Round-Britain swimmer Ross Edgley sets foot on land for first time since June 1

Extreme sportsman Ross Edgley emerges from the water for the first time in 157 days after becoming the first person to swim around Great Britain.

Ross, 33, was joined for the final mile of his 1,791-mile journey by 300 other swimmers, 57 of whom had swum the English Channel.

He did his last few strokes of front crawl before coming ashore where he had begun, in Margate, Kent.

He said: “I had to put my goggles on. I was getting really emotional.

“I thought I was going to fall over. And then I started running – that was a mistake. I was really wobbly.

“It feels a bit weird. Feels a bit too solid for my liking.”

He left Margate on June 1 and then circumnavigated Britain by front crawl in a clockwise direction.

He had expected it to take 100 days and told his family “sorry I’m late” as they greeted him alongside hundreds of others on the beach.

During his epic feat, Ross’s tongue started to disintegrate due to the exposure to salt water and he was also stung in the face by a jellyfish.

Ross, from Grantham, Lincs, swam for to 12 hours a day, on occasions through the night.

He battled strong tides and currents in cold water, storms, and swimming into winter, suffering shoulder pain and wetsuit chafing.

He was Ross Edgley, 33, has front-crawled almost 2,000 miles over 157 days to become first person to swim round UK .

Ross’s odyssey has been compared to that of Captain Matthew Webb, who in 1875 became the first person to swim the English Channel.

While more than 1,900 swimmers have since made that crossing, few are likely to follow in Ross’s wake.

He was thrilled by his reception early yesterday morning.

He said: “That was unbelievable. You won’t find many other sports where people will come out in November, at five o’clock in the morning, just to swim out for a mile.

“That represented what I love about open water swimming.

“Because I’ve had my face in the water for so long now I didn’t know – I thought it was just going to be my mum and my dad with a pizza.”

He entered the Guinness Book of World Records on August 14, on day 74, for the longest staged sea swim.

It is his latest record-breaking feat.

In 2016, he did a rope climb equivalent to the height of Mount Everest in 19 hours, two months after doing a marathon pulling a car.

And his mantra on challenges?

“Be naive enough to start and stubborn enough to finish.”

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