Category Archives: Dragon Boat photos 2003

Dragon boat techniques: top teams at May 25 FC Women's regatta

Dragon boat techniques: Here are pictures of the top teams at May 25th False Creek Women's Regatta.

The
top two women's teams year after year are False Creek Women and Wasabi Team Huge.  FC
Women have medaled at every World Championships since 1995…and a gold
medal at some race every year back to 1988.  Team Huge at the 2001
& 2003 Worlds + 2004 World Club Crew in South Africa.


Last
year I steered for Team Huge in Victoria.  I have also steered for them
in Kent WA in 2003, and 2002 in Deep Cove.  I have also steered for FC
Women for 2 practices – just before they went to Worlds in 2001.  They
both have great coaches, Kim Ketcham for Wasabi and Andrea Dillong for FC Women.  I am honoured for their trust to have
assisted these teams.


look 
how deep the Wasabi Team Huge paddles are… (green stripes lane 3)  
My friend Suzi is in seat 9 right side.  Her boyfriend Mike is
steering.  False Creek (lane 2) is in recovery stage – top hands high
as they punch their body forward in rotation.



Here
is False Creek Women in the midst of their “entry”.  They haven't
started the “catch” or the “pull” yet.  Note the reach of seats 1 &
2 with extended bottom arms. Note the high top arms outside the boat
and the “positive” angle of the paddles.

FC
Women have just finished their exit and are bringing their top arms up
now… see how hight they bring their top hands in the very top photo. 
Meanwhile Team Huge is just about to “catch” as they “bury” their
paddles.  Seat  1 is ready to “pull” but seat 2 & 6 are just out of
time still getting their paddles in the water.

Note the
rotation of the bodies.  FC is just starting the rotation, while Huge
has fully extended with their backs facing the outside.


FC is 8 seats ahead at the finish :

1. 2:04.59 False Creek Women
2. 2:06.57 Team Huge

= 1.98 seconds.

FC
exits in perfect sync – paddles come out of the water… led by the top
hand – which is still OUTSIDE the boat – or at least over the gunwale. 
Look how close the paddle blades are still to the boat.

They are NOT dropping the top hand inside the boat, nor flaring the paddle blade outwards.

June 5th Gung Haggis dragon boat team fundraiser @ Doolin's Irish Pub


2007 Tartan Day celebrations at Doolin's Irish Pub – we became Kilts Night poster boys and girls!!!
 
Gung Haggis Fat Choy
dragon boat team fundraiser
Doolin's Irish Pub
 

$10 for 1 beer + 1 burger
proceeds to Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team
 
June 5th
Thursday
7-9pm

followed by

KILTS NIGHT
-wear a kilt get a pint of Guinness FREE

free music with
Halifax Wharf Rats
Celtic tinged folk and rock music

Doolin's Irish Pub
654 Nelson at Granville
Vancouver BC V6B 6K4

Tickets available from team members
for more information:
email: gunghaggis@yahoo.ca

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We will distribute tickets on SUNDAY

If 20 people buy tickets – we get $200
and we can buy food drink for festivals

If 40 people buy tickets – we get $400
– we can pay for the paddling clinic with Olympian Kamini Jain

if 60 people buy tickets – we get $600
– we can pay for early bird registration for Taiwanese Race

If 100 people buy tickets – we get $1000
– we can pay for all the above – if we also do a raffle or 50/50 draw.

Dragon Boat Nutrition: What to eat before a dragon boat race or practice?

Eating is important.  It gives us energy on a dragon boat. 
Dragon Boat Nutrition: What to eat before a dragon boat race or practice?

 

Dragon Boat racing is very short 2minutes to 4 minutes or even a longer 12 minute races,
depending if you are a competitive, recreation or novice paddler, or if
you are racing 250m sprint, standard 500m, 1000m, or 2000m Guts &
Glory races..  So it's neither a pure sprint or a marathon event.

During the first 6-8 seconds you use the ATP-CP energy (immediate/stored energy) systems in your muscles. 
So I will usually eat more protein the night before such as a steak or fish dinner. 

Next you use the short-term glycolytic energy system which usually lasts for 90 seconds to 2 minutes.
Eat
lots of good carbohydrates, this will give you the energy for the
glycolytic and aeorobic energy systems.  This means lot of good fruits,
vegetables, pastas, rice, etc.

