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experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Dare to Dream
Athletic
fantasies become reality at these sports-immersion schools.
By Kelle Walsh |
October 2009 |
Challenge Yourself
A New Passion
Taking It All In
With Competence Comes Confidence
Pick Your Trip
It’s
the twinge you get when
you see a kite surfer
effortlessly riding the waves, a rock climber scaling a cliff, a skier tearing
up the slopes. The twinge of longing: I
wish I could do that. . . . You
can! And you should. Scientists who study aging tell us that a key to living a
long, happy life lies in our ability to keep learning and
moving. Increasingly, people are stepping out of their comfort zones and
challenging themselves to learn new athletic skills. The benefits, they’re
discovering, are worth the growing pains: Not only are they becoming proficient
at a new sport, but they’re also developing more confidence and courage while
staying physically and mentally fit.
Need
a nudge to pursue your athletic dreams? A beginner sports-immersion camp may be
just the thing.
Challenge Yourself
At
training sites across the country and around the world, outdoor outfitters are
offering fun — and intense — introductory courses for newbie athletes. Led by
certified instructors and lasting anywhere from a couple of days to two weeks,
these getaways immerse participants in their activity of choice. They learn the
basic skills and techniques, and then get plenty of opportunities to put their
newfound knowledge into practice.
On
his first surfing vacation, for instance, Joe Waters discovered that getting up
on a surfboard isn’t so hard — it’s staying up that’s the challenge. At 63,
Waters likes to stay active, riding his motorcycle and mountain bike, golfing,
and skiing. Surfing, however, was a longtime dream. “It’s something I wanted to
accomplish while I’m still physically strong and have a lot of energy,” he
says.
So
last February, Waters joined seven other adults for a seven-day beginners’ class
with Surf Camp, Inc., in Tortola, British Virgin Islands. Instructors taught
them how to lie on the surfboard, carry it into the water, fall off safely
and avoid rip currents. They also learned how to read the waves and catch the
right one.
They
practiced, and then practiced some more. “By the end of the week, most of the
group were standing on their boards,” Waters says. “None of us were great
surfers, but we were all to the point where we could jump on the board and ride
for some distance.”
That
modest success was enough: Waters was hooked. He’s since gone on Surf Camp trips
to Costa Rica and attended the company’s base camp in North Carolina for private
lessons. The president of a waste-recycling company in Medina, Ohio, Waters
casually mentions that during an upcoming business trip to San Diego, he might
“head up to La Jolla” to catch some waves.
A New Passion
It’s
not unusual for novices like Waters to progress from nervous beginners to
devotees after a sports vacation. “They catch the bug,” says Karen Najarian, who
leads beginning backpacking trips through Yosemite National Park for REI
Adventures. Discovering that in just a few days you can actually excel in a
sport you had only dreamed about doing is exhilarating. And once you get a
taste, there’s a good chance you’ll just want more.
That’s
what happened when Jason Gould, a 37-year-old photographer and former pro bike
racer from New York City, went on his first river-kayaking trip last May. He was
familiar with rivers, having done a fair amount of canoeing. But he was looking
for a little more action. “I wanted to try something with more excitement than a
lazy paddle down the river,” he says.
An
Internet search led him to Zoar Outdoors in Charlemont, Mass., for a three-day
course on the dam-controlled Deerfield River. It was just enough to whet his
appetite. “I saw a lot of room to improve and lots of possibilities,” he
says.
He
returned to Zoar twice more to practice his newfound hobby and felt his
world expand. “It changed a lot of things for me,” he admits, adding that river
kayaking has become his passion, shaping his free time and schedule in
completely new ways.
“If
you’re really curious about a sport, going and learning that sport is the
only way to do it,” he says. “To try something in a day and walk away with any
real experience is hard. It takes time and practice.”
Taking It All In
While
tackling a new sport is fun, it can be a “sensory overload,” says Marty
Molitoris, director and owner of Alpine Endeavors climbing school in New Paltz,
N.Y. With any learning experience, students are required to absorb a lot of new
information, learn to use new equipment and then embody this knowledge to
execute the activity. Progress, not
perfection, is key to keeping the activity fun.
