News Articles
BreastStrokes Team Down Under for Dragon Boat Races
For breast cancer survivors from Guelph, competition is about celebrating life
BY DEIRDRE HEALEY
What do you get when you take 2,000 breast cancer survivors, 90 teams and a bunch of 45-foot-long boats?
It's the “Abreast in Australia” world dragon boat invitational for breast cancer survivors, and 14 crew members from the U of G-sponsored BreastStrokes team will be competing.
The team members flew to the land down under last week along with coach Pat Richards, co-ordinator of lifestyle and fitness programs in the Department of Athletics, to prepare for the two-day competition that begins Sept. 28.
“I'm sure we'll do well,” says Richards, who began coaching the team at the start of its second season nine years ago. “Our paddlers make up a great team. They're a little older than other teams, but they have lots of heart and courage and they just keep getting better and better.”
Team members range in age from 30 to 83, and a majority are part of the University community.
“We have young mothers, grandmothers and great-grandmothers,” says Beverlie Nelson, who joined BreastStrokes in 2002, just six weeks after she finished her treatment for breast cancer.
The team was launched about a decade ago by two Guelph graduates, Margaret Brewer and Valerie Powell. Brewer and Powell had paddled with a breast cancer survivors' team in Hamilton and brought the idea to Guelph.
Today BreastStrokes has 25 members. The paddlers who will be taking part in the world invitational being held in Caloundra, just north of Brisbane, include Pat Matz, assistant to the director of Environmental Health and Safety; Mary Visser Kerr, office secretary at the Child-Care and Learning Centre; Myrna Dyson, a 77-year-old U of G student; Guelph graduate Connie Jasinska; and Nelson.
BreastStrokes wasn't able to send a full team of 22 to the championships, says Richards, so it will be joined in the boat by members of the Tasmanian team, Nipples on Ripples.
“The names of some of the Australian teams are a bit over the top,” says Nelson. “We're still trying to come up with a name that will combine both of our team names.”
Dragon boat races are a great way to build camaraderie, find support and raise awareness of breast cancer, she says. The exercise of paddling also helps breast cancer survivors combat the swelling and constricted movement often caused by the loss of lymph nodes following treatment.
Being a member of BreastStrokes takes some commitment, says Richards. During the winter, the team does weight training with her at the Athletics Centre and participates in weekly aquafit and paddling classes in the gold pool. As soon as the ice melts on Guelph Lake, they're out on the water, practising twice a week.
She says she's seen steady improvement in the team over the years. They can cover the standard 500-metre course in 3½ to four minutes and recently won their division at a competition in Stratford.
But the trip to the world championships is not so much about the competition as it is about “celebrating life,” says Nelson.
“We're all winners because we're all survivors of this disease. It's good for people to know that there is life after breast cancer and that it's not a death sentence.”
For more information about BreastStrokes, visit the website www.breaststrokes.org.