But this energy system also gives
you the lactic acid burn – so train for increased lactic acid
tolerance.  This means lots of short drills for 30 seconds, such as
interval training.  20 seconds paddle, 30-60 second rest, repeat.

Finally
you start using the long term aeorobic system – 60-90 seconds into your
activity –  which is why marathon bike racers do carb-loading by eating
huge pasta dinners before the Tour de France, because they want more
carbohydrate energy to burn in their bodies.  So again, eat lots of
carbohydrates such as fruits, vegetables, pastas, rice.  Ideal for any
paddler going into Guts & Glory.

RACE DAY: avoid
eating greasy fatty foods.  This will sit in your system for  4-6
hours.  Avoid being the paddler who orders a hamburger, then has to
scarf it down because the order came late, and their team has just been
called to marshall.   Confused

Pasta,
rice and vegetable dishes are ideal lunches for afternoon practices,
they are easily digested and you will have lots of energy to burn.

Avoid
eating large amounts of refined sugars such as candy bars or soft
drinks just before going out on the boat.  It will affect your blood
sugar levels and actually weaken your strength, and take longer to
break down.  However, once you are actively working out, sports drinks
or juices are ideal for replenishing your system.  Drink lots of water
during the day to avoid dehydration especially on hot days.  Remember
that coffee, teas and alcohol can actually dehydrate the body.  Mad

Bring
a snack to eat and drink right after practice.  This will help prevent
carbohydrate depletion and offset fatigue.  Juices, fruits and energy
bars are ideal.  Bananas are always favorites of athletes.  Smile

My
favorite foods between races are Bananas, fruit smoothies or carrot
& fruit juices – easy to digest, and fast energy. You can also try
protein shakes.

After the last race of the day… carbohydrate replenishment choice is a nice dark beer!  Very Happy

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team is racing May 17th at Burnaby's Barnet Marine Park

The Lotus Sports Club Bill Alley Memorial Dragon Boat Regatta is one of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team's favorite races of the season.  

This year it is held on the Saturday of the Victoria Day Long weekend. May 17, 2008.

image
The 2007 Gung Haggis dragon boat team getting loaded into the boat.


The Lotus Sports Club is one of
North America's oldest dragon boat paddling clubs.  It was started in
1986, for the first dragon boat race in Vancouver during Expo 86.  The
club has won the Canadian Men's Dragon Boat Championship three times.
In 1996, the Lotus Mixed Team placed first at the Vancouver
International Dragon boat Festival and went to Toronto to compete in
the Toronto International Dragon Boat Festival.

My first dragon boat experience was at the Lotus Sports Club, where our Headliners Team practiced in 1993.  We won the novice division that first year.  I paddled and steered three years on the Headliners before starting up the Celebration team in 1997.  We would take Celebration team to Lotus Sports Club organized Golden Spike dragon boat race at Port Moody's Rocky Point Park.  The races were moved to Barnet Marine Park and later renamed to the Bill Alley Memorial Dragon boat Regatta, in honour of one of the club founders.

Read about last year's Gung Haggis team at the 2007 Lotus Dragon Boat Bill Alley Dragon Boat Regatta
We won the Adult Mixed Final B race.
Gung Haggis dragon boat team does well at Lotus

The following is information to our paddlers and friends who want to come compete or cheer us on!!!

Here's a map to Barnet Marine Park
Map to Lotus Sports Club

http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=49.290846,-122.928954&spn=0.003537,0.007


From Vancouver/Burnaby:

drive East on Hastings St, it will turn into Barnet Rd.


Go past Cement factory on your left, past Velodrome on right


Go past Texaco Road on your left


Turn left at next light marked Barnet Marine Park.




From Port Moody/Coquitlam

Go West
on Barnet Rd. (arriving from Clarke Road or St. Johns St.


Drive past Reed Point marina – just West of Port Moody.


Turn right at light marked Barnet Marine Park




If you have equipment to drop off:

proceed
to the right on Takeda Drive.  Cross the train tracks – then there is a
loading zone… watch for other cars unloading. drop off your partner
with equipment.  After drop off – turn the car around and proceed back to parking lots.




The parking lot along Takeda Dr. will fill up fast.  Park in the large parking lot West of the park entrance.  There is also a pathway from the parking lot to the beach.



