UPDATE: A committee of coaches and paddlers with national experience is being formed on Vancouver Island for the purpose of working closely with Pacific Sport to develop an NCCP Dragon Boat Technical course.  If you are interested in participating with this effort, please contact me (250-616-9431) and let me know. We expect our organizational meeting to be held in Nanaimo in October, 2011. (See reference material included at the end of this article.)

If you could change the sport of dragon boating here on Vancouver Island, what would you do?  Have you ever thought about that? Every time I go to a festival, I hear paddlers talking about things that they’d like to change, whether it be safety, class structure, festival management, the boats and nearly everything else associated with the sport.

Tell me, if you were in a position to facilitate change, what would be your top five goals for dragon boating here on the Island? How would you implement those goals?

These are questions I was asked yesterday afternoon, and when I began thinking about it, I realized they’re serious, complicated questions… much more so than first meets the eye.

I decided to ask these questions here, rather than in the Forum, because you don’t have to register to leave comments here, and you can do it from Facebook, too.

Here are  six goals compiled to date; I’d appreciate your input. Please hit the Comment button and share your thoughts:

  1. Expose local paddlers to sport-level racing
    1. Introduce IDBF age categories and classes (women’s, mixed, AND open) to local festivals
    2. Add competitive divisions to local races so that rec and corporate teams don’t get matched up against top competitive teams in preliminary heats – this increases enjoyment for rec teams who then won’t be losing races by 30+ seconds, and increases the opportunities for competitive teams to race their peers and improve racing skills
    3. Develop a bid to host DBC’s National Championships on the Island
    4. Create easier access for local paddlers to train and race in IDBF certified dragon boats
  2. Provide local paddlers with more access to program model dragon boat training (as Victoria’s Gorging Dragons and one Nanaimo coach are working to do), as opposed to just providing boat rental options (as GO and Nanaimo’s Ergondragons do)
  3. Providing the same level of support for dragon boat paddlers as other athletes currently receive through organizations like Pacific Sport.
    1. Resolve political barriers (Dragon Boat Canada vrs Canoe Kayak Canada)
  4. Provide more resources for local coaches
    1. Improve access to DBC coaching certification courses on the Island (even with funds in hand, it can be hard to schedule a course – it requires active support from a sponsoring club.)
    2. Improve access to more skill/technique oriented courses for coaches on the Island
    3. Allow easier access by coaches to Pacific Sports’ sports psychology, nutrition, and other performance enhancing resources.
    4. Create funding mechanisms to support the development of coaches, as well as equipment purchases to establish new clubs and create new programs.
    • Trillium Foundation in Ontario has established such a partnership with DBC for boat purchases, but BC Gaming (our equivalent to Trillium) is far more limited in their scope and vision, so other funding sources must be found.
    • Because the structure of GO (the currently dominant dragon boat provider on the island) differs so greatly from clubs in the East, coaches are often not paid, or are paid a miniscule amount. This hinders professional development by the coaches. Access to bursary programs for Island coaches could be the first step in developing higher level coaching on the Island.
  5. Encourage the development of more youth paddler programs
    1. As with other high-level paddle sports, create opportunities for talented youth to be identified and nurtured at a young age
  6. End cancer exclusion
    1. work with festival boards to make them aware of the damage done by exclusion
    2. work with breast cancer teams to end the exclusion
    • The Canadian Cancer Society’s 2011 Cancer Statistics projects that “More men than women will be diagnosed with a new cancer (52% of all new cases will occur in men vs. 48% in women) and will die from cancer (53% of all cancer deaths will occur in men vs. 47% in women.”
    • In addition, the CCS document claims that, “In men and women combined, lung cancer is the second most common cancer (14%), and colorectal is the third most common cancer (12%). Prostate cancer remains the most common cancer diagnosed in men, with 25,500 cases expected in 2011. Breast cancer continues to be the most frequently diagnosed cancer in women, with over 23,400 new cases expected.” (Canadian Cancer Statistics, p 15. http://tinyurl.com/65e797m)

I’ve received submissions from five people so far (thanks, everyone), and we seem to be heading in the same directions.  The top five goals selected (again, your comments welcomed) will be submitted during discussions related to exploring ways and means to improve the sport here on the Island.

Relevant reference material:

  1. Athletics Canada Long Term Athlete Development Model
  2. Sport Manitoba: CANADA’S LONG TERM ATHLETE DEVELOPMENT (LTAD)
  3. Canadian Sport for Live: LTAD Resource Papers
  4. Google LTAD plans
article clipper UPDATED: What are your top 5 goals for improving our sport on the Island?
 

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Heat 3 of Semi-Final A at the Kent Dragon Boat Festival (July 15th, 2011) provided some added, and surely unexpected, excitement for Lake Meridian spectators. The Paddles of Fury (Portland) dragon boat team was involved in a  mid-race collision with Seattle’s Hot Sake, resulting in drummer going swimming. Head cam footage via Paddlesoffury:

Here’s a question for you:  Should the boat have stopped to pick up their drummer?

article clipper Paddles of Fury   Hot Sake  Dragon Boat Collision during Kent Festival
 

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5921395414 e2c36e2d09 b 2011 Nanaimo Dragon Boat Festival Photos Online

Ladies, thank you so much for that spectacular entrance – alas, you didn’t tell me what your team name was, so I can’t tag it here. Can someone sell me a clue? (I got a clue: These are the ladies of Vancouver’s The 7th Wave.)

Photographs taken during the 2011 Nanaimo Dragon Boat Festival are available in two places online. The sets can be found on Facebook in the BC Dragon Boat Paddlers group and on Flickr. Sunday’s images have been uploaded to FaceBook,
and the Flickr upload is now complete.

