Category Archives: Dragon Boat Information

Gung Haggis dragon boat team races in Rec C Final – our best ever showing!

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team competed at the 20th Anniversary Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival on June 21, 22. 

This was the team's 7th year under the name Gung Haggis Fat Choy.

This was the best finish ever by the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat
team.  We competed hard in the REC C medal Championships.  previously,
Gung Haggis has been in the D, and E divisions.

This team showed a lot of maturity in its paddling focus, and it's
conduct.  And it showed a lot of its fun side by the addition of more
kilts into the line-up and carrying the Scottish flag as we walked from
Racer's Village to the Marshalling area.

Special congratulations to:
Stephen for captaining
Keng -for drumming
Gayle, Tzhe for lead stroke
Hillary, Alissa, Joanne, Jane, Joy, Marion, Colleen, Paulette, Jim,
Steve B, Steven W., Devon, Michael, Rich, Tony, Joe, Raphael, Gerry,
Gerard, Don, Todd – for paddling hard
Rory for steering

This team shows a lot of depth as we “loaned” non-Alcan roster paddlers
to other teams.  Thanks to this paddlers who weren't expecting to race
at Alcan, they were able to help out other teams.

Leanne, Wendy and Ashleigh paddled with Gayle Gordon's “G.Force Winds”
in the Women's division coming in 5th, to the Women's Rec A Finals…
the team's best Alcan finish ever.

Jonas was a late add-on to the GVRD 44 Cheeks, and they beat us in Rec C, as Jonas gets a silver medal.

with Jonas winning a medal as a late addition to the GVRD team.

Thank you to our supporters who came to cheer us on.  Stuart, Deb, Julie, Debbie, Ryan, Dan, Natalie, and so many more!!!!

Congratulations everybody!!!!

Todd

ps… Now who is up for a one day race in Kent WA (Seattle)
July 12, Saturday.   4 races in a day… if you make the final.  $20 each.

Dragon Boat friendships at Vancouver festival run deep, hard and long

Dragon Boat friendships at Vancouver Festival run deep, hard and long


Todd Wong and Deb Martin wear team shirts with tartan kilts, making the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team very easy to spot! photo 2005 archives.

The Gung Haggis dragon boat team paddlers are quickly discovering that by wearing a kilt with their team shirt, paddlers  and tourists are asking to take a picture with them.  Okay… we are a bit of a novelty in the paddling fashion world.

Our red team shirts emblazoned with lucky gold coins “Fat Choy”, which means “prosperity”, is easily identifiable and encourages other paddlers to yell at them “Go Gung Haggis!”  or “Where's Todd?”

As I was walking back to the tents from the marshalling area, I bumped into friends from San Francisco Linda and Andrew who not only organize one of the top clubs in Dragon Warriors, but they also organize the San Francisco Dragon Boat Festival held on Treasure Island in the middle of San Francisco Bay.  It attracts some of the best teams on West Coast, and there is a healthy but friendly rivalry between San Francisco and Vancouver teams.  In 2005, I invited Dragon Warriors to our post-Alcan Festival party, and their paddlers loved it.  Later that summer, I also invited Andrew and Linda out on a Taiwanese dragon boat during a practice for the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team, and gave them one of our team shirts.  They really love our shirts.  Linda said it's one of their favorites.

While I was chatting with Andrew and Linda, somebody tried to surprise me with a kiss on the neck… but I flinched.  Oops… it is Grace Morissette, my first dragon boat coach from the 1993 Headliners team when we won the inaugural Novice Cup.  Grace is paddling with the Lotus Sports Club and they surprisingly won their first race of the day, pushing them into the Competitive Divisions.  I give her a hug later… and also have a good chat with her husband Doug Mancell.

Jim McArthur is also a Lotus Sports Club stalwart.  He paddled in the first Vancouver dragon boat races at Expo 86.  Whenever Jim comes by to say hi, I unfailingly introduce him to the team, as an honourary Gung Haggis Friend.

“Where's Todd?” can often be a question asked by the team, as not only am I busy coaching the Killarney Cougar Dragons junior team, but I can often be waylaid by too many spontaneous conversations with the many dragon boat friends I know.