The dragon boat teams set up tents East of the concession stand…. usually
along the beach.  This is where we set up in 2006.  Because of rain, we
set up under the trees near the concession stand in 2007.

Gung Haggis schedule

arrive 8am – sign waivers & set up tents & tables
8:20 hand waivers in….
8:20am captain meeting
8:30am – warm up
8:45 – team briefing and line-up
8:50 marshall to race area
9:00 team picture
9:07 load boats
9:20 1st race heat 2

10:20 DOTTING OF THE EYES ceremony + Gung Haggis Lion and Dragon dance ceremony.
11:30 2nd race heat  8
12:30 3rd race  heat 10
2:15 Mixed Adult Final B
2:30 Mixed Adult Final A


PADDLERS
please arrive for 8am
to help set up the tents and our “camp” for the day.
If somebody arrives at 7:30 – they can claim better real estate for a beach view!
 
We need your signatures on the
waivers handed in by 8:20am

Stephen Mirowski is Team Captain
Todd wong is team coach / drummer
Dave Samis is steers

BRING: bowl + spoon for chili (courtesy of Chef Hillary)
             sandwich + own food + something to share
             your own water + drinks. 
             BANANAS recommended.
Bring: lawn chair, blankets,
tents if needed.

(there
is a food stand on site – but fried foods with lots of fat eg. hotdogs
and hamburgers sit in your system for 3+ hours and are slow to digest).

Bring your SUV sun protection, a hat and water.

TEAM COLOURS are:
RED and BLACK – with BLUE kilts
(women's small and medium Gung Haggis team shirts
available)

4 races – almost all paddlers will sit out a single race as spares.
Everybody will race 3 races.  Key positions will race every race eg. lead strokes, mid-strokes, drummer, steers.
spares announced during line-up
if you are sparing a race – please stay close to the team, in case somebody goes missing, or is sick or injured.


Gung Haggis dragon boat team performing well in race pieces

Paddling on False Creek in the sunshine… with friends… on a dragon boat team.  Very Vancouver!

I love the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragonboat team.  I have managed and coached it since 2002, when the team morphed from the former Celebration team, which I had created in 1997.

This past Sunday, we did some full 500m race pieces.  You could feel the power in the boat.  Some of the rookies still need to develop their timing and many paddlers still need to develop their cardio.  But the potential is there and we are very happy with our development this year.

Our core paddlers are so enthusiastic they wanted to start paddling in February.  I told them they were crazy and should go skiing instead… but happily relented and joined them, when a Global television crew wanted to film us for their “Best of BC” news series representing cultural diversity.


The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team is about opportunities. 

It's
about community building.  It's about making cultural statements.  It's
about having fun and making friends.
And it's about dragon boat racing….

This year I wanted to create two dragon boat teams.  We now have about 35 active paddlers, coming to practices on Sunday afternoon at 1:30pm and Tuesday and Wednesday evenings at 6pm.  Our system is flexible.  Come at least once a week, twice is recommended.  Pick a day, paddle, bring a friend and have some fun.  Each practice is different with different combinations of paddlers.  Everybody is getting to know each other, and we are encouraging more responsibilities and team leaders.

Last year we raced 7 dragon boat races + 2 canoe regattas.  We will do similar this year, starting on May 17th at the Lotus Sports Club Bill Alley dragonboat regatta.

This year is special.
Two weeks ago we had two time Olympic kayak racer Kamini Jain come out and give us a paddle clinic.  It really helped the team both improve their paddling, and as a bonding experience.  They got to watch each other on the video, cheer for each other, and encourage each other… which is what we do on the boat all the time.  Amazingly, Kamini really complimented many of our rookie paddlers.  She was amazed that some of them had only been on a boat for 6 or 7 times.


This year's Gung Haggis team is going to be incredible.
Adding the CC Dragons paddlers gives us so much more experience in the boat.
I have been drumming during our race pieces “as coach” waiting for our “star drummer” to come out.

Imagine conducting a symphony… where everybody knows what to do, when
to do it.  All you have to do is wave your arms, and signal the
transitions.

You don't do any counting… the team does it…. mentally… or only for key words.

You stand at the front, watch them, guide them, encourage them, coach
them.  giving out cue words…. like a race jockey on a thoroughbred
horse.

