First, a disclaimer: There is absolutely nothing safe about living, being alive, etc. Power-hungry people over the millennia have attempted to legislate safety and all that ends up happening is that the inherent freedoms & liberties that each of us are gifted with by the Universe when we are born become endangered and oppressive, slave culture develops, whether it be communist, fascist or what have you. Now, with my disclaimer out of the way...
Dragonrider, since you asked, for the sake of sharing experiences (which everybody on here knows I
love to do), I will relate my experience on this issue.
I have been swimming hundreds of times on LSD. That being said, I have tripped on LSD (
literally) thousands of times ranging from micro-dosing (1 mcg) all the way to 1 mg+ doses (
which I do not condone nor endorse) and every dosage possible in between those two extremes.
Now, I have always chosen, very consciously I might add, to swim while on acid in swimming places that I feel very safe in. I don't ever go anywhere that I don't feel relatively safe (it is impossible to be 100% safe all the time; heck, you could die just getting out of bed in the morning, so don't kid yourself) while tripping on any psychedelic. I boils down to using good 'ol common sense so as to not make a great trip into a horrific one.
When I was young, early on in my heavy-acid-tripping days (19-early 20's), I came to the realization that swimming with my family (dad, mom, brothers) in the family pool we had grown up in was a pure joy. My family did not know that I was tripping (usually these trips would range from 150-300 mcg. & I was just finding out that I could easily perform any physical task with amazing agility and grace within that dosage range) and they are loving, kind people, so it was a special treat for me to do this, especially since I no longer lived with my parents and was visiting. Once, I told my good friend and very first tripping buddy about this phenomenon and he was like, "I wanna swim on acid with your parents & brothers too dude! That sounds fun! They always crack me up laughing anyway!" So we went swimming on acid with my family in their pool and had a blast one night.
I have swam in various natural bodies of water on acid since then, but only when I felt it was absolutely a good, easy, non-dangerous thing to undertake.
One time I got the chance to swim to an tiny island (literally a couple hundred square feet) a mile off shore in the warm, tropical waters of the Indian Ocean on acid. I would have
never attempted this alone because I've never been one to swim in the ocean and have always felt a wee bit scared of the deep waters where I couldn't tell what was underneath me (the original "Jaws" movie absolutely
ruined ocean swimming for me just as I was about to enter jr. high school). The only reason that I got the opportunity to do this was because I was hanging with a bunch of young men that did it for a living nearly every day of their lives and they wanted me to come along with them and experience what they did every day (they did not know that I was on acid at the time). It was truly amazing and I will never forget it!
For the last decade, the wife & I discovered that we really enjoyed canoeing on the river we live close to while microdosing LSD. I grew up boating & swimming on this particular stretch of river & know it intimately. It can be a very dangerous, swift river that has some seriously deep undercurrents & evil snags. Again though, simply living by some common sense rules & knowledge, we usually can always find mild, calm see-to-the-bottom or see-almost-to-the-bottom swim holes on our various canoe routes that are eminently enjoyable on a hot day!
So, remember, it
is possible and
can be safe to swim on LSD, if one knows their limits, abilities and comfort levels before hand. If one doesn't know these basic things about themselves yet, they probably shouldn't do anything or go anywhere anyway,
especially not on a psychedelic!!! LOL!
Freedom's so hard
When we are all bound by laws
Etched in the scheme of nature's own hand
Unseen by all those who fail
In their pursuit of fate