After all our races were done today, I was hailed by Heather Bissonette, who was doing video interviews for Nova Television.  Heather volunteered for the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner event a couple of years ago, and asked me for a reference letter when she applied for the BCIT Journalism program.

“You know the drill,” she said as we started an interview about why I was combining kilts with dragon boats.

“It's about multiculturalism.  We really do celebrate diversity in Vancouver.  People recognize Canada's historical beginnings of English and French – but in BC, I say the pioneer origins are Scottish and Chinese.  The Scots came from the Far East across the Atlantic, and the Chinese came from the Far West across the Pacific.  They met here in BC, and originally didn't like each other… but soon they started dating and having kids.  This is BC's heritage and its' future.  Dragon boat racing is a way to have fun and share our cultures.”

Soon I am chatting with Daniel of One-Apparel, the team uniform sponsor for the Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival.  We bought this year's team shirts from Daniel, and he loves the design we put on it.  I suggest that he have a display of all the team jerseys who are his clients.  He asks for one of ours.  I have recommended teams such as Portland's Wasabi Paddling Club to him.  And when Linda and Andrew of San Francisco's Dragon Warriors admired my team jersey, they dropped in on Daniel and One-Apparel.

Back in the Racers' Village. I bumped into Phillip Chau, who is now coaching Edgewater Casino Without Warning.  Back in 2000, he captained the Nokia Dragons, and I was the drummer.  I also inadvertently ended up doing some coaching duties for the team too when Coach Leah Nagano was unable to coach us when the team switched practice dates.  We won gold for Rec B.  At this festival we are sharing a paddler for the Without Warning Men's team and the Gung Haggis Mixed Team, Tony, formerly of the Phillipine PYROS team whom I originally met in 2005.  Last year Art Calderwood was one of our best rookie paddlers on Gung Haggis, this year he is paddling on Without Warning.  Art and I bumped into each other and had a good chat.  We are proud of him, and he is happy to see that Gung Haggis has improved this year too.

Racer's Village is a compact community of 160 dragon boat teams, each with a designated spot under army tents.  On one side of the Gung Haggis team space are the Killarney Cougars, managed by teacher sponsor Stuart Mackinnon who fell in love with dragon boat racing when he joined the Gung Haggis team last year.  On our other side is G. Force Winds – coached, drummed and organized by Gayle Gordon who is now our lead stroke, and an assistant coach for our team.  Gayle is an whirlwind of activity this year, as she is also coaching a corporate team Flight Centre, tenting on the other side of G. Force Winds.

Gung Haggis is making a special effort to cheer on G. Force Winds because 3 of our paddlers who didn't roster for the Alcan race are now paddling with Gayle and G. Force.  It is really a compatible relationship.  Gung Haggis Fat Choy has built up a depth of about 40 members in our “club.”  I really wanted to build a second team, but it didn't work for Alcan this year.  Not everybody wanted to paddle at Alcan, some go on vacation, some have studies, some don't like the huge size of Alcan Races, nor the waiting in between races.  But now Wendy, Ashleigh and Leanne are paddling with Gayle.  It's fair to say that we all really love Gayle, and the effort that she puts into each practice.  We have nicknamed her “The Goddess.”


Leanne, Ashleigh and Wendy are Gung Haggis paddling on G. Force Wind.


James Yu, Michael Brophy and Todd Wong at the Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival

There are so many friends here at the festival.  GVRD 44 Cheeks are just opposite us.  Their coach and drummer James Yu was on my first  dragon boat team.  Their steersperson Dave Samis is also a Gung Haggis paddler.  I coached the GVRD team back in 2003, and they joined us for races in Portland OR, and Victoria BC that year.

The Pirates led by Ian Paul are around the corner.  My family friend and honourary cousin Mei-Fah is just a few tents away with the Richmond Centre Dragoneers.   Her daughter Jessie is paddling on the Richmond Colts Junior Team.  And over around the other corner are 6 Wasabi Teams from Portland. I consider the Wasabi Team Huge women's premier team as “my Portland team” because they have invited me to steer for them on 3 occasions in Kent WA, Deep Cove BC, and for last year's Victoria races.  This is largely due to my friendship with one of their veteran paddlers Suzi Cloutier, a former US National kayak team member.  Since 1991, Suzi and I have had a tradition of meeting, exchanging gifts and having a post-Alcan Monday brunch.  But sadly she is not at this year's festival.  Coach Kim Ketcham explained that she couldn't make this year's trip due to the sudden passing of a close friend.


