Home
In order to outsmart the wolf, consider your relative angular speed as you swim along concentric circles. Without loss of generality, we may assume the pond has radius 1 centered at the origin. As you swim along the path r = r_0, the wolf can cover the same central angle more quickly if r_0 > \tfrac{1}{4}, more slowly if r_0 < \tfrac{1}{4}, and at precisely the same speed if r_0 = \tfrac{1}{4}.

From this, we can develop a simple strategy. Swim out near to but just shy of the circle
r = \tfrac{1}{4}. Since we can cover the same angle more quickly than the wolf, we may swim in a circle until the wolf is directly behind us. We can cover the remaining distance of slightly more than \tfrac{3}{4} in less than the time it takes the wolf to cover its distance of \pi.

To be more precise, we can successfully implement this strategy of first swimming to
r = r_0 exactly when 1 - \tfrac{\pi}{4} < r_0 < \tfrac{1}{4}. There is a tradeoff. The smaller the r_0 we choose in this interval, the faster we can get to the edge of the pond. On the other hand, the larger we choose r_0, the further away the wolf is when we reach the edge.