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Treading water or water treading is what a swimmer can do while in a vertical position to keep their head above the surface of the water, while not providing sufficient directional thrust to overcome inertia and propel the swimmer in any specific direction. As it expends less energy than traditional strokes, it is often used by swimmers to rest in between periods of exertion without having to leave the water.

In figurative language, the expression "treading water" has become a metaphor for an effort expected to create motion, but which actually results in merely staying in one, possibly barely sustainable, place.

Methods

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Any sort of movement that allows the swimmer to do this can be classified as treading water, but it is more efficient to move the arms and legs in a specific fashion.

Non-swimmers often splash and kick in an effort to stay above the surface but their lack of technique along with shortness of breath and the panic factor make for a very ineffective method of treading water. They will usually tire quickly and not be able to stay above the surface very long.[1]

Experienced swimmers use a variety of techniques to stay above the surface. These techniques often involve sculling, flutter kick, and other unofficial techniques of staying above the surface.[2]

Eggbeater kick

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The eggbeater kick is an efficient method of treading water.[2] It involves the swimmer in a "sitting position" in the water. The swimmer's back must be straight, knees bent so that the thighs are parallel to the surface of the water, and lower legs perpendicular to the surface.

The left foot makes a clockwise motion while the right leg makes a counterclockwise motion towards the axis of the body, in a similar manner to operating the pedals on a bicycle. The legs should never meet as when one foot is on the inside of the motion, the other should be on the outside. The arms are not involved directly in this kick.

The most critical aspect to having an effective eggbeater kick is flexibility. A very good hip motion range is needed to achieve a good eggbeater kick.[3]

The eggbeater kick can be used to move through the water if the body is angled. Because of the opposite motion of the legs, the eggbeater is a very smooth and steady way of treading water. Another thing worth mentioning is that it does not usually involve the use of the hands, leaving them to be used for other matters.

Because of its efficiency and simplicity, this method of treading water is one of the most commonly used methods by lifeguards and other aquatic rescue professionals. Since this method does not occupy the hands it is often used by these kinds of professionals as they sometimes have to perform first aid while swimming back to safety.

The eggbeater kick is also used in water polo because it lets the athletes use their arms to throw the ball. The eggbeater kick is the primary kick that enables the player to support themselves in the water while passing, shooting, defending, and resting – horizontally and vertically. It is also used for getting a quick, explosive start, when the player is beginning to swim. Greater elevation of the Polo player is created by a stronger eggbeater kick which results in a better rotation and stronger pass or shot.[4] Overuse of the eggbeater kick has been a cause of knee injuries in water polo players.[5]

Furthermore, the eggbeater kick is also used in synchronized swimming since it grants stability and height above the water while leaving the hands free to perform strokes. Using the eggbeater, swimmers can also perform "boosts", where they use their legs to momentarily propel themselves out of the water to their hips or higher.

Dog paddle and others

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The dog paddle is a simple style often used instinctively by children. It involves waving both hands & legs randomly while "on all fours".

Another popular style involves sculling water horizontally while using flutter kicks vertically.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Treading water is a fundamental aquatic skill involving specific arm and leg movements to maintain an upright, vertical position in the water with the head above the surface, allowing a person to stay afloat without propelling forward or backward.[1] This technique is essential for survival in emergencies, such as accidental immersion or strong currents, by conserving energy and preventing drowning while enabling individuals to rest, signal for help, or await rescue.[2][3] Common techniques for treading water include the eggbeater kick, where the legs perform asynchronous circular motions resembling pedaling an eggbeater to generate upward thrust, often combined with sculling arm movements—sweeping the hands back and forth horizontally beneath the surface.[2] Other methods involve a flutter kick with alternating leg motions paired with arm sculling, an upright breaststroke using symmetric leg and arm actions, or simpler rotary kicks for beginners.[2] The eggbeater and upright breaststroke are recognized as the most efficient among skilled practitioners, requiring lower oxygen consumption (approximately 23 ml/kg/min) and heart rate compared to less coordinated approaches like running in place, due to better biomechanical synchronization and reduced cognitive load.[2][3] Beyond survival, treading water serves as a low-impact exercise that engages the core, arms, legs, and cardiovascular system, burning up to 11 calories per minute while minimizing joint stress—making it accessible for rehabilitation, fitness training, and sports like water polo and synchronized swimming where sustained buoyancy is critical.[4] Organizations such as the American Red Cross emphasize its inclusion in swim safety curricula, recommending at least one minute of treading as a core competency for water confidence.[5]

