Can cold plunging help make a Canadian winter more bearable?
CBC
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A growing cadre of enthusiasts are evangelizing the benefits of plunging in cold water, even in sub-zero climates like Saskatchewan.
Our Good Question, Saskatchewan podcast team took the plunge — literally — to better understand the risks and benefits of cold plunging, and how it might make us more resilient to our winters.
"I think I want out," said host Leisha Grebinski after submerging in 10 C liquid for one minute.
Celebrities like Joe Rogan, Drake and Justin Bieber have touted the benefits of cold plunging. People in Saskatchewan are doing it too.
"Even though you're super numb, you get out of the water and then you can feel your body naturally starting to warm up, right? It's an unbelievable feeling. I love it," said Anastas Maragos, a Regina man who co-founded a company called Kryo Cold Water Therapy.
The company sells black canvas pools for people to plunge at home.
But why would you do this in Saskatchewan? Is it not cold enough already?
Brennan Ross said starting the day with a cold shower helps him work outside in the cold all day.
"You're just able to handle the cold a little bit better, " he said. "You just feel less bad about the cold. You don't try to avoid it."
Stephen Cheung, a Brock University kinesiologist who studies how extreme climates and cold water affect our bodies, said Ross is right.
"You do get adapted to the cold, and most of it is your perception," he said,
That's why the first very cold day of the winter tends to feel worse than the same temperature at the end of the season, Cheung said.
He advised approaching the cold-plunge fad with a bit of skepticism, because many of the health benefits are overstated, but he acknowledged that it can make you feel good.
While his party has made a cause célèbre out of its battle with the Speaker, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has periodically waxed poetic about the House of Commons — suggesting that its green upholstery is meant to symbolize the fields of the English countryside where commoners met centuries ago before the signing of the Magna Carta.