Herring Cove Polar Bear Dip cancelled for third straight year - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Herring Cove Polar Bear Dip cancelled for third straight year

One of the organizers says COVID-19, the flu season and a volunteer shortage have put the annual event on ice again.

Organizer says pandemic, flu season and volunteer shortage led to decision

Man in swimsuit jumps into water as people in winter gear look on
A man braves the elements as he jumps from the government wharf into the icy waters of the North Atlantic in Herring Cove, N.S., on Jan. 1, 2009. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

The Herring Cove Polar Bear Dip in Halifax used to draw up to 200 thrill-seekers, keen tomark the start of thenew yearwith a plunge into the icy waters of the Atlantic Ocean.

Butfor the third year in a row now, organizers have had to cancelthe event.

COVID-19, the flu season and a shortage of volunteers are creating the perfect storm, according to Robert MacLellan, a member of the organizing committee.

"We jumped in 20 weather and in snowstorms and we never ever cancelled because of the weather. We were lucky that way, you know?" he said.

A man named Robert MacLellan with grey hair and a beard wears a black t-shirt in a Facebook profile photo.
Robert MacLellan, a member of the organizing committee for the annual Herring Cove Polar Polar Dip, says the event has been cancelled for the third consecutive year. (Robert MacLellan/Facebook)

MacLellan, who has been involved with putting the event on since2005,saidit takes extensive planning:securing sponsors who donate food, finding volunteer first responders to ensure safety, registering participants,and eventually donatingthe money raised to local charities.

A long tradition

According to the organization's website, the Herring Cove Polar Bear Dip started in 1994 in a garage and saw a group oflocal residents jumping off the wharf for the fun of it.

Over the years it grew, attracting local politicians and, MacLellan said, in 2011 it got a boost in popularity when comedian Ron James and CBC's Rick Mercer took the plunge.

In 2015, the Herring Cove Polar Bear Dip was registered as a non-profit charity.

MacLellansaidthe annual event has drawna unique community of people, with a deck party, spectators watching from the shore, and a bagpiper leading the way down to the wharf.

There was always a lot of support for first-timers too.

"'You're gonna be so excited by all the cheering and whatever, you won't even feel cold,'" he recalledtelling them.

One of the best years included 20 international students from South America and Europe, MacLellansaid.

But now he said it's time for him to throw in the towel.

"I don't know if it's ever gonna come back the way it was," he said. "So I think maybe it's time for, you know, younger people or somebody with a new, or newer vision or something, to step in."

And for time being, the Herring Cove Polar Bear Dipwebsite is encouraging people to continue the spirit of giving by donating to Feed Nova Scotia.

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