Kamini Jain gives paddle clinic to Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team

Olympic paddler Kamini Jain gives paddle clinic to Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team

CIMG0266

Kamini
Jain
came out to give a paddle clinic. She is coach of the False Creek
Mixed and FC Mens teams
– that brought home medals from the World
Championships last September in Sydney Australia.  Kamini is also a
two-time Olympic paddler at the Sydney and Athens summer Olympic games.  And she is v-e-r-y “Gung Haggis” with both South Asian and Italian ancestry.

Kamini
watched the team paddle out for their warm up from the coach boat,
while Todd got used to steering the boat with a little out board and
very sensitive throttle grip.

CIMG0262

Then Kamini climbed into boat and gave a drill:
stretching
forward with your hand along the gunnel of the boat until your arm was
parallel with the water.  That's how far your reach should be she said.
A 2nd drill:  paddling only with the bottom hand… and reaching as far as the first drill

  • She went down the boat making
    adjustments for each paddler. 
  • She gave demonstrations for the reach and how to grip the paddle (no champagne glass two finger grips)

CIMG0253

Kamini makes Stephen M utilize all his potential r-e-a-c-h!

Kamini did some paddle correction with each paddler
most notable:

  1. more stretch
  2. more forward lean
  3. working the hinge at the waist
  4. bottom hand placement

CIMG0250

Good s-t-r-e-t-c-h Jane!

some of the corrections she made on the video were:

  1. more reach
  2. bottom arm extended straight out (more reach)
  3. top hand staying high (not dropping out of the boat)
  4. exit – not flaring out
  5. recovery – not pulling the paddle into your body
  6. move head forward when you pull
  7. don't lean too far out
  8. get paddle deep in the water for the catch
  9. don't exit too late
  10. don't sit back too far at the end of your stroke
  11. use hips more

There were lots of compliments:

  1. good reach
  2. good top hands
  3. good
    blending
  4. good rotation
  5. good hips
  6. deep paddles
  7. rookies are looking real good

Attending the practice today were, in order of appearance on the video:

LEFT SIDE of the Boat

1) Gayle
2) Hillary
3) Keng
4) Alyssa
5) Joy
6) Ernest
7) Steve Behn
8) Joe
9) Raphael
10) Don
11) Christina

RIGHT Side of the boat

1) Tzhe
2) Jane
3) Cindy
4) Colleen
5) Leanne
6) Stephen Mirowski
7) Steven (“Yoga”) Wong
8) Devin
9) Sean John
10) Paulette
11) Pam

+
Michael
Gerard
Marion

Following
both Tuesday and Wednesday practices.  We will take the dvd to “The
Clubhouse” japanese restaurant – where we can watch the dvd, on a large
screen, while we enjoy cabohydrate replenishment.

Tuesday roster
will be limited to 22 paddlers, as last week we had the max, and not
enough on Wednesday to go out. Very sad and unfair to the paddlers who
came out on Wed.

please hit reply
to myself and Stephen Mirowski, so we can have a roster count confirmed for each day. 

If
you can only attend on Tuesday (some paddlers have classes on Wed) they
will be priority for Tuesday.  If you can attend either – please come
on Wednesday.

If there are 14 or 16 paddlers on each evening, it
makes it easier for me to do more one-to-one work with individual
paddlers.  If there is a full boat, I am less likely to do individual
paddler corrections. hint… more personal coaching on Wednesday!!!

see all the pictures:

Gung Haggis dragon boat paddle clinic with Kamini Jain

Gung Haggis dragon boat paddle clinic…

Cheers, Todd

Gung Haggis dragon boat practice SUNDAY 1:30pm, April 20

The sun is expected to peek out for Sunday – while the chance of flurries is also expected.

It's snowing on the North Shore right now, after some hail this afternoon.

BUT….
Last Sunday was soooo much fun with two boats out, doing sprint races
side by side.  Expect more fun and practices like this as more people
come out.

SUNDAY APRIL 20th
1:30pm
Dragon Zone
Creekside Park @ Science World
bring your windbreaker and a cap… (for the sun 🙂

Next week is our video taping and special coaching session with Kamini Jain.  April 27th,

We have had 18 practices so far…

It is one month / 4 weeks until our first race at Lotus Sports Club Bill Alley Memorial Regatta, on May 17th,

we have practiced on Sunday afternoons, Tuesday Nights and Wednesday night

We have have been filmed by 2 news crews, Global TV News and City TV Breakfast Television.