Here's my friend Suzi admiring the Hon. David Lam Trophy for “Best Multicultural Team” with the winning Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team in 2005 – photo Todd Wong

And it is these friendships that I have with so many of the paddlers that make this event special for me.  Having conversations with Manfred Preuss and his wife Kathy from Chilliwack.  Saying hello with Connie and Kristine who also work at the Vancouver Public Library with me.  Seeing Tracey who first paddled with Gung Haggis and after only four practices won a medal at the inaugural Sellwood Park Race in Portland OR, then again two weeks later in Victoria with a combined team of Gung Haggis Fat Choy with Dieselfish of San Francisco.

Dragon Boat racing is about teamwork.  But at the root of the team is friendship.  The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team is built with an emphasis on friendship and good-hearted people.  It is the favorite team I have ever paddled or coached for.  And as Tony Lim, the former PYROS paddle wrote to me last night.  “Gung Haggis IS Todd Wong.”

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team gets ready for final practice before the BIG RACE – Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival June 21/22

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team at the Lotus Sports Club Bill Alley Memorial Dragon Boat regatta at Barnet Marine Park on May 17th, 2008

It's the final practice before the Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival…

Race schedule will be out anyday now… 
The first race could be anytime on Saturday morning.
the 2nd race is dependant upon where we finish in our first race.
the 3rd race is usually after the Women's and Junior races – so around 10am -11am.
– this is the race that determines top finishers in the finals, otherwise the consolation
The 4th race is in the finals or consolation.

TUESDAY practice is geared for final race preparation….
ALL Alcan rostered paddlers – please attend.
All other paddlers can take out our 2nd dragon boat…. so Ashleigh, Wendy, Leanne, Sean, Andrew and everybody are invited…

SUNDAY FATHER's DAY PRACTICE

We had visits from Steven Wong's father and my father – both named Bill Wong.
Steven
gave an introduction about his father, who was the subject of a CBC
documentary in February called “Tailor Made: Chinatown's Last Tailor”  
Steven's father also paddled on the team “Paddling the Wong Way”.  This
was significant as Bill Wong was in his 80's and paddling with his
younger brothers Maurice and Milton – who was one of the founders of
the Canadian International Dragon Boat Festival Society (also known as
the corporate sponsored Alcan Dragon Boat Festival).

On the
water… we worked the team harder for a warm-up, trying to get out the
Sunday afternoon lazies… and put the team into race mode.  We started
with 1/2 boat starts… front half , then back half.  Wow… the boat
was really pulling!!!   Then a full race boat race piece.  You could
really feel it fly.   

But… timing was mushy on some areas, the fronts complained the backs were rushing, and the backs complained about timing… 

We
worked on some other small group exercises.  We did more front half and
back half starts.  We moved some people around.  And everything started
to fall into place again.

Our final start + transition pieces worked really well.  We can all take pride in what we are accomplishing as a team. 

During a quick debrief… Hillary's answer to everything was “Ice cream!”

Keep up the fun… get to know everybody on the team….
Remember that as hard as we want to paddle, win medals and do our best…
there is always life
after dragon boating…
and it's name is

a) f-u-n
b) f-r-i-e-n-d-s-h-i-p
c) i-c-e-c-r-e-a-m

Cheers, Todd

Gung Haggis team race results from June 8th Rio Tinto dragon boat regatta

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team raced hard on Sunday, May 8th.

It was the first time we had our Alcan roster in a regatta, as steersperson Rory Dunn has now been able to join us on the water.  We have also moved paddler Keng Graal to the drummer's seat, to add more muscle to the boat.  Keng is an experienced drummer from her first team the CC Riders at Columbia College where she teachers, but for the past few years she has paddled with us.

Congratulations
to our Alcan roster for improving with each race.  We came 2nd by a
fraction to Banana Fusion in our second race.  But in our third race,
we came in third.