It was great to renew acquaintences with old paddling friends while we promoted our Champion dragon boats and the upcoming VCKC “Guts and Glory” event on August 27th.

All the best,
Ken

article clipper 2011 Nanaimo Dragon Boat Festival Photos Online
 

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paddling 296x300 Pink Schmink

The more I observe carnation ceremonies at dragon boat festivals, with their inevitable Sea of Pink, I have to admit that I find myself getting irritated.

Before I meander further, and create thousands of grumpy women, let me offer credentials.

I am a 70 year old male with metastasized prostate cancer.

I was diagnosed in mid-2003, and underwent a radical retro-pubic prostatectory (which I couldn’t pronounce, let alone spell, at the time the surgeon sliced me up and put my prostate gland in a jar) which, alas, was too late to rid me of the disease. It had already metastasized, although we didn’t know it for a few months.

There was no need to treat it way back then – there was no way of knowing where it was then residing, because it was too small to detect, outside of the blood test which told us it was alive and kicking.

So yes, folks, I’m a Survivor, sort of. I’m still here. But I’m also a patient. In another month or so, because the cancer has grown to its original state and now represents a threat to my life, I will begin to receive anti-androgen treatment in the form of a drug called Lupron.

Lupron is a medication that is used for the treatment of prostate cancer. Lupron treats the disease in its advanced stages, and is not intended to cure it, but instead to manage it by slowing down its progression and soothing some of its uncomfortable symptoms. The medicine is administered via injection. In my case, the dose will be designed to last about six months and injected subcutaneously.

You can read the balance of this opinion piece here, in the forum.

article clipper Pink Schmink
 

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Race the River 005 On Reflection: 2011 Race the River Dragon Boat Festival

Ok. I’ve downed my second cup of coffee, and I’m ready to face the world…and think about what I am hoping was but the first of many Race the River dragon boat festivals in Campbell River.

Organized by local teams Bravehearts and River Spirit, “Race the River” was an outstanding example of what can be accomplished if your hearts are in the right place.

The venue wasn’t perfect, lacking only better loading and unloading facilities, but everything else was outstanding. The event was held in the Campbell River Estuary, which provided nearly ideal racing conditions and spectacular scenery, as this image of the starting line 350 meters away, attests:

5900270842 1b3f292056 b On Reflection: 2011 Race the River Dragon Boat Festival
(Click on the photograph for the spectacular full-sized version of this picture.)

Where to begin? At the beginning, of course.

When we arrived in the area, on Campbell River’s Spit Road near Dick Murphy Park on Tyee Spit, we were greeted by a smiling traffic control lady who explained that there was an unloading area at the Park, plus free, day-long, parking in a nearby paved lot. She also pointed out that the festival offered  free shuttle service to and from the aforesaid parking area, complete with a gorgeous vintage Cadillac to make paddlers feel special! (Would that Nanaimo would do that!)

Locations for paddlers’ tents were clearly marked by plainly labeled stakes, and most of the team tents were already set up by the time we arrived. All the facilities needed were clustered around the parking area, including porta-potties, a stage for the live entertainment, a Serious Coffee area for folks like me who appreciate real coffee (would love to see this implemented in every festival I attend…there’s nothing worse than the wretched coffee served up by most vending trailers at festivals, made, I suspect, with the cheapest floor sweepings imaginable and boiled for hours to insure that it’s properly disgusting), a Marine Harvest kitchen offering immense slabs of grilled salmon for a paltry five bucks, and the registration and staging tents. It was immediately apparent that these folks were looking after their guests in grand fashion. There wasn’t an overpriced, second-rate vending trailer in sight, and I loved it.

The breezy morning air was shattered at precisely 8:30 by the call to warmup led by an energized woman who was probably an ex-Marine Corps drill sergeant:

5899726487 1efb737fd7 b On Reflection: 2011 Race the River Dragon Boat Festival
5899727477 773ff85709 b On Reflection: 2011 Race the River Dragon Boat Festival
5900293660 57ebe9454f z On Reflection: 2011 Race the River Dragon Boat Festival

Here we can insert, “A hearty good time was had by all!”

Then, of course, it was on to the racing… Most of the photographs in the Flickr collection were taken from near the finish line, where a multitude of great viewing spots were available. Thanks to the friendly and cooperative festival staff, I was also able to hitch a ride to the Start line, where I spent an hour or so taking pictures and getting sunburned.

 

5900771904 4b15e44f36 z On Reflection: 2011 Race the River Dragon Boat Festival

Click here to see the entire Race the River collection

Bravehearts and River Spirit earned a resounding “A+” for this event, and everyone should be looking forward to next year, when I’m hoping they will find the time to add another day to the festival for 200m Champion Sprints, which are near and dear to my heart.

Cheers,

Ken

PS: One final image, lest we forget what brought many of us to this wonderful sport:

5902522604 1a41d6a5db z On Reflection: 2011 Race the River Dragon Boat Festival

Afterthoughts:

5900002963 88c5e220f2 z On Reflection: 2011 Race the River Dragon Boat Festival

  • This enthusiastic volunteer had a ball while encouraging staging teams to chant their chants and sing their songs, and Wow! was she effective at raising the Fun Bar! (I can still hear a rousing version of “What do ya do with an Aquaholic?” ringing in my ears icon smile On Reflection: 2011 Race the River Dragon Boat Festival This was an effective moral booster, and I’d love to see more of this enthusiasm during other festivals. In retrospect, I realize that the mood for the festival was set by the organizers. As paddlers themselves, they understood and embraced the festival atmosphere and augmented it with humour and class.
  • The Carnations used for the traditional ceremony weren’t pink; the colours were mixed, and provided a rainbow of colour which I, being a dedicated “pink-o-phobe,” deeply appreciated.

 

article clipper On Reflection: 2011 Race the River Dragon Boat Festival
 

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