We
have had 32 experienced paddlers out and at least 12 rookies…. and 3
signed up and paid veteran paddlers still missing in action.

Some paddlers are opting to skip Alcan Race, so we will have one good team for Alcan with a mix of veterans and a few rookies.

We are welcoming our new paddlers and will give them priority for our next races, as we continue to build a second team.  In the next few weeks, we would like to identify and prioritize our racers for each race.

It is 8 weeks until Rio Tinto Alcan
Dragon Boat Festival

Wednesday night, I attended the managers/captains meeting with Stephen Mirowski, Steven Wong, Stuart Mackinnon and Pash Brar.

There
will be no 50+ race.  It was dropped because there weren't enough
entries (they needed 6) Last year Gung Haggis & Friends entered and
came 4th, just a second out of 3rd place.

The actual Racer's
village and festival site is undecided because of construction, but the
race course will still be exactly the same, with boats finishing
towards the North East corner of False Creek.

Race format is the same as last year – 32 teams in Comp.  64 teams in upper Rec, and 32 teams in lower Rec/Novice.  

With
combined paddlers from CC Dragons and Gung Haggis Fat Choy + other
experienced paddlers + keener rookies, I see us improving over last
year's performance in the Lower rec/Novice division.  The boat feels
strong and smooth with the experienced paddlers.  The rookies are
learning fast. 

Let's get out and fill the boat for practices, and make it to the middle of the Upper Rec division.

See you SUNDAY!!!!

Todd

Gung Haggis dragon boat team finally paddles in the sunshine!!!

GREAT PRACTICE on Sunday!

The sunshine stayed out – and it was warm!!!
no rain in sight… and lots of dragon boaters came out to paddle in the sunshine.

We had 28 people show up, so we took two dragon boats out.  Gayle Gordon led one boat, and I lead the other.  Both Stephen Wong and Stephen Mirowski started steering.  Ashleigh and Wendy were lead
strokes on the Chinchillas. Tzhe and Keng were lead strokes on the
Donkeys.  Gayle and I also took some turns at lead stroke as well.

We
divided people up into two teams, and alternated lessons with mini
sprint races.  The Green Swamp Donkeys won the first two
sprint races.  The Flaming Red Purple Chinchilla teamwon the third race.  As is our
tradition – after each race, the losing team gets to pick somebody from
the other team to join them.  So after they lost each race, the Chinchillas got to pick somebody off the Swamp Donkeys team, finally winning with 15 paddlers to 11 paddlers.

Sunday
practice was a lot of fun.  People really liked racing each other.  With more
people out on Sundays – we can have more races, as well as teaching
people how to paddle when another boat is right beside you, as well as
how to avoid collisions.

upcoming practices

TUESDAY April 15
6pm – on the water asap

This will be our only evening practice this week, as we are going to cancel the WED practice, because of the Managers.& Captains 7pm meeting for the Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival.  

Maybe with only one practice we will have more than 10 or 12 paddlers out for the evening – CROSS YOUR FINGERS!!!

Tuesday Night foodie club in effect… 
I think the vote is to go for 40% off happy hour at Kyushu Island.

WEDNESDAY- April 16
no dragon boat practice
7pm Managers & Captains meeting for dragon boat festival
@ Chinese Cultural Centre
corner of Carrall and Pender St.
– walk into the courtyard and enter the David Lam Multi-purpose hall.

THURSDAY – April 17
6pm practice with Gayle's women's team
if you can't practice on Tuesday….
Come out to paddle with the women!
email Gayle to confirm.   ggcater@mac.com
She says there has been room on the boat so far…

SUNDAY – April 20
1:30 @ Dragon Zone
It is Sun Run in the morning… so the traffic should be cleared up by the after noon for us.
We are hoping to have enough people for two teams again!
Following Sunday on April 27th, we have a special coaching & video session with Kamini Jain.

A Tartan Day dragon boat paddle practice… with bagpiper and proclamation reading

HAPPY TARTAN DAY dragon boat practice!

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Michael Brophy holds Scottish flag, Todd Wong, Deputy Mayor Raymond Louie, bagpiper Joe McDonald – photo Georgia Thorburn

A very different kind of dragon boat practice today.

