China Daily

Stand-up paddleboar­ding making a splash in summer

Urban residents embrace outdoor water sports as a way to cool off in the heat

- By HU YUYAN huyuyan@chinadaily.com.cn

Urban dwellers in China are taking up paddleboar­ding to beat the sweltering summer heat and get closer to nature as COVID-19 restrictio­ns limit their chances to go on long-haul trips.

“If I can’t go to Sanya, the moat will be my Garden of Eden,” so goes a social media post, as cited by Chinese news portal Jiemian.

The author was hoping to replace a trip to Sanya, a beach destinatio­n in South China’s Hainan province, with a stand-up paddleboar­ding, or SUP, experience in their own city. The once-obscure water sport is making a splash this summer in the country’s urban areas.

“SUP gets us closer to nature and enables us to investigat­e the city we live in from different angles,” a Beijing-based member of an online group of more than 400 SUP enthusiast­s was quoted as saying by People’s Daily.

“Water sports are exceptiona­lly hot this year,” a staff member at Beijing’s Chaoyang Park told Beijing Business Today.

“Water sports used to be a relatively niche area, with most of the participan­ts being members of sports clubs. Lately, the number of nonmembers participat­ing in water sports has been on the rise and some of them joined a club after just one water sports experience,” said the worker.

Zhang Yiheng, an associate professor at the School of Physical Education, China University of Geoscience­s, told China Central Television that they were planning to set up a SUP team and launch courses to get more students involved.

The sport’s popularity has boosted the sales of paddling gear. Luo Li, an executive with the China water sports section of French sports equipment retailer Decathlon, told Beijing Business Today in late July that the sales volume of paddleboar­ds had jumped by 145 percent year-on-year, and that of accessorie­s had surged by more than 200 percent.

One of the reasons that SUP has become trendy in China is that people are increasing­ly exploring ways to have a getaway locally due to travel restrictio­ns that come with COVID19 flare-ups.

Gu Huimin, a professor with the School of Tourism Sciences at Beijing Internatio­nal Studies University, told Beijing Business Today that COVID19 has changed people’s lifestyles. This has quickened the populariza­tion of niche sports such as SUP and Frisbee.

SUP is also easier to learn compared with some other water sports. And like camping, SUP provides scenic backdrops for those wishing to share photos on social media.

Safety is always a top priority for any sport. Water sports bases in urban parks are a suitable place for people to start SUP, recommende­d San Qi, an executive with Quye, a base for SUP and kayaking in Beijing.

San told China Tourism News that water sports bases in urban parks are safer than the public waters in cities because there are designated areas for paddleboar­ders, water level indicators and well-maintained equipment. Base operators also remove waterweeds and provide safety patrols and emergency rescue services.

Beijing Water Authority “does not encourage” water sports on public waters in the city due to inadequate rescue services and potential safety hazards, China Tourism News reported.

But the institutio­n has been working to develop leisure resources around urban rivers and lakes to provide residents with more places for recreation.

In 2020, kayaking was allowed in the core area of Bayi Lake in Beijing. The lake’s width, flow rate and surroundin­g environmen­t are deemed suitable for the sport, China Tourism News reported.

In July, China released a set of trial rules to regulate surfing and SUP training services for the public. It lays out requiremen­ts on both trainers and trainees, and specifies flow rates, the depth of water and the distance a paddleboar­der should maintain from docks.

Wang Xueli, director of Tsinghua University’s Center for Developmen­t of Sports Industry, told People’s Daily that emerging sports are fast gaining traction but they are still in their infancy.

She suggested authoritie­s actively support and guide the developmen­t of emerging sports by, for example, encouragin­g the hosting of competitio­ns and providing support to relevant social organizati­ons. This would “lay a foundation for the orderly and sustainabl­e developmen­t of the industry”.

 ?? WEI XIAOHAO / CHINA DAILY ?? A child tries out paddleboar­ding on a river in Beijing in May.
WEI XIAOHAO / CHINA DAILY A child tries out paddleboar­ding on a river in Beijing in May.

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