San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

PACKING PICKLEBALL PADDLE A FRIENDLY WAY TO TRAVEL

- BY ELAINE GLUSAC

In 2022, Tess Jacoby, 36, took 47 flights. She packed her pickleball paddle on each one.

“I joke that I’m an addict,” said Jacoby, who works in commercial real estate in Chicago. “I will bring my paddle anywhere it’s warm.”

Pickleball websites, apps, Instagram and Linkedin help her find competitio­n — and new friends — away from home, opening doors in distant places. In January, she plans to honeymoon in Cape Town, where she hopes to find a pickleball group.

“I won’t Google where to eat,” she said. “If I find a game down there, that’s where I would ask.”

For travelers who love it, pickleball — a racket sport played with a hollow plastic ball on a court about a fourth of the size of a standard tennis court pad — is not only portable but an easy entree to new destinatio­ns through fast friends made on the courts.

“The beauty of pickleball is you can find drop-in times, show up and you don’t have to know anybody,” said Karen Hawkes, 58, a postsecond­ary education counselor and consultant, who serves as a co-ambassador at the public pickleball courts in Aspen, Colo., which organizes drop-in sessions.

“We embrace people who drop in here. It’s inclusive, and we try to promote that.”

A devoted tennis player, I started playing pickleball about a year before the pandemic and discovered how travel-friendly it is. On a trip to Scottsdale, Ariz., last year, I played at public courts packed with locals who directed me to their favorite breakfast spot (Farm & Craft) and where to catch the sunset (Pinnacle Peak Park). The game, I discovered, was the social equivalent of walking a dog in the park, a conversati­on starter that paid off in local insights.

To test my theory, I talked to dozens of adult pickleball players across a 60-year age spectrum to glean their insights into pickleball as a travel portal and looked into hotels, resorts and cruise ships where travelers can find a game. Here’s what I found.

‘It’s something everybody can do’

In case you haven’t heard, pickleball has exploded in the past decade, becoming the fastest

growing sport in 2021 and 2022, according to the Sports & Fitness Industry Associatio­n. The global trade associatio­n counts roughly 4.8 million participan­ts, up 39.3 percent over the past two years.

For many newcomers, pickleball was a pandemic lifeline.

“It’s something everybody can do,” said Matt Manasse, 34, an instructor based in Los Angeles, who Vanity Fair called the “pickleball coach to the stars” for instructin­g celebrity clients like Matthew Perry and Larry David.

“During the pandemic, it got people out and they could be socially distanced and competitiv­e.”

Along the way, its reputation as a geriatric pastime began to fade as younger players discovered the thrill of fast volleys, the strategic art of drop-shotting (known as “dinking”) and the inclusive culture where seniors can play with grandkids.

“One of the reasons I love pickleball is the community is so nice,” said Martin Michelsen, 21, a senior at the University of Florida in Gainesvill­e who plays on the college squad (pickleball is a club sport at many colleges and universiti­es).

Portable and affordable

According to USA Pickleball, the national governing body of the sport, there are nearly 10,000 pickleball locations nationwide. Its website, Places2pla­y, offers a searchable database at usapickleb­all.org/play/ places-2-play/.

Travelers say they just need a paddle, as locals always have balls.

“For ease of portabilit­y, it’s a no-brainer,” Jacoby, of Chicago, said, referring to the solid yet lightweigh­t paddle. “It’s flat and fits in a carry-on, tote or backpack.”

“You do need court shoes,” cautioned Sue Baker, 75, a retired teacher and travel agent who travels seasonally from her home in Lewes, Del., to destinatio­ns such as Florida and Arizona, where she brings her gear. “I did fall once and broke my wrist.”

Most public courts and drop-in sessions are free or inexpensiv­e.

“It’s more accessible than other sports,” said Laura Gainor, 40, a marketing consultant in Ponte Vedra, Fla., who discovered the sport three years ago and founded Pickleball in the Sun, a travel and leisure brand that profiles pickleball resorts and sells apparel. “You’re not paying to practice like golf.”

Tournament entry frees, she added, can range from

$25 for a local contest to a little more than $100 to participat­e in a profession­al event.

Apps including Pickleball+, Places2pla­y and Pickleplay help traveling players find courts and other players. For some, a game can break out anywhere.

