Delaware
Dewey Dunk rings in new year with a splash of tradition and community spirit
Brock Maloomian, a Dewey Beach native who now lives in Lewes, experienced his first plunge Monday.
“This is a nice little shock to the system. Good way to start 2024. I feel pretty good, honestly,” he said. “Had a hard week at work, 2023 was good. But I just feel like a nice cold plunge today. Which will get everything set and it did. I feel fantastic, it woke me right up.”
Rick Cady and Natasha Smith-Cady, of Alexandria, Virginia, were celebrating their sixth plunge.
The couple echoed Maloomian’s sentiments.
“All of this is so fabulous and doing a dunk, It just changes your mind. You get into the water, you wash off all of last year and you’re just going to bring in good things for this year,” Smith-Cady said. “But here’s the most important thing, if we’re gonna do it, we have to go under, not just get our toes wet. You need to actually go into the water totally submerged or else it doesn’t count.”
Cady said he spent the morning mentally preparing for the plunge.
“I’ve been psyching up for it now all morning looking at it and yesterday I saw a guy jump in and go for a swim on his own. If he can do that yesterday for no reason I can’t do it today,” he said. “The preparation is coffee, maybe some liquid encouragement and towels, warm clothing for once you get out.”
After taking the plunge, dunkers of age were treated to champagne and bloody marys.