These were much better races than we had out
at Lotus on May 17th.  Paddlers were much more focussed.  The
atmosphere was more intense with 25 teams instead of 17.  The Sunday PM
results are also listed on
http://www.dragonboatwest.net/index.php?topic=5035.msg48892;topicseen#new

D Final
Moscrop Mighty Fish – 2:42.04
Flying Colts – 2:53.59
Super Strokin' Dragonflies –
2:56.68

Surgin Sturgeons – 2:58.12
Hardy Herons – 3:17.03
Edgewater Casino    – DNF

C Final
VT Conquest – 2:39.73
Banana Fusion – 2:40.08
Gung Haggis Fat Choy – 2:47.41
Raging Rebels – 2:49.08
Killarney Cougar Dragons – 2:49.24
Richmond Centre Dragoneers – 2:56.60

B Final
Kitsilano Water Demons – 2:40.45
STM Knights – 2:40.48
CBC Wave Catchers – 2:43.89
FCRCC Grandragons – 2:45.35
Draggin' Riders – 2:46.15
Team Momentum – 2:51.56
Mission VT – 2:53.21

A Final
Laoyam Eagles – 2:17.36
Rice Rockets – 2:24.28
Eric Hamber Eternal Dragon – 2:26.87
Legacy – 2:31.87
TD Lightning – 2:35.53
Strathcona Youth Dragons – 2:36.52

If
you compare these times to Saturday PM times… you may have to adjust
for a head wind.  Gemini boat times are usually about 5 seconds slower
than a BuK or 6-16 boat.

We had really good feedback from steersperson Rory, paddlers Don, Richard and captain Stephen M.

Our
starts were NOT explosive, as we were often left behind and succeeded
by playing catch-up.  We usually did not hit our groove until the half
way point, and gained ground with a good long reach.

Lots of improvements with each race – but still lots to work on too!
We will work on starts and transitions for Tuesday night.

I hope to see ALL paddlers for Tuesday night practice
6pm @ Dragon Zone


especially if you want to paddle during the July and August races…
we are building our foundations now… and we don't want you to miss out.
We can run TWO boats for TUESDAY.

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team hosts Kilts Night party at Doolin's Irish Pub

“It's a Chinese-Scottish dragon boat team in an Irish pub with Middle Easter belly dancing!” said veteran paddler Steve Behan, new to the Gung Haggis dragon boat team.

Many Gung Haggis dragon boat team paddlers are regulars at Kilts Night at Doolin's Pub.  But June 5th was special, as we combined the event with a Pub Night dinner fundraiser.   The  $10 Burger + Beer combo was really an excuse to create a social bonding event for the team, as well as to make some money for the team.  It was a really fun evening, that also highlighted the cultural diversity that this team celebrates.  Not only are the Chinese and Scottish traditions highlighted in the team name, but kilts are really highlighted in a fun, yet fashionable way.

And… Middle Eastern belly dancing became a featured event, from our 1st year paddlers Joy and Lena.  They are both strong paddlers, not to mention fun and very likeable.  We are very glad that they chose our team to join this year.

Every body had fun, as paddlers mingled with supporters and friends. Bagpiper friend Allan McMordie came to join us… I think he is becoming addicted to Gung Haggis Fat Choy since he was featured earlier this year in the Vancouver Sun Tartan Day article and he came to Vancouver City Hall to play for a Tartan Day recognition event with the Mayor.  We even had out of town supporters as Jonas's parents from Toronto were in town.

Photo Library - 2699
Paddlers Joy and Lena in their belly dancing outfits pose with Dooin's bartender Lindsey and manager Ori.  Joy has celtic heritage and Lena was born in Iraq – photo Todd Wong

Photo Library - 2697

Free Gin Martinis, were tasted by the team, courtesy of Vanessa and Van Gough Gin… must remember to invite them to our next fundraiser party.

Forrest & Leanne

Stephen and Leanne wear our “team tartan” – the Fraser Hunting tartan. photo Deb Martin

Photo Library - 2702

Gung Haggis coach and clan chieftain Todd bar-hopped with bartender Lindsey – photo Deb Martin

Here are some pictures:

Gung Haggis June 08 Kilts Night

Gung Haggis June 08 Kilts Night

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

Vancouver Sun: Dragon boats about to set sail – will dragon boat festival leave False Creek?

