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Diana Nyad Ends Latest Bid To Swim From Cuba To Key West

Diana Nyad in the Florida Straits on Monday.
Christi Barli
/
AFP/Getty Images
Diana Nyad in the Florida Straits on Monday.

Endurance swimmer Diana Nyad has ended her third recent attempt to swim the 100 miles or so from Cuba to Key West, Florida, her official Twitter page says.

That word followed reports from ABC News' Good Morning America and CNN.

Earlier today, she was about 55 miles from her destination. But according to Nyad's "Extreme Dream 2012" website, a "heavy squall" was holding her up. A storm had also delayed her on Sunday.

Last September, Nyad was 67 miles into the swim when she gave up because of painful man o' war stings. In August 2011, her attempt was ended by an asthma attack.

She's been trying to become the first person to make the swim without a shark cage.

Nyad turns 63 on Wednesday. She first tried to cross the Straits of Florida in 1978.

Update at 9:30 a.m. ET. Nyad's Team Says Storm Made It Impossible To Go On:

In a new post on Nyad's website, her team reports she was "fully alert and articulate" when she got into the escort boat and wanted to get back in the water to finish the swim. But "with lightning, thunder, and roiling winds tossing her tiny escort vessel up and down on the waves like a paper cup" it was decided that "for the sake of the safety of her team and herself" they needed to motor on to Key West.

"It took Mother Nature's biggest force — the weather — to get her out of the water," the post says.

And it adds that Nyad "was stung by box jellyfish nine times on Monday night alone, with sharks surrounding her as a team of divers labored for hours in the darkness to discourage them away."

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Mark Memmott is NPR's supervising senior editor for Standards & Practices. In that role, he's a resource for NPR's journalists – helping them raise the right questions as they do their work and uphold the organization's standards.