When I arrived, we passed out the tartan kilts, and the tartan sashes.  Because…

We had a City TV cameraman John Wilson come film our practice this afternoon.

And a bagpiper, my friend Joe McDonald, walked over from the Skytrain
station, while we were doing our warm-up under the covered gazebo.

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Raymond Louie holds the proclamation, while Joe McDonald plays his bagpipers – photo Todd Wong

We had a proclamation reading ceremony with the deputy mayor of
Vancouver, city councilor Raymond Louie.  Raymond used to paddle
dragon boats, and he shared a story, how on a day – just like today. 
with a bit of wind, and a bit or rain… he went out on the boat with
his team the Vancouver Sun Strokers.  And they capsized just beyond the
Cambie St. Bridge.

I told a story about Vancouver s Scottish heritage goes way back to the
first mayor in 1886 – Malcolm Alexander  McLean… way back to the
first Prime Minister in 1867 – Sir John Eh MacDonald…. way back to
the first Governor of British Columbia – James Douglas in 1858.

Tartan Day was first celebrated in Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1986 to help celebrate Canada s Scottish heritage. 

In 1993 Tartan Day was proclaimed in B.C.

In 2002, Sean Connery leads 10,000 bagpipers through the centre of New York for Tartan Day.

And in Vancouver…. nothing…. for Tartan Day…. until this past week.
Tartan Day was proclaimed in Vancouver City Council

I asked Raymond Louie to explain how it happened.  He said there were a
lot of e-mails between us, and he credited me for making it happen, as
I emailed my connections in the Scottish cultural community, and had
the proclamation draft written by Ron MacLeod, Chair V of the SFU
Scottish Studies program.  The motion was made by Heather Deal and
seconded by Raymond.  Deputy Mayor Louie then read the proclamation.

Joe McDonald played another song on his bagpipes.  It was raining. 
People were smiling, and taking pictures.  It was Pam s first practice
with us, and she had kilt on (does she really know what she is getting
into).  It was wonderful for team spirit.

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Joe McDonald pipes the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team down to the dragon boat for their special Tartand Day Sunday practice – photo Lena Yamulky

We organized the team above the dock, and we were led down the ramp to
the docks by bagpiper Joe MacDonald.  We climbed into the boat.  And as
the paddlers backed the boat out, I unfurled the Scottish flag,
attached to the hockey stick.  The tv camerman was filming us… and it
looked real good.

Then somebody spotted team member Steven Wong, just coming down the
dock.  Question.  Do we continue backpaddling, or come in for Steven. 

We are an inclusive team.  Steven is a big part of our team.  We
paddled back in, waited for him to get a pdf, find a seat in the boat,
then paddled out for the camera again.

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Bagpiper Joe McDonald plays the pipes, as the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team loads the boat – photo Lena Yamulky

The flag unfurled beautifully.  When we started paddling forward, and
the flag flew nicely.  As we gained speed, it flapped strongly. 
Wheee!!!! Big smiles on our faces.  Great Fun for Tartan Day.

It was a good practice.  The rain stopped for the most part.  We
paddled pretty strongly with 23 paddlers out past David Lam Park.  We
did some technique exercises, backs and fronts, and kept the boat
moving.  We were back just after 2pm.  A shorter practice than usual –
but pretty good for a cold rainy day.

Following the practice, we had a leadership council meeting at the Wolf & Hound pub over on West Broadway.

Looking forward to seeing the everybody out on Tuesday and Wednesday this week.

Vancouver Tartan Day

See pictures on Flickr:  Vancouver Tartan Day

See more on www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat practices Sunday March 30, Tues April 1, Thurs April 3


Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team practices in the sunshine this week.

We meet Sundays 1:30
Tuesday 6pm
Wednesday 6pm
All practices at Dragon Zone @ Creekside Park
just south of Science World
meet above the Dragon Boat/ Aqua Ferry docks
at the green trailer building that is Dragon Zone club house

Practices this past week.

Sunday March 30, we had 19 paddlers
GREAT PRACTICE in the sunshine.  This is what dragon boat practices are all about… great people, great weather, great
experience paddling on a Sunday afternoon.  We did our usual paddle around East Basin, then up to David Lam Park.

