Adult Learn to Swim
Owner Anita Killmier has a passion for swimming as a life long sport. H2O not only focuses on developing younger swimmers but also focuses on promoting & developing swimming amongst adults. H2O can cater to all adult swimmers irrespective of age, ability and goals.
H2O offers group or private lessons providing a systematic step by step process that will address your fears and assist you to enjoy the water and realise its true benefits. H2O are experts and pioneers in the field of adult swimming and in particular with fearful adult learners
H2O offers group or private lessons providing a systematic step by step process that will address your fears and assist you to enjoy the water and realise its true benefits. H2O are experts and pioneers in the field of adult swimming and in particular with fearful adult learners
Learning to swim as an adult
Mother-of-one, Chaitali, explains why she started swimming lessons in her thirties, and her determination to overcome her fear of swimming at Australian beaches. Insight | Now streaming on SBS ON Demand. https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=8048865855188831
Mother-of-one, Chaitali, explains why she started swimming lessons in her thirties, and her determination to overcome her fear of swimming at Australian beaches. Insight | Now streaming on SBS ON Demand. https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=8048865855188831
The Water In You
The USGS Water Science School
Think of what you need to survive, really just survive. Food? Water? Air? Facebook? Naturally, I'm going to concentrate on water here.
Water is of major importance to all living things; in some organisms, up to 90% of their body weight comes from water. Up to 60% of the human adult body is water.
According to H.H. Mitchell, Journal of Biological Chemistry 158, the brain and heart are composed of 73% water, and the lungs are about 83% water. The skin contains 64% water, and even the bones are watery: 31%.
Water helps digest our food so it can provide us with energy, it helps to transport waste out of the body, and it is important in controlling body temperature.
Each day humans must consume a certain amount of water to survive. Of course, this varies according to age and gender, and also by where someone lives.
Generally, an adult male needs about 3 liters per day while an adult female needs about 2.2 liters per day. Some of this water is gotten in food.
According to Dr. Jeffrey Utz, Neuroscience, pediatrics, Allegheny University, different people have different percentages of their bodies made up of water. Babies have the most, being born at about 78%.
By one year of age, that amount drops to about 65%. In adult men, about 60% of their bodies are water. However, fat tissue does not have as much water as lean tissue.
In adult women, fat makes up more of the body than men, so they have about 55% of their bodies made of water.
There just wouldn't be any you, me, or Fido the dog without the existence of an ample liquid water supply on Earth. The unique qualities and properties of water are what make it so important and basic to life.
The cells in our bodies are full of water. The excellent ability of water to dissolve so many substances allows our cells to use valuable nutrients, minerals, and chemicals in biological processes.
Water's "stickiness" (from surface tension) plays a part in our body's ability to transport these materials all through ourselves. The carbohydrates and proteins that our bodies use as food are metabolized and transported by water in the bloodstream.
No less important is the ability of water to transport waste material out of our bodies.
The USGS Water Science School
Think of what you need to survive, really just survive. Food? Water? Air? Facebook? Naturally, I'm going to concentrate on water here.
Water is of major importance to all living things; in some organisms, up to 90% of their body weight comes from water. Up to 60% of the human adult body is water.
According to H.H. Mitchell, Journal of Biological Chemistry 158, the brain and heart are composed of 73% water, and the lungs are about 83% water. The skin contains 64% water, and even the bones are watery: 31%.
Water helps digest our food so it can provide us with energy, it helps to transport waste out of the body, and it is important in controlling body temperature.
Each day humans must consume a certain amount of water to survive. Of course, this varies according to age and gender, and also by where someone lives.
Generally, an adult male needs about 3 liters per day while an adult female needs about 2.2 liters per day. Some of this water is gotten in food.
According to Dr. Jeffrey Utz, Neuroscience, pediatrics, Allegheny University, different people have different percentages of their bodies made up of water. Babies have the most, being born at about 78%.
By one year of age, that amount drops to about 65%. In adult men, about 60% of their bodies are water. However, fat tissue does not have as much water as lean tissue.
In adult women, fat makes up more of the body than men, so they have about 55% of their bodies made of water.
- Babies and kids have more water (as a percentage) than adults.
- Women have less water than men (as a percentage).
- People with more fatty tissue have less water than people with less fatty tissue (as a percentage)
There just wouldn't be any you, me, or Fido the dog without the existence of an ample liquid water supply on Earth. The unique qualities and properties of water are what make it so important and basic to life.
The cells in our bodies are full of water. The excellent ability of water to dissolve so many substances allows our cells to use valuable nutrients, minerals, and chemicals in biological processes.
Water's "stickiness" (from surface tension) plays a part in our body's ability to transport these materials all through ourselves. The carbohydrates and proteins that our bodies use as food are metabolized and transported by water in the bloodstream.
No less important is the ability of water to transport waste material out of our bodies.