“You
need to learn to move, stand and breathe in new ways. There are technical skills
and motor skills involved. If you don’t do it often, you forget or your
performance level goes down,” he says. “When you do it for a few
consecutive days, you start to feel comfortable. And the more comfortable with
the skills you are, the more you can do bigger objectives and more climbs.”
For
Elizabeth Winter, 26, a naturopathy student in San Francisco, a 10-day
scuba-diving vacation on the tiny island of Utila, off the coast of Honduras,
promised to be an exciting and challenging intro to scuba diving. Through a
package offered by Utila Dive Centre, she received basic and advanced open-water
certifications from the Professional Association of Diving Instructors (PADI),
which allow her to dive anywhere in the world at depths up to 100 feet. The
first certification was a “rigorous four days,” she says, while the
advanced certification took two more days and included night and deep
dives, and even an exploration of a sunken ship.
Once
certified, Winter was diving four times a day, twice in the morning and twice in
the afternoon. “I really didn’t do anything else, because by the end of the day
I was so exhausted,” she says. But she can’t wait to do it again.
“Scuba diving is a super way to travel to
a lot of great places,” she says, “and it’s a great way to meet really
interesting, cool people.”
With Competence Comes Confidence
“Wow,
I can do this!”
is a phrase instructors frequently hear when their students start mastering the
skills. And spreading the learning curve over many days — allowing your mind and
body to integrate the information and then practice what you’ve learned — is
what creates that competence, says Molitoris.
REI’s
Karen Najarian loves it when people who take her backcountry backpacking course
in Yosemite realize that they don’t have to be athletes to hike through some of
the most breathtaking scenery in the country. “Most of them have never done this
before,” she says. “They are afraid of bears, that they won’t be able to keep
up, that they will hold the group back, all this stuff. By the end of the trip,
they just feel awesome.”
That
newfound confidence is exactly what Elaine Parker, a tour leader with Sojourn
Bicycling and Active Vacations in Vermont, strives to instill in her snowshoe
students. By the end of her five-day Vermont Winter Wonderland snowshoe
tour, students can use a map and compass, and identify animal prints in the
snow. They’ve also covered up to 15 miles a day, even in subzero
temperatures.
Judy
Bayer of Rolling Hills Estates, Calif., discovered that snowshoeing through the
tranquil Vermont countryside is thrilling — even at 20 degrees below zero.
Bayer, 70, an active bicyclist and sports enthusiast (she just tried
snowboarding a few years ago), was surprised by how easily the skills came. “At
first we were tentative and cold, but we soon felt like experts,” she says.
“As
a tour guide, it’s a big part of my job to help people feel less apprehensive
and more comfortable,” says Parker. “That’s why I get everyone out on their
snowshoes on the first afternoon, so they can find out they can do it, and that
it’s fun, too!” Kelle
Walsh is a writer in San Francisco.
Pick Your Trip
When selecting a beginner sports vacation, there are a
few things you should keep in mind:
- Student-to-instructor
ratio. Depending
on the sport, one instructor for every two to four students is typical and
usually allows enough individualized attention. If you’re looking for more
personalized instruction, inquire about one-on-one lessons.
- Solo or
group getaways. Sometimes you want to
travel with friends or family; other times you may prefer to go it alone. Many
sports-trip outfitters offer a range of options to accommodate any preference.
- Length. How in-depth do you want to
go? You can get an introduction to a new sport in a day or two, but if you want
to get over the learning curve, consider a longer trip. The more time you spend
practicing your activity right after learning it, the closer you will be to
mastering the skills and techniques.
- Variety. Spending multiple days
focusing on learning a new sport can be physically — and mentally — challenging,
so many sports-vacation outfitters offer additional activities to round out the
experience and provide much-deserved breaks. Decide if you want all-out lessons
or practice, or if you wouldn’t mind a little downtime. Many outfitters also
arrange private excursions if you have a side adventure in mind.
For a list of outfitters that offer beginner
instruction in a
variety of sports, see the Web Extra! at the top right of this page..