Tuesday Beginner night
14
paddlers out on the water Tuesday… and the boat felt strong, even
with 3 new rookies.  Joe Easton, a 6 year veteran on the Gung Haggis
team says the team is way ahead of where we were this time last year.

We
had the second Gung Haggis Food & Social Club after-practice meal
at Congee House on Broadway.  A great way to introduce non-Asian
paddlers to lots of Chinese food.

Wednesday Rec night
The
Killarney Cougar Dragons had their first practice with teacher sponsor
manager Stuart Mackinnon.  Coaches were Todd Wong, Gayle Gordon and
Kimm Mitchell, and steers Steven Wong.

These high school
students had 20 paddlers out on the boat.  After some confusing paddle
clashing at the beginning, we soon had them paddling in time and having
fun.  Gayle remarked that they were remarkably good for their first
time, and easy to see how the team won Junior D silver last year, when
we had only the veteran paddlers paddling.

Gung Haggis practice had only 10 paddlers out tonight.
We
waited for our 10th paddler to show up, so we could take a Gemini boat
out.  We transformed the disappointment of a small turn-out into a
positive experience with more one-to-one coaching.  We rotated two
paddlers to do some lead stroke work with Gayle Gordon, and Todd moved
from seat to seat, working with different paddlers.

We did some
4 person quad sections (much easier with less people)… but that's all
we had… a front half of  4 and a back half of 5.  We did some good
paddling work, and brought in some intensity pieces of 10 and 20
strokes. GOOD workout tonight.

SPECIAL
EVENTS

Thursday April 3rd – 1pm
TARTAN DAY PROCLAMATION
at Vancouver City Hall
Come join me for a ceremonial reading as the mayor proclaims  April 6th as Tartan Day in the City of Vancouver.
Bagpipe ceremony with Allan McMordie.  I snuck in the words “Gung Haggis Fat Choy tartan” into the proclamation – see www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com

Thursday, April 3rd
8pm-8:30pm meeting time
Doolin's Irish Pub
KILTS NIGHT – 1st Thursday of each month.
9:30pm – live music with Halifax Wharf Rats.
This is an optional social event. 

FREE pint of Guinness if you wear a kilt.
We have 5 kilts for the team.  Tzhe Lam will have the Kilt bag, as I am working until 9pm.
This is a special Tartan Day event,

SUNDAY, April 6th.1:30
Dragon Zone @ Creekside Park
just south of SCIENCE WORLD

TARTAN DAY dragon boat paddle.
We will invite people to wear their tartans for paddling
invite your friends to join us for practice
hopefully we can have two boats on the water, for a photo opportunity for Tartan Day…. always good for recruiting!

This Sunday is TARTAN DAY. 
see www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com for details.

TARTAN DAY
celebrates the Scottish ancestry and contributions to Canada… and is
a good excuse for getting a free beer and a photo opportunity. See  The next celebration: Wearing the tartan

We
invite people to wear their polyviscous kilts, invite their friends to
come join us for paddling… and hopefully have a photo opportunity
with the media.  (all part of good community work and sets us up for
that very pretty Alcan Sustainability Award – cultural sustainability
is good).

We
will follow up a hard practice with well-earned carbohydrate
re-loading.  Sugars are carbohydrates.  Alcohol is a sugar.  Beer and
scotch are alcohols – a good way to replenish the body's carbohydrates
and celebrate Tartan Day.

APRIL 11th. 6pm-8:30pm
Dragon Zone
Special paddling clinic with Kamini Jain – 2 time Olympic paddler and coach of the False Creek Racing Canoe Club.
I
took a similar paddling clinic with Kamini last October and liked it so
much, I have signed up our team.  Kamini will give paddle instruction,
and we will video the team.  Then will watch the team, and Kamini will
critique each paddler.  Video can be a powerful tool.

Cost is
$400 for the team… so participants please bring $20 each. This is a
GREAT price.  I paid $75 for the workshop last year.

May 17th. Saturday Victoria Day weekend
Lotus Sports Club dragon boat regatta
Barnett Marine Park
Cost is $20 per person
I
have registered our team.  We will paddle some some friendly rivalries
with the Chilliwack Pirates.  Last year we came 1st in our final
race… but we didn't have the third fastest combined time – the
Pirates did.  Dinner Party at Raphael's in Port Moody following the
race.

Cheers, Todd
h: 604-987-7124
c: 778-846-7090