Fundamentals

Definition

Treading water is a stationary flotation technique employed by swimmers to maintain a vertical position in deep water, where the feet cannot touch the bottom, by using coordinated movements of the legs and arms to keep the head above the water's surface without forward propulsion.[6] This method relies on continuous motion to sustain equilibrium, allowing the swimmer to remain in place rather than progressing through the water.[1] Key characteristics of treading water include minimal horizontal movement and a dependence on dynamic actions to overcome the body's tendency to sink, counteracting gravity and water resistance through repetitive leg kicks and arm sculling.[3] The technique is particularly essential in situations requiring sustained positioning, such as during pauses in swimming or in open water environments.[7] The term "treading water" derives from the analogy to treading or stepping in place on land, evoking the repetitive, stationary motion used to mimic walking while afloat. It is described in early 20th-century swimming manuals, such as Frank E. Dalton and Louis C. Dalton's Swimming Scientifically Taught (1912), as a critical skill for staying upright in deep water.[6] At its core, treading water operates on the principle of buoyancy as described by Archimedes' principle, wherein the upward buoyant force on the body equals the weight of the water displaced by the swimmer's submerged volume.[8] The leg and arm movements enhance this displacement and provide additional lift to ensure the head remains above the surface, preventing full submersion.[9]

Purposes

Treading water serves as a fundamental technique for swimmers to maintain buoyancy and an upright position in deep water without relying on the pool edge, bottom, or flotation devices, allowing individuals to rest during extended swims or wait in open water scenarios such as awaiting rescue or regrouping in group activities.[10][11] In water safety contexts, it is an essential survival skill that enhances the chances of staying afloat during accidental immersion or drowning emergencies, often incorporated into swim lessons to demonstrate water competency by treading for at least one minute after entering deep water.[3][12] The American Red Cross emphasizes its role in building overall water safety proficiency, as it enables swimmers to signal for help or orient themselves toward safety while conserving energy.[5] Beyond emergency situations, treading water finds application in non-competitive recreational settings, such as taking breaks during casual pool sessions or pausing to observe marine life during snorkeling excursions in open water.[13][14] In these activities, it provides a stable, hands-free position for brief rests or environmental engagement without forward propulsion.[15] Psychologically, mastering treading water fosters confidence in deep water environments, reducing panic by offering a controlled, vertical stance that promotes calmness until assistance arrives or safe exit is possible, aligning with aquatic safety guidelines from the American Red Cross.[16][17] This skill's inclusion in progressive swim programs helps learners transition from shallow to deeper areas with greater assurance.[18]

Techniques

Eggbeater Kick

The eggbeater kick is a highly efficient treading water technique characterized by alternating circular leg motions, with one leg tracing a clockwise path and the other a counterclockwise path, mimicking the action of beating eggs in a bowl. This continuous, opposing rotation generates steady upward propulsion through hydrodynamic lift and drag, enabling the swimmer to maintain a vertical position with the upper body elevated above the water surface.[19][20] Execution begins with the swimmer in an upright, vertical posture, head erect, shoulders level with hips, and water at mid-shoulder height; knees are bent at approximately 15° with hips flexed to 80°, abducted 90°, and laterally rotated 30°, while feet remain flexed. The legs then alternate in elongated oval cycles: during the power phase, the hips and knees extend, adduct, and medially rotate as the foot pushes downward and inward with dorsiflexion followed by plantarflexion and inversion to propel water for lift; in the recovery phase, the hips flex, abduct, and laterally rotate as the knees flex, preparing for the next cycle. The right leg moves counterclockwise and the left clockwise, with each full cycle lasting 0.5–0.65 seconds for optimal rhythm. Arms may supplement with sculling motions—small, figure-eight hand movements—to fine-tune balance and add minor lift without significant fatigue.[20][19] This technique excels in endurance, permitting trained individuals to sustain treading for up to 30–60 minutes during intensive training or matches, as it distributes workload primarily to the legs and supports prolonged vertical positioning for 45–55% of a typical water polo game duration. It minimizes arm involvement and fatigue by relying on leg-driven propulsion, freeing the upper body for actions like passing or shooting. Compared to linear kicks such as flutter or scissor, the eggbeater provides superior stability through constant alternating support, reducing bobbing and enabling greater height maintenance via forces of 60–112 N that offset 10–20% of body weight.[21][20][22]

