DRAGON BOATING
History of Dragon Boating
In Chinese folklore, the dragon is gentle and kind unlike the evil
dragon of European tradition. In fact, the Chinese dragon is reputed to
chase away evil. It's known as a fiercely watchful female guardian,"
Meredith Cosburn said. "When I heard that, I thought, oh, that's
wonderful and very fitting." |
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Dragon boating got its beginning 2,000 years ago in China. A
poet-philosopher named Qu Yuan drowned himself in the Mei Lo River to
protest the corrupt regime of a Chou emperor. The local fishermen raced
out in their boats to save him, but failed. To stop his body from being
devoured by fish they beat the water with their paddles and threw rice
dumplings wrapped in silk into the river as a sacrifice to his spirit.
Ever since, annual dragon boat races are held in China to re-enact this
story.
During the 1970s, dragonboating became a watersport in addition to an
annual cultural celebration. In the1990s especially dragonboating as a
sport for people of all ages has grown tremendously. There are now teams
all over the world--North America, Europe, Australia, and New
Zealand.
Dragon Boating and Women with Breast Cancer
The dragon boating experience has been described as a "floating support
group" for women with breast cancer. It all began with a study involving
one boat of 25 women. In 1996, Dr. Don McKenzie, a sports medicine
physician at the University of British Columbia, launched Abreast in a
Boat.
Medical experts believed that repetitive upper-body exercise in women
treated for breast cancer encourages lymphedema. Lymphedema is a
permanent, irreversible swelling of the arm and chest area that may
develop after lymph node surgery and radiation treatment. Dr. McKenzie
disagreed. He believed that women could get involved in a sport like
dragon boating if they followed a special upper-body exercise and training
program. They could enjoy active lives and avoid the onset or worsening of
lymphedema.
Participants in his study were monitored closely by a sports medicine
physician, a physiotherapist and a nurse. Dr. McKenzie's theory was right.
No new cases of lymphedema occurred and no existing cases got worse.
Since 1996 Dragon Boat racing by breast cancer survivors
has grown across Canada, the United States, Australia and New Zealand.
There are eight teams in Ontario alone, five in Vancouver, two in Nova
Scotia, Alberta, and Manitoba, and a team in Saskatchewan and Montreal,
Quebec.
Training
The first training took place poolside using smaller
practice paddles at the Family YMCA in Peterborough. Len Minty coached
the women to perfect their stroke and timing. Then, when the milder
weather arrived, the team got to do the "real thing".
Now it was time to apply all their learning in the brand
new dragon boat built by Glenn Fallis of Voyageur Canoes and paid for by
Liberty Mutual. As the races got closer, the practices got harder and
more frequent. Len taught the race "start" and "finish" and the deadly
"six-pack" a surprise technique that speeds up the boat and hopefully
throws off the competition!
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