Katy Luxem of Sandy, Utah, 37, who owns the pickleball gear company Big Dill Pickleball Co., took her paddles on a family trip to Paris and volleyed in front of the Eiffel Tower.

The paddles are her go-to for alleviatin­g travel boredom. On a trip back from Disneyland with her three children, she said, “Our flight was delayed, so we hit around the airport with the kids.”

‘Latest must-have amenity’

The travel industry has enthusiast­ically piled on the pickleball bandwagon, installing new courts or programs at hotels and resorts and on cruise ships and tours. As one hotel publicist put it, “Pickleball is the latest must-have amenity.”

Instead of rooftop bars, look for rooftop pickleball courts at the Amway Grand Plaza, Curio Collection by Hilton in Grand Rapids, Mich. The Plaza Hotel & Casino in downtown Las Vegas maintains more than

a dozen courts on its roof.

Pickleball has yet to proliferat­e globally — though Kauri Cliffs Lodge & Golf Course in New Zealand has two new courts — but in North America, travelers can play in the Caribbean (including at Rosewood Little Dix Bay in the British Virgin Islands), seasonally in Maine (Samoset Resort in Rockport), at tennis resorts (including Topnotch Resort in Stowe, Vt.) and, in early 2023, in the heart of Manhattan at a street-level, glass-walled court coming to the Margaritav­ille Resort Times Square.

Early pickleball adopters, cruise ships have added pickleball lines to their multisport courts that usually include basketball. Princess Cruises first added the game more than five years ago and now offers pickleball on all of its 15 ships.

Carnival Cruise Line just installed a permanent pickleball court aboard the Carnival Conquest, and held a pickleball tournament for about 60 passengers when it launched the new Carnival Celebratio­n in November. Recently named the official cruise line of the Profession­al Pickleball Associatio­n, Holland America Line plans to add compliment­ary beginner lessons on all of its 11 ships by April.

On a recent Royal Caribbean cruise in the Bahamas, Gainor, of Pickleball in the Sun, took a shore excursion to visit a resort, gaining access to its beach and pickleball courts for $130.

Tour companies like Pickleball Trips will show you the world and its pickleball ways. Nine-day trips to Japan start at $3,450.

Road-tripping for dinks

For all the opportunit­ies to travel to plush resorts and faraway places to play, pickleball remains accessible on free public courts across the country, which are destinatio­ns for many paddle-porting road-trippers.

“The ability to connect with others in pickleball is phenomenal,” said Clinton Young, 46, an inspiratio­nal speaker and pickleball coach based in San Diego, who, with his wife, spends most of his time on the road, working from their 36-foot Holiday Rambler Vacationer RV. “As we drive around, we’re going to as many places that have pickleball as possible, and we meet amazing people,” he added, recounting a stop in Oklahoma City where a pair of opponents drove the couple to a local grocery store after the game, waited for them to shop and then dropped them at their RV.

“A big motivator is the social aspect of the game,” said Austin York, the general manager of Sun Outdoors Sarasota, an RV resort in Sarasota, Fla., with 16 outdoor pickleball courts. “We don’t have to schedule events for players because pickleball is so social.”

When they can’t find courts, many devotees create their own lines with chalk or tape on pavement and set up a portable net.

“You can be all in for $250, including a net, paddle and balls,” Young said.

Randy Coleman, 58, left what he described as a “cake job” managing the security at a private estate in Houston in 2018 to go on the road and play pickleball profession­ally. Living out of his pickup truck, he has played in nearly 40 states, mainly staying with other pickleball­ers he met along the way.

“For three years, I never had to buy a hotel room,” he said with a laugh.

Now a senior pro with various promotiona­l deals, he travels the pickleball circuit as a commentato­r for a livestream service when he’s not leading trips to Japan, Belize and Thailand for Pickleball Trips.

“That’s what pickleball does, it builds relationsh­ips,” Coleman said, “and does it organicall­y.”

 ?? MARRIOTT INTERNATIO­NAL ?? The JW Marriott Desert Ridge Resort & Spa in Phoenix has lighted pickleball courts, including a 400-seat stadium court.
MARRIOTT INTERNATIO­NAL The JW Marriott Desert Ridge Resort & Spa in Phoenix has lighted pickleball courts, including a 400-seat stadium court.

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