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#1
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![]() All that is very true, and thery even have at all there public pools brief style (speedo) vending machines.
I happen to have one of them (not the machine silly the suit (lol) And not bad at all, GOOD FIT. |
#2
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![]() I found an example of the vending machine here
http://en.topsec-equipement.fr/s/11304_ with the suits here http://en.topsec-equipement.fr/s/11310_woman http://en.topsec-equipement.fr/s/11311_man |
#3
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![]() Spending a day cycling south through the Brittany (France) countryside and running out of water, I hadn't seen anyone for hours and was thirsty. First I saw a mobile phone mast and thought that where there are mobile phones there are people and something to drink. Then I saw the top of a water slide and thought that where there are water slides there are swimming pools and cool drinks.
Parking the mountain-bike I went to the poolside bar and had a cola with ice, sat back and watched the sun tanned swimmers playing in the water, the sun light reflecting on their wet bodies, the men and boys wearing only speedos. The whole community seemed to be there, all ages happy together in this outdoor pool in this one horse ville. There is a swim briefs rule in many French pools, and it works; without boardshorts even a crowded pool looks inviting. |
#4
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![]() USA as well - Speedo trialling vending machines in 15 pools
(Florida,Kentucky,Minnesota,New York,Ohio) |
#5
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#6
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![]() French Swoof black briefs ref: 514 can be obtained from machines of Aquatik Distribution Automatique.
http://www.swimart.eu/Swoof_SwimwearRange.html PS: URL for Yahoo Q&A in post above is four years old and does not work - but if of interest the discussion can be followed by googling "What do the French have against swimming shorts?" |
#7
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![]() The French would not be hung up on only brief-style suits. A snug nylon/lycra squarecut that looks like a swimsuit not baggy walking/board shorts would be perfectly acceptable as well.
I've never understood the practicallity of baggy shorts as swimming attire.The French haven't either. For starters, the bigger and baggier the short, the more drag they will create. At some point this becomes a serious swimming safety concern. Then you have the cleanliness concern of wearing what could be street attire in the pool. Finally wearing baggy shorts coming out of the pool creates this large dripping-wet piece of cloth that you somehow need to dry. A final issue is that some "modest" men who are a little overweight think that it will be less apparent that they are carrying excess pounds if the swimming attire is baggy. But lets face it: an overweight person isn't suddenly going to look slimmer in baggy shorts. Overweight is overweight, and trying to cover it all up is not the answer. If one wants to wear baggy shorts, fine, but put a real (brief or squarecut nylon/lycra) swimsuit underneath. Then you can removre the baggy shorts just before entering the water. Reverse the process coming out, putting your still dry baggy shorts back on after letting your real suit dry out for a few minutes while lounging at the pool. Carry along a tee shirt to protect you from the sun, and you are all set!. If you are staying at a hotel/motel, my room key-card stays dry in the pocket of the baggy shorts. |
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