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Dare to Dream
Athletic
fantasies become reality at these sports-immersion schools.
By Kelle Walsh | Head Out Department, October 2009 |
Challenge Yourself
A New Passion
Taking It All In
With Competence Comes Confidence
Pick Your Trip
It’s
the twinge you get when
you see a kite surfer
effortlessly riding the waves, a rock climber scaling a cliff, a skier tearing
up the slopes. The twinge of longing: I
wish I could do that. . . . You
can! And you should. Scientists who study aging tell us that a key to living a
long, happy life lies in our ability to keep learning and
moving. Increasingly, people are stepping out of their comfort zones and
challenging themselves to learn new athletic skills. The benefits, they’re
discovering, are worth the growing pains: Not only are they becoming proficient
at a new sport, but they’re also developing more confidence and courage while
staying physically and mentally fit.
Need
a nudge to pursue your athletic dreams? A beginner sports-immersion camp may be
just the thing.
Challenge Yourself
At
training sites across the country and around the world, outdoor outfitters are
offering fun — and intense — introductory courses for newbie athletes. Led by
certified instructors and lasting anywhere from a couple of days to two weeks,
these getaways immerse participants in their activity of choice. They learn the
basic skills and techniques, and then get plenty of opportunities to put their
newfound knowledge into practice.
On
his first surfing vacation, for instance, Joe Waters discovered that getting up
on a surfboard isn’t so hard — it’s staying up that’s the challenge. At 63,
Waters likes to stay active, riding his motorcycle and mountain bike, golfing,
and skiing. Surfing, however, was a longtime dream. “It’s something I wanted to
accomplish while I’m still physically strong and have a lot of energy,” he
says.
So
last February, Waters joined seven other adults for a seven-day beginners’ class
with Surf Camp, Inc., in Tortola, British Virgin Islands. Instructors taught
them how to lie on the surfboard, carry it into the water, fall off safely
and avoid rip currents. They also learned how to read the waves and catch the
right one.
They
practiced, and then practiced some more. “By the end of the week, most of the
group were standing on their boards,” Waters says. “None of us were great
surfers, but we were all to the point where we could jump on the board and ride
for some distance.”
That
modest success was enough: Waters was hooked. He’s since gone on Surf Camp trips
to Costa Rica and attended the company’s base camp in North Carolina for private
lessons. The president of a waste-recycling company in Medina, Ohio, Waters
casually mentions that during an upcoming business trip to San Diego, he might
“head up to La Jolla” to catch some waves.
A New Passion
It’s
not unusual for novices like Waters to progress from nervous beginners to
devotees after a sports vacation. “They catch the bug,” says Karen Najarian, who
leads beginning backpacking trips through Yosemite National Park for REI
Adventures. Discovering that in just a few days you can actually excel in a
sport you had only dreamed about doing is exhilarating. And once you get a
taste, there’s a good chance you’ll just want more.
That’s
what happened when Jason Gould, a 37-year-old photographer and former pro bike
racer from New York City, went on his first river-kayaking trip last May. He was
familiar with rivers, having done a fair amount of canoeing. But he was looking
for a little more action. “I wanted to try something with more excitement than a
lazy paddle down the river,” he says.
An
Internet search led him to Zoar Outdoors in Charlemont, Mass., for a three-day
course on the dam-controlled Deerfield River. It was just enough to whet his
appetite. “I saw a lot of room to improve and lots of possibilities,” he
says.
He
returned to Zoar twice more to practice his newfound hobby and felt his
world expand. “It changed a lot of things for me,” he admits, adding that river
kayaking has become his passion, shaping his free time and schedule in
completely new ways.
“If
you’re really curious about a sport, going and learning that sport is the
only way to do it,” he says. “To try something in a day and walk away with any
real experience is hard. It takes time and practice.”
Taking It All In
While
tackling a new sport is fun, it can be a “sensory overload,” says Marty
Molitoris, director and owner of Alpine Endeavors climbing school in New Paltz,
N.Y. With any learning experience, students are required to absorb a lot of new
information, learn to use new equipment and then embody this knowledge to
execute the activity. Progress, not
perfection, is key to keeping the activity fun.