When will a boat house be built in East False Creek for dragon boats?

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team paddles into South East False Creek  dock near Science World. – photo Leanne Riding.


It's a big issue for the dragon boat community. 

Rio
Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat festival general manager Ann Phelps stated in
April at the Manager & Captains dragon boat meeting, that it is an
election year, and she needs help lobbying the city for help.

This morning Miro Cernetic wrote an article in the Vancouver Sun
Check out Saturday May 24th Vancouver Sun…. page D5.

Dragon boats about to set sail
Vancouver's development plans for False Creek leave out a very important institution
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=ae962876-267d-4d2e-a634-646d8ee72b85

Here are my thoughts:

The
EAST BAY BOAT HOUSE
for dragon boats etc, has been in discussion since or before 1995.  It was on earlier plans for SEFC.  What happened to it?

UBC and City of Richmond have built a rowing centre near the Delta Airport Inn.  This area is now home to the Richmond Dragon Boat Festival.

There are proposals for False Creek East Bay (East of Cambie Street Bridge) to host a Motorless Marina – this is perfect for recreation and ecological impact.  Ideally East Bay should be MOTOR BOAT FREE to create Canada's first saltwater recreation civic park (okay… there are issues with it being a Canadian Ports jurisdiction… but have them donate the waterway to become a park – for paddling activities, similar to the former row boats in Lost Lagoon.)

Dragon boats are seen as an important symbol of Vancouver's multicultural diversity

  1. Dragon Boat racing first started in 1986 at Expo 86, when Hong Kong donated boats to City of Vancouver
  2. Vancouver dragon boat race featured on 2003 Canada Post stamp of Canadian tourist attractions
  3. Vancouver dragon boats featured in Feb 2008 Global tv news feature “BC World Class”  Gung Haggis dragon boat team is part of World Class BC on Global News show Feb 26
  4. dragon boat featured in Dec 2007 German public television documentary “From Toronto to Vancouver by Train” 
    Gung Haggis dragon boat team…. 200m sprints with a German TV cameraman in seat 1
  5. Canadian
    International Dragon Boat Festival (now called Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon
    Boat Festival) is one of Vancouver's oldest running festivals – 20
    years old – since 1988. 

I see two solutions.

1) A long planned and talked about boat house should finally be built in the East Bay.  It could be part of a park facility or a motorless marina.

2) Waterfront community centres should become dragon boat centres similar to False Creek Community Centre, home to False Creek Racing Canoe Club – the top dragon boat team in Vancouver, and one of the top teams in the world.  Coal Harbour and Roundhouse community centres have docks/marinas nearby, and the proposed Southeast False Creek Community Centre should similarly be used.

Vancouver Sun, May 24th page D5

Dragon boats about to set sail
Vancouver's development plans for False Creek leave out a very important institution
Miro Cernetig, Vancouver Sun
Published: Saturday, May 24, 2008

The
dragon boat people drifted into the editorial board room of The
Vancouver Sun the other day with some worrying news: Vancouver's
floating dragons, if we don't act fast, are going to fly away to a more
hospitable harbour.

Dragon boating, a cultural phenomenon that
took root here 20 some years ago when Vancouver became North America's
first city to offer a permanent harbour for the Chinese-inspired sport,
is currently being overlooked in our current development boom. The
blueprints for the final build-out of the former site of Expo'86 and
False Creek are being etched out as you read: There's an Olympic
Village, a $350-million art gallery, phalanxes of towers and a public
park.

But
there's no clear spot for our fleet of dragon boats or the much-needed
boathouse on False Creek. You've got to wonder when this city's leaders
and planners will realize they're about to lose an institution that
reflects the new Vancouver.

We're now what you might call the A,
A & A city — Atlantic, Asia and the Americas, all fused together
into Canada's West Coast metropolis that's known around the world. Yet
none of the city's cultural institutions come close to fully capturing
the 21st century complexion of Vancouver. With an exception — the
dragon boats, and the festival built around them.

