I went: ‘No, that’s crazy. I’m not doing that.’

“A couple of months later, I was looking on Facebook and there was this channel relay looking for people to join. I applied and thought that I wouldn’t get on. But then I got on and it started from there.”


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Millie completed the channel relay, which sees swimmers compete in a team and swim for an hour at a time on the English Channel.

But she realised that she wanted to take on the full swim solo.

Last month, she went to Jersey as part of her training which saw her swim from the island to France which is 14 miles and took her seven hours and 22 minutes to finish.

“The distance for me was not too much of a problem. I knew I was capable of doing it because I had swam Windermere a couple of times and that’s 10 and a half miles.”

Millie swimming the channel relay in 2021.

The build up to the swim will test Millie’s body, but also her mind.

Much like other athletes who compete at the highest level, Millie has been working with a sports psychologist to help get her in correct mental state to swim the channel.

“For me, I doubt myself quite a lot.

“Sometimes when you get in the middle of a swim and you’re in the middle of the sea, you start to doubt yourself and you start to panic.

“He [the psychologist] helps me with ways to keep my focus. It’s really important is the mental side. It’s only this year that I have started to realise how important it is.”

She added that the mind can also wander during extended hours of swimming, including being bored.

“When you’re swimming for six or seven hours, what do you think about?

“If I can get my brain so that it doesn’t think about anything then that is absolutely perfect. But when you’re bored, you start to think about everything don’t you? You start to think: ‘Did I say this wrong earlier in the week?’

“Being bored makes me really anxious. Some people get really bored and just want to get out. So boredom can be a bit of an issue. But, for me, panicking is more of an issue.”

The list of channel swimmers stretches back as far as 1875, when Matthew Webb, an English swimmer and stuntman, became the first recorded person to complete it.

In 10 months time, Millie could join that list.

For her, completing the task would be an itch she could finally scratch. 

“It’s probably one of the biggest things that I will do in my life.”


If you have any local sporting heroes who you think should be featured in Sporting Spotlight, contact calvin@thestrayferret.co.uk.

Ice swimmers bring medals back to Harrogate district

A group of ice swimmers from across the Harrogate district has come back with top results from the world championships.

Millie Bell, 23, won bronze medals in each of her three events at the World Ice Swimming Championships in the French Alps.

She took part in the 250m, 100m and 50m swims in the 18-24 age group, coming third in each.

She said:

“I wasn’t expecting to get anything. The girls in my age group were pretty fast and experienced.

“I had gone back to the hotel room after one of the races and my friend called me to say I had to come back because I was meant to be on the podium!”

Millie said she had been supported in the competition by her employer, Vp plc in Harrogate. She is now back in training for marathon open water swims in the summer.

Meanwhile, Jacqui Hargrave, 51, came sixth and eighth in her events, which she said she was thrilled with.

She told the Stray Ferret:

“It was absolutely amazing. It was a faster pace than I could ever have imagined.

“I went in having never done this before, expecting not to do anything. To come out with that result was more than I could have hoped for.”


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Both Millie and Jacqui said the water was not as cold as they had thought it might be, measuring around 3.7C across the four days of competition.

Millie said:

“It definitely helped mentally knowing that I can swim in colder conditions. It was the perfect temperature for me – which is bonkers!”

Their fellow Harrogate district ice swimmers, Jonty Warneken and Emily Smailes, also performed well.

Jonty came fifth overall in the 100m freestyle para competition, winning his age category, and third overall in the 50m freestyle para category.

Emily, meanwhile, joined Jonty, Jacqui and Lara Fawcett in the Frozen Roses 50m relay, coming fourth against competition that included a four-time Olympian.

Team GB set 32 new age group world records during the championships, more than any other country taking part.

Jacqui said the experience of being in the team at the championships had given her a sense of achievement, even if she never returns.

She added:

“I’m going to do the GB trials next year, then we’ll see if I try for the world championships again.

“It’s getting so much more popular that the level to be able to compete is getting higher. I will give it everything I’ve got, but it might be too high for me.

“If it becomes a Winter Olympic sport, the level will be so much higher again.

“Being able to do it once is such an accomplishment. I’ve ticked a box and been able to do something not many people have done.”

Harrogate district quartet set to represent Britain in world ice swimming

A swimmer from Knaresborough is one of four locals warming up to represent their country at the world ice swimming championships this week.

Jacqui Hargrave – known as Open Water Woman – is part of a team of four from the Harrogate district competing in the event.

Millie Bell, Emily Smailes and Jonty Warneken will also be taking part in the contest from January 12 to 15 in the French Alps.

The team face water temperatures as low as 2C when they compete against 500 athletes from around the world.

Jacqui will be competing in the 50m and 100m categories and has been in training with the team in Doncaster. She said:

“There’s very strict rules. You can’t dive in head first because it’s so cold you could die.

“It can be dangerous.”

Her sprint race may only last a couple of minutes, but it is still important that Jacqui takes the cold seriously and warms back up gradually.

She uses a hot drink and hot water bottle to help her recover, before taking a warm shower about an hour later. She added:

“There is one person that is there for you, to put your clothes back on and take you inside to see the medical team.”

The team was given a major boost recently when adventurer and Chief Scout Bear Grylls, whose sister Lara is also in the squad, stopped by for a training session.

He posted about the experience on his Twitter account:

Great to swim today with some of the ice swimming GB team! What they’re doing takes courage and determination, and I’m so proud of my sister Lara who is swimming next month in the world ice championships – you’re going to smash it! pic.twitter.com/87K16vIc3E

— Bear Grylls OBE (@BearGrylls) December 27, 2022

Always a keen athlete, Jacqui only began open water swimming 12 years ago after problems with her hips preventing her from running.

She first tried swimming with her friend Andrea and said:

“That was it, we fell in love with it.”


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