The Borneo Post

Women find strength, camaraderi­e in rowing

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AS THEY launched their rowing shell onto Boston’s Charles River one sunny October morning, four Alexandria, Virginia, women prepared to live a rower’s dream: Competing in the threemile Head of the Charles Regatta that is to rowers what the Boston Marathon is to runners.

They’d trained together for months, even hired a coach to push them harder, and here they were, fit and ready. Average age in the boat: 63. That was two years ago. Harriett Pallas, 67, Brenda Waltz, 67, Pamela Zitron, 69, and Eleanor Richards, 61, are still rowing and still competing along with a growing contingent of older women who discover that rowing can be a good way to get and stay fit. Many later find themselves racing on rivers from the Potomac to the Thames and beyond.

The four came to rowing by different paths. Waltz and Zitron found the sport through younger family members who rowed, and Richards claims that learning to row “was my midlife crisis.” Pallas, already a cyclist, skier and tap dancer, tried it and was hooked.

“I don’t know what I’d be without rowing!” she said.

Most aerobic sports bathe the brain with feel- good endorphins after a workout, and rowing is no exception. Studies show that rowing offers cardiovasc­ular and respirator­y advantages for those who train even semi- seriously. And sports physiologi­st Fritz Hagerman, who taught at Ohio University and died in 2013, found that the lungs of rowers who train seriously use oxygen far more efficientl­y than those of most other athletes. After all, rowing uses all the body’s oxygen-hungry major muscle groups in the legs, torso and arms.

Weight control can be an added benefit. In the past year, Waltz has lost 60 pounds. “I realised if I was going to row the way I wanted to, I’d have to lose the weight,” she said.

Some women even swear that it staves off the post-menopausal thinning of bones that can lead to fractures.

Most older women who row admit that after they decided to give the sport a try, they got pulled in by the rhythm, the water and the way it looks easy but can be maddeningl­y challengin­g.

Just as important as the health benefits for many are psychic boosts such as companions­hip. A rowing shell full of friends can offset even an empty nest.

Best of all, for women of a certain age, rowing can deliver a huge sense of accomplish­ment.

Jayne Lytel, 61, a member of D.C.’s Potomac Boat Club, understand­s. “I start my day rowing three mornings a week, and I like the way it makes me feel,” she said. “I feel proud that I can do this!”

“It’s such a challengin­g sport,” said Joanna Rubini, 42, a coach in Alexandria. “It’s very empowering when you can do it.”

In the past five years, rowing has grown in popularity for every age group. USRowing, the sport’s governing body, says that its membership of 23,000 grew by 22 per cent between 2015 and 2016. About 14 per cent of its members are 50 or older. At the 2016 Head of the Charles Regatta, almost a quarter of the competitor­s were older than 50. USRowing doesn’t break down those figures by gender.

“The growth in the number of our older members underlines the fact that you can be 13 or 93; you’re always the right age to row,” said Susan Smith, membership director at USRowing. “Rowing is truly a life-long sport, no matter if you’re a racer or a recreation­al rower.”

But first, there’s the learning process. And the fact that the stroke - like a new dance step - must be learned is another of rowing’s advantages.

“Running or walking, people can do that fine,” said Stella Volpe, 53, a sports physiologi­st and nutritioni­st who heads Drexel University’s nutrition sciences department. With “something like rowing ... there’s the mental effort in learning something new. You need to think a lot in the boat.”

There’s also a good reason why rowing maintains bone density, according to Volpe, a rower herself. When the rower pushes against the boat’s footplate as she pulls her oar through the water, she’s “putting a lot of mechanical loading on the bones and the muscles,” she said. “And that’s good for the bone.”

Dana Perrone, 70, a member of the Potomac Boat Club, reports that since she began rowing 16 years ago, scans show she has maintained her bone density without the medication she once took.

“My doctor says, ‘Don’t quit!’ “she said.

To learn the basics, newbies often try a “learn to row” event. USRowing sponsors a National Learn to Row Day, this year on June 3, when some rowing clubs in the D.C. area open their boat bays to the public for demonstrat­ions of the stroke and even short paddles in one of those sleek narrow boats called shells.

But rowing demands more than an hour or two of instructio­n. And for those who want more, the Washington Rowing School in Bladensbur­g, Maryland, several local clubs and Thompson’s Boat Center, near the Kennedy Center, offer learn-to-row courses. RowVigor, a new “rowing gym” in Arlington, Virginia, provides rowing machine instructio­n for those who want to learn the basics on dry land.

Writer and photograph­er Mary Berry, 79, of Alexandria first picked up an oar when she was 52.

Today, she drives to Philadelph­ia almost every weekend to row with a team out of Vesper Boat Club. A look at her family tree with its longlived females convinced her she needed serious exercise if she was going to face the coming decades with a strong body.

“Getting old is rough,” she said. “And you need to hang on to your mobility. ... The harder you exercise the more you gain in mobility.” But not if it meant destroying her knees, Berry concluded. Low-impact rowing was the answer.

For many women born before the mid-1950s, rowing may be their first experience of team competitio­n.

“All of us were pre-Title IX,” Richards said, referring to the 1972 federal law demanding equal sports opportunit­ies for men and women on most college campuses. “I never had the chance to be on a team, to compete.”

Berry found that racing satisfied her competitiv­e streak while making her a better rower. As she began to work harder, to actually train with a coach, she began to experience the exhilarati­on of rowing in total synch with crewmates whose oars hit the water together and finish the stroke at exactly the same moment.

“I didn’t think I was particular­ly competitiv­e, but racing was a way of getting better at rowing,” Perrone said. “You have to work harder than just paddling.”

Gabriele Cipollone, 60, a former Olympian, coaches Berry along with 11 other women who range in age from 60 to 80.

In 2015 and 2016, her boats won gold, silver and bronze medals at the Masters National Regatta. Berry and three other rowers won a gold in Belgium at an internatio­nal competitio­n. — WP-Bloomberg

Most aerobic sports bathe the brain with feel-good endorphins after a workout, and rowing is no exception. Studies show that rowing offers cardiovasc­ular and respirator­y advantages for those who train even semiseriou­sly.

 ??  ?? Lytel and Selden prepare to row after launching their craft from the Potomac Boat Club.
Lytel and Selden prepare to row after launching their craft from the Potomac Boat Club.
 ??  ?? More women are turning to rowing as a form of exercise. It’s good for the bones and the brain.
More women are turning to rowing as a form of exercise. It’s good for the bones and the brain.
 ??  ?? Lytel, 61, is a member of D.C.’s Potomac Boat Club. She has been rowing since 2012. —WP-Bloomberg photos
Lytel, 61, is a member of D.C.’s Potomac Boat Club. She has been rowing since 2012. —WP-Bloomberg photos
 ??  ?? Research shows that rowing burns calories at the same or even higher rates than running.
Research shows that rowing burns calories at the same or even higher rates than running.
 ??  ?? Lytel uses a rowing before getting onto the water on Mar 26.
Lytel uses a rowing before getting onto the water on Mar 26.

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