The Importance of Treading Water in Survival
Treading water is a fundamental aquatic survival skill. It allows a swimmer to remain upright and keep their head above water in a fixed position without holding onto any support. In deep-water emergencies, this skill can make the difference between life and death. It enables you to conserve energy while waiting for rescue or regaining composure. If you fall into deep water, trying to swim forward constantly without a rest point will exhaust you in a matter of minutes. In such cases, being able to tread water is your ultimate natural life jacket.
Why is treading water mandatory before entering deep pools?
When swimming in deep pools, lakes, rivers, or open oceans, you face many unpredictable variables. If you only know how to move forward using breaststroke or freestyle but do not know how to tread water without getting tired, you are in a highly vulnerable position. If you experience cramps, water in your goggles, a sudden wave, or simple exhaustion, you must be able to pause and stay afloat.
Without treading skills, the natural human instinct is to slap the water vertically and kick frantically to keep the head up. This panic response drains oxygen, causes rapid lactic acid build-up, and leads to exhaustion and sinking within 30 to 60 seconds. Knowing how to tread water keeps your airway clear, stabilizes your heart rate, and keeps you calm.
Real-world Insight from Swim For Life Coaches
At Swim For Life Vietnam, we emphasize that treading water is a life-saving tool first, and a sports skill second. Our Training Director, Nguyen Huy Manh, recalls coaching an adult student who was terrified of deep water due to a near-drowning childhood experience:
"For the first few sessions, the student refused to step past the 1.2-meter line. Instead of pushing him to swim laps, we focused entirely on shallow-water vertical floating and hand sculling drills. Once he realized he could control his buoyancy and keep his chin above water using just his hands and breathing, his anxiety dissolved. By the fourth session, he confidently floated in the 2.1-meter deep end for three minutes straight."
The Physics of Floating: Archimedes & Bernoulli
Efficient treading water relies on two key physical concepts: **Archimedes' Principle** (static buoyancy from air-filled lungs) and **Dynamic Lift** (hydrodynamic forces from horizontal sculling movements of the hands and legs). When you master these, staying afloat becomes a relaxed, low-energy movement rather than a physical struggle.
Archimedes' Principle and Your Internal Float
Archimedes' Principle states that a body immersed in a fluid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the body. The human body's density is very close to that of water (roughly 0.98 to 1.02 g/cm³). This means we only need a tiny amount of extra lift to stay afloat. Muscle and bone are denser and sink, while fat is less dense and floats.
Your lungs are the most effective way to change your body's overall density. When filled with air, they act as a built-in life jacket. In our classes, we teach the **"70% lung volume rule."** Always keep your lungs partially filled (between 60% and 80% capacity). When breathing, exhale a small amount quickly and inhale immediately. Do not empty your lungs fully, as this causes you to sink instantly.
Hydrodynamic Lift and Bernoulli's Principle
To keep your head comfortably above the surface, you need dynamic lift. This is created by moving your hands and feet horizontally at a slight angle (the angle of attack). As your hands slice through the water, it creates a pressure difference (similar to an airplane wing or a boat oar), generating upward thrust.
Slapping your hands vertically downward only raises you for a split second, and the subsequent recovery pulls you back down. Proper treading water uses continuous horizontal hand sweeps (figure-8 sculling) and circular leg movements (eggbeater kick). These horizontal movements generate continuous upward lift without drag.
Treading Water with a Breaststroke Kick
For beginners, **treading water with a breaststroke kick** is the easiest method to learn. It adapts the symmetrical leg kick from breaststroke into a vertical motion. Since most new swimmers learn breaststroke first, they already have the muscle memory and feel for the water.
The 4 Phases of the Vertical Breaststroke Kick:
- The Recovery (Draw): From a vertical posture, gently draw your heels toward your glutes by bending your knees. Keep knees hip-width apart; pushing them too wide generates drag. Keep this phase slow and relaxed.
- The Flex (Ankle Setup): Flex your ankles outward so your toes point to the sides. The soles of your feet should face down toward the bottom of the pool.
- The Whip (Propulsion): Kick your legs outward and downward in a circular, upside-down V path. Push the water down with the soles of your feet and inner shins.
- The Squeeze: Snap your legs together to complete the kick. Pause for a brief fraction of a second (glide) to let the lift support you, then repeat.
Treading Water with the Eggbeater Kick (Intermediate)
The **eggbeater kick** is the gold standard for treading water. It provides continuous, smooth lift by rotating your legs in alternating, opposite circular paths. This is the technique used by water polo players, synchronized swimmers, and professional lifeguards worldwide. Because the lift is continuous, your head remains perfectly level and your hands are completely free.
How the Eggbeater Kick Works:
- Posture: Sit vertically in the water as if resting on a wide armchair. Open your thighs to a 90-degree angle, with knees bent.
- Left Leg: Rotate your calf and foot in a clockwise circle. Push water downward and inward with the inside of your foot and shin.
- Right Leg: Rotate your calf and foot in a counter-clockwise circle.
- Alternating Rhythm: While one leg recovers, the other pushes water. This constant alternation ensures there is no dead spot in your buoyancy, keeping you perfectly stable.
Sculling Hand Technique: The Figure-8 Motion
Hand sculling provides balance and additional lift. By moving your forearms and hands horizontally in a continuous figure-8 pattern (∞) under the surface, you create a steady pressure difference that supports your upper body.
Step-by-Step Sculling:
- Hand Position: Submerge your hands 15-20cm below the surface at chest level. Keep elbows bent slightly (100-120 degrees) and tucked near your sides.
- Outward Sweep: Move your hands outward past shoulder width. Tilt your thumbs down and pinkies up (45-degree angle) to push water outward and downward.
- Inward Sweep: Change the pitch of your hands. Tilt your pinkies down and thumbs up, sweeping your hands back toward the center.
- Keep Fingers Closed: Keep your fingers naturally closed. Do not splay them (which lets water slide through) or tense them.
Breath Control and Deep-Water Buoyancy
Mastering your breathing is crucial to prevent fatigue. Rhythmic breathing lowers your heart rate, relaxes your muscles, and turns treading water into a sustainable, relaxed movement.
- Inhale Quick: When your chin clears the surface, take a quick, deep breath through your mouth.
- Hold Brief: Keep the air in your chest for 1-2 seconds to maximize static buoyancy.
- Exhale Slow: Submerge your face slightly (or keep it clear) and blow bubbles slowly through your nose for 3-4 seconds.
Step-by-Step Training Guide
Never practice treading water alone in the deep end. Always follow this safe, step-by-step progression:
Stage 1: Shallow Water Basics (Chest-Deep)
Practice in chest-deep water where you can stand up at any time. Focus on horizontal hand sculling and practicing the eggbeater motion while sitting on the pool steps.
Stage 2: Deep Water Gutter Practice
Move to the deep end. Hold the pool gutter with one hand to stay safe. Practice the kick and sculling with your free hand. Get used to the feeling of deep water.
Stage 3: Supported Treading (With Floats)
Hold a pool noodle or kickboard to your chest. This supports your upper body, allowing you to focus 100% on coordinating your leg kicks and breathing without worrying about sinking.
Stage 4: Independent Treading
Remove all floats. Tread water independently for 10-30 seconds with a coach standing right next to you. Gradually increase your time as your confidence builds.