The thousands
of people who take part in it — and the 100,000 who come out to watch
the annual races — are a true cross-section of the city. It's an event
— and sport — that has gone from being mainly Chinese to a
multi-ethnic and global phenomenon. There are at least 60 national
federations around the world and that number grows every year.

Dragon
boating has its genesis in China, about 2,500 years ago, though the
history is complex and cloudy. One theory is that dragon boats began to
honour the great Chinese poet Qu Yuan, who waded into the Miluo River
to drown himself in a ritual suicide to protest a warlord's destruction
of his home province. The villagers tried to rescue him by taking to
the water in their canoes and hitting the water with paddles to scare
away evil spirits. The other is the dragon boat racing began as a
fertility and water ritual, carried out during the summer solstice to
pay homage to the dragon, believed to live in the water.

While
it was an ancient tradition well-known to millions of Chinese, dragon
boating became internationalized only a few decades ago thanks to Hong
Kong. In 1980 it began donating teak dragon boats to cities around the
globe. The sport crossed the Pacific and took root in North America
thanks to Expo '86 where four Hong Kong boats were put on exhibition
and then given to Vancouver.

It
was perfect timing. Vancouverites were just waking up to how Asia and
the Chinese would transform the city. They lined up by the thousands to
touch a brick from the Great Wall at the China pavilion. When the four
dragon boats took to the waters of False Creek, they were a sensation.

By
1989, a small group of locals seized on the idea of setting up dragon
boating as permanent cultural festival for Vancouver. Chief amongst
them were businessmen Milton Wong and Terry Hui, both of whom have
spent much of their life trying to bridge the gap between Metro
Vancouver's Asian and non-Asian communities. Wong himself has long had
his own dragon boat team, called “Paddling the Wong Way.”

It
took off. Vancouver's Dragon Boat Festival has grown from a handful of
boats and hard-core enthusiasts to an event with more than 180 racing
teams. The festival, which starts June 21, is so complex that the
Canadian Army often helps with the logistics of keeping the races
running on time.

Aside
from the festival, which costs about $1 million to put on and generates
about $3 million in annual economic spinoffs, dragon boating has also
become a part of the city's cultural tapestry. Stand on the Burrard
Bridge any day of the year and you will likely see one or two of the
dragon boats on the water. Climb aboard one of the 300-kilogram canoes
as it cuts through English Bay and you will observe Vancouver from a
thrilling new perspective.

Thousand of school children are also
introduced to the sport each year. Members of the public are welcomed
to join a racing team. And its also a sport that is amazingly
inclusive: Since there are 20 paddlers to a boat, as well as someone
doing the steering and another pacing the paddlers by banging a drum,
there's room for people who are blind, deaf or living with other
challenges. Being part of a dragon boat team is being part of a small
community, one that usually includes fellow paddlers from all walks of
life and cultures.

So why are we in danger of losing something that the city has taken 20 years to build?

For
years the dragon boat festival's organizers have been shuffled around
False Creek. Each new development has squeezed them out of their spot
and they've usually been able to find another spot to call home.

Now,
however, with the latest push to develop the eastern and northern
shores of False Creek, there will be no space left. If the dragon boats
don't get a permanent boathouse in this round of development there will
be no other place in the City of Vancouver with the sheltered water and
dock space the event needs. Richmond, now developing its riverfront,
would probably be the dragon boats' final harbour.

In its 20
years of existence, the Vancouver Dragon Boat Festival has never taken
a dime of public money. But it may be time for the City of Vancouver
and the provincial government to kick in to help launch a fundraising
drive. Give the dragon boaters a permanent anchorage in False Creek and
help them raise the $4.5 million needed to design and build a new
boathouse It should be a great piece of architecture, perhaps with a
restaurant, that would become a waterfront landmark.

Vancouverites
put dragon boating on the map in North America. Other cities have come
here to emulate it. It's also a terrific brand for Vancouver,
encapsulating our fusion of Asia, Europe and the Americas. It's
probably even going to be an Olympic sport in the years ahead.

Isn't it time to anchor the floating dragons — permanently — in the nautical artery in the heart of the city?

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.