Alternative Methods

One common alternative to the eggbeater kick is the dog paddle variant, which employs a flutter kick with the legs while the arms paddle in a circular motion to maintain balance and upright position. In this technique, the swimmer keeps the head above water, extends the arms forward alternately, and pulls them back in scooping, circular arcs to push water downward for lift, complemented by a gentle up-and-down flutter kick from the hips. This method is suitable for beginners and short durations but becomes tiring on the arms due to the repetitive upper-body exertion.[23][24] The sculling technique focuses on arm movements to generate buoyancy, involving horizontal sweeps of the hands to create pressure under the body. The arms form a T shape at shoulder height with hands submerged and angled at about 45 degrees, palms facing slightly downward; the swimmer then sweeps the hands inward until fingertips nearly touch at the chest before extending them outward again in a smooth, controlled motion. This is often paired with a gentle bicycle kick, where the legs alternate in small circular pedaling actions to assist propulsion. Sculling is particularly effective for arm-dominant treading and allows hands-free moments for signaling or resting.[25] Breaststroke legs provide another accessible option through a symmetric frog-kick motion, ideal for brief rests or transitions. The swimmer draws the heels toward the buttocks with knees flared outward, then extends the legs forcefully in a whip-like action before snapping them together to propel upward. This generates effective lift and is energetically efficient, comparable to the eggbeater kick for skilled practitioners.[3] To combat fatigue in basic swim training, practitioners are advised to alternate between these methods, switching periodically to distribute effort across different muscle groups and prolong overall endurance.[3]

Applications

In Aquatic Sports

In water polo, treading water is integral to gameplay, particularly during set plays and free balls, where players must maintain offensive or defensive positions without forward propulsion. The eggbeater kick, a specialized treading technique, allows athletes to elevate their upper body above the water surface, freeing the arms for passing, shooting, or blocking while resisting opponents in physical contact. This skill is employed approximately 35% of total game time, providing the stability essential for shooting accuracy and tactical maneuvers like six-on-five plays.[26][27][28] In artistic swimming, treading water serves as a core skill for seamless transitions between figures and strokes, enabling precise control of body height without horizontal movement. The eggbeater kick supports vertical positioning in deep water, allowing performers to sustain elevation for inverted positions, splits, or platform lifts during routines. It is particularly vital in combination events, where swimmers tread while awaiting re-entry to maintain synchronization and form.[29] Open-water swimming incorporates treading water at aid stations for feeding and during navigation to sight buoys or correct course. Swimmers pause to tread vertically using an eggbeater or modified breaststroke kick, consuming nutrition via feeding poles in a four-step process: spotting the feed, reaching and rolling to receive it, gulping, and resuming swim. Training emphasizes integrating treading with freestyle recovery to minimize time loss in races.[30][31] The use of treading water in aquatic sports, notably water polo, evolved alongside the sport's Olympic inclusion since 1900, when basic treading techniques were limited by primitive swimming abilities; the eggbeater kick emerged in the mid-20th century as athletic capabilities advanced, enabling sustained vertical play. Rules have since incorporated measures against excessive treading to prevent stalling, such as penalties for delaying free throws or retaining possession beyond 30 seconds without a shot attempt, promoting continuous action.[32][33][34]