“You
need to learn to move, stand and breathe in new ways. There are technical skills
and motor skills involved. If you don’t do it often, you forget or your
performance level goes down,” he says. “When you do it for a few
consecutive days, you start to feel comfortable. And the more comfortable with
the skills you are, the more you can do bigger objectives and more climbs.”
For
Elizabeth Winter, 26, a naturopathy student in San Francisco, a 10-day
scuba-diving vacation on the tiny island of Utila, off the coast of Honduras,
promised to be an exciting and challenging intro to scuba diving. Through a
package offered by Utila Dive Centre, she received basic and advanced open-water
certifications from the Professional Association of Diving Instructors (PADI),
which allow her to dive anywhere in the world at depths up to 100 feet. The
first certification was a “rigorous four days,” she says, while the
advanced certification took two more days and included night and deep
dives, and even an exploration of a sunken ship.
Once
certified, Winter was diving four times a day, twice in the morning and twice in
the afternoon. “I really didn’t do anything else, because by the end of the day
I was so exhausted,” she says. But she can’t wait to do it again.
“Scuba diving is a super way to travel to
a lot of great places,” she says, “and it’s a great way to meet really
interesting, cool people.”
With Competence Comes Confidence
“Wow,
I can do this!”
is a phrase instructors frequently hear when their students start mastering the
skills. And spreading the learning curve over many days — allowing your mind and
body to integrate the information and then practice what you’ve learned — is
what creates that competence, says Molitoris.
REI’s
Karen Najarian loves it when people who take her backcountry backpacking course
in Yosemite realize that they don’t have to be athletes to hike through some of
the most breathtaking scenery in the country. “Most of them have never done this
before,” she says. “They are afraid of bears, that they won’t be able to keep
up, that they will hold the group back, all this stuff. By the end of the trip,
they just feel awesome.”
That
newfound confidence is exactly what Elaine Parker, a tour leader with Sojourn
Bicycling and Active Vacations in Vermont, strives to instill in her snowshoe
students. By the end of her five-day Vermont Winter Wonderland snowshoe
tour, students can use a map and compass, and identify animal prints in the
snow. They’ve also covered up to 15 miles a day, even in subzero
temperatures.
Judy
Bayer of Rolling Hills Estates, Calif., discovered that snowshoeing through the
tranquil Vermont countryside is thrilling — even at 20 degrees below zero.
Bayer, 70, an active bicyclist and sports enthusiast (she just tried
snowboarding a few years ago), was surprised by how easily the skills came. “At
first we were tentative and cold, but we soon felt like experts,” she says.
“As
a tour guide, it’s a big part of my job to help people feel less apprehensive
and more comfortable,” says Parker. “That’s why I get everyone out on their
snowshoes on the first afternoon, so they can find out they can do it, and that
it’s fun, too!” Kelle
Walsh is a writer in San Francisco.
Pick Your Trip
When selecting a beginner sports vacation, there are a
few things you should keep in mind:
- Student-to-instructor
ratio. Depending
on the sport, one instructor for every two to four students is typical and
usually allows enough individualized attention. If you’re looking for more
personalized instruction, inquire about one-on-one lessons.
- Solo or
group getaways. Sometimes you want to
travel with friends or family; other times you may prefer to go it alone. Many
sports-trip outfitters offer a range of options to accommodate any preference.
- Length. How in-depth do you want to
go? You can get an introduction to a new sport in a day or two, but if you want
to get over the learning curve, consider a longer trip. The more time you spend
practicing your activity right after learning it, the closer you will be to
mastering the skills and techniques.
- Variety. Spending multiple days
focusing on learning a new sport can be physically — and mentally — challenging,
so many sports-vacation outfitters offer additional activities to round out the
experience and provide much-deserved breaks. Decide if you want all-out lessons
or practice, or if you wouldn’t mind a little downtime. Many outfitters also
arrange private excursions if you have a side adventure in mind.
For a list of outfitters that offer beginner
instruction in a
variety of sports, see the Web Extra! at the top right of this page..
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