Anonymous wrote:Ours offers only morning practices when school is out. Interesting that some offer morning and afternoon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was interested in signing up my DC (age 10) for a program over the summer to supplement their summer swim team practices. It doesn't need to be anything too intense or heavy on the instructional aspect of it, even 60-90 minutes of swimming a couple of times a week would be fine. Is there anything like this in Montgomery County?
Curious -- why add more swimming when I assume he is swimming 5 days a week with his summer team?
To clear a few things up, my pool does not allow kids to attend both the morning and afternoon sessions. Also, my DC will be at camp some of those weeks and can only attend the afternoon practices those weeks. There is no Friday afternoon practice, so we're talking 3 practices a week since the B meets are Wednesdays. Not only that, but the afternoon practices are very crowded and from past experience there hasn't been a whole lot of continuous swimming in them. So I would just like to be able to add a couple of practices to the 3 very basic practices.
To the person who suggested Fins, thank you, I will look into that.
We do camps that start late morning or in the afternoon only so we can do morning practices.
I mean that’s great for you, but that doesn’t work for most working parents.
OP, my kid also did FINS (although not in the summer) and enjoyed it. It was their springboard to joining club swim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our pool offers both morning and afternoon practices. Swimmers who want to do more attend both practices. The other swimmers who do more than summer swim in June/July are the ones signed up for year-round who attend practices for both teams.
^^ This is the correct answer - she can just attend both morning and afternoon practice a couple of days a week. You can also ask your coach or around the team if anyone is giving private lessons. Some of our swimmers who swim year around would also give 1 on 1 lessons to the younger kids. A couple of years ago there was a girl who is now swimming D1 but was a senior at the time who worked with my 7yo daughter a number of times over the summer which really worked out well and helped speed up her learning curve.
We are in Virginia - our team offers morning and afternoon practices, but you are only allowed to attend one or the other due to lane space. Also, for a 10 year old two practices a day is the way to burn out. You would be better off doing private coaching once or twice a week at that age - perfect technique instead of garbage yards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was interested in signing up my DC (age 10) for a program over the summer to supplement their summer swim team practices. It doesn't need to be anything too intense or heavy on the instructional aspect of it, even 60-90 minutes of swimming a couple of times a week would be fine. Is there anything like this in Montgomery County?
Curious -- why add more swimming when I assume he is swimming 5 days a week with his summer team?
To clear a few things up, my pool does not allow kids to attend both the morning and afternoon sessions. Also, my DC will be at camp some of those weeks and can only attend the afternoon practices those weeks. There is no Friday afternoon practice, so we're talking 3 practices a week since the B meets are Wednesdays. Not only that, but the afternoon practices are very crowded and from past experience there hasn't been a whole lot of continuous swimming in them. So I would just like to be able to add a couple of practices to the 3 very basic practices.
To the person who suggested Fins, thank you, I will look into that.
We do camps that start late morning or in the afternoon only so we can do morning practices.