In Safety and Rescue

Treading water serves as a foundational skill in lifeguard training programs, enabling rescuers to maintain buoyancy while assessing situations or supporting victims. In the American Red Cross Lifeguarding course, candidates must demonstrate proficiency by completing a prerequisite swim-tread-swim sequence, which includes treading water for 2 minutes using only the legs (with hands placed under the armpits) after swimming 150 yards and before an additional 50-yard swim.[35] This requirement simulates the demands of holding a victim afloat during an emergency, ensuring trainees can sustain the position without fatigue in real-world scenarios. Similar standards appear in YMCA and other certified programs, where treading for 2 minutes with legs alone is a core evaluation to verify readiness for shallow- and deep-water rescues.[36] In drowning prevention education, treading water is emphasized as an energy-conserving technique for individuals in distress, contrasting with panicked thrashing that accelerates exhaustion. Programs teach victims to adopt upright treading to keep the head above water while awaiting help, reducing the risk of submersion by promoting calm, efficient movements like the eggbeater kick or sculling arms.[37] This aligns with the "Reach, Throw, Don't Go" protocol promoted by the American Red Cross and other safety organizations, which prioritizes non-entry rescues—such as extending a pole or throwing a flotation device—unless the rescuer is trained, in which case treading allows the victim to stay afloat longer without endangering bystanders.[12] During active rescue operations, lifeguards employ treading water to approach distressed swimmers cautiously, often while carrying rescue tubes or backboards to avoid escalating the situation. For instance, in approaching an active drowning victim, the rescuer treads to position themselves behind the individual, extending the rescue tube for a secure grasp without direct contact that could lead to grappling.[38] To stabilize unconscious or passive victims, treading facilitates in-water support, such as maintaining head position above water via manual inline stabilization until extraction, particularly in deeper pools or open water where immediate removal is challenging.[39] Recent advancements in swim safety curricula during the 2020s have integrated inclusive treading techniques to accommodate diverse body types and disabilities, broadening access to life-saving skills. Organizations like the YMCA and specialized programs, such as Swim Angelfish, adapt methods—for example, using supportive floats or modified sculling for those with mobility limitations—to teach treading or equivalent flotation in neurodivergent or physically challenged populations, reducing drowning disparities.[40] These updates, reflected in updated Red Cross and USA Swimming guidelines, emphasize personalized instruction to ensure efficacy across body compositions, including adjustments for higher buoyancy in varied fat distributions or joint restrictions.[41]

Physiology

Muscles Involved

Treading water relies heavily on lower body muscles to generate propulsion and maintain buoyancy, particularly the legs in techniques such as the eggbeater and flutter kick.[2][3] In the eggbeater kick specifically, adductors and tensor fasciae latae support leg sculling for continuous lift.[42] Core muscles engage isometrically to uphold upright posture, counteracting downward forces and preventing torso rotation or sinking during sustained treading. Upper body involvement provides supplementary support through hand sculling in eggbeater and flutter techniques to augment leg-driven buoyancy.[3] In arm-dominant methods like upright breaststroke, upper body muscles contribute to coordinated sculling for lift generation.[3] Overall, the biomechanics of treading water feature isometric core contractions for balance and concentric leg contractions for propulsion, with activation patterns shifting by technique—for example, emphasizing calves more in flutter kicks than in eggbeater sculling.[2]

Endurance Factors

The endurance of treading water varies significantly based on individual capabilities and conditions, with beginners typically sustaining it for 1 to 2 minutes in temperate water before fatigue sets in, while trained athletes, such as water polo players, can maintain the activity for several minutes, as demonstrated in 3-minute study trials, during structured training sessions.[43][2] Water temperature plays a critical role, as colder conditions (e.g., 10°C) reduce treading duration by approximately 30-35% compared to warmer water (28°C), primarily due to accelerated heat loss and increased risk of hypothermia, which impairs muscle function and coordination.[43] Energy dynamics during treading water primarily rely on aerobic metabolism for sustained efforts, operating at 50-70% of maximum heart rate (typically 120-150 bpm depending on age and fitness), allowing for prolonged activity without rapid onset of anaerobic thresholds.[44] Inefficient techniques can elevate heart rate and oxygen consumption (VO₂), pushing toward anaerobic contributions and accelerating fatigue through lactic acid accumulation in the lower limbs.[3] Key influencing variables include body composition, where higher body fat percentages enhance buoyancy and reduce the energy required to stay afloat, easing endurance for those with greater adipose tissue compared to lean individuals who must exert more effort against their higher density.[45] Overall fitness level also matters, with novices expending over 40% more metabolic energy than experts due to poorer coordination and higher perceived exertion, while efficient technique—such as the eggbeater kick—lowers cardiac and metabolic demands by 20-25% relative to sculling or flutter kicking, enabling up to 40% longer sustained treading in comparative studies from the 2010s and 2020s.[3][2] Fatigue typically arises from localized lactic acid buildup in the legs after 2-3 minutes of continuous effort, particularly in less buoyant or untrained individuals.

References

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