Anonymous wrote:The time commitment is major: practice four days a week and regattas all day Saturday during the season, and because you have to get to the boathouse there is more transit time than most high school sports, depending on where you live. Lots of cleaning and hauling boats. It helps to be very tall. You have to be the kind of person who enjoys/thrives at doing repetitive actions while facing someone else’s back. My dh and one kid have the right build and mind for it and love it; my other kid and I find erging boring and painful—we are runners and it’s a different mentality, I think. Can’t really articulate beyond that.
Be aware that for girls there are genuine recruiting opportunities for college. Lots of girls from our school go into college rowing. For boys, it’s d3 only but I know only one boy who rows in college and it might be club rowing,
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is a junior and rows for a FCPS high school team. She played several other sports before starting rowing her freshman year. She loves it. Heart and soul. It is an incredible time commitment but she has really found her people among the team and has had a lot of success.
Some colleges have expressed interest, but I’m not yet sure what that will eventually mean for if she will row in college and at what level.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a great sport for an average or non-athletic kid to pick up with an incredible work ethic. No one starts much before high school so it’s a very level playing field.
Incredibly time consuming and a lot of expectations from parents.
For serious rowing you need the tall and lean body type but doesn’t matter as much in high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people know if it’s acceptable to row either spring or fall but not both?
If only spring, then could be ok. Fall is a short season and it wouldn’t be worth doing only fall.
Anonymous wrote:Do people know if it’s acceptable to row either spring or fall but not both?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people know if it’s acceptable to row either spring or fall but not both?
We had a couple of kids who only did one -- but it was usually because they were playing a different sport at the time.
It would be at the coach's discretion, and probably depends on how competitive your program is.
Anonymous wrote:Do people know if it’s acceptable to row either spring or fall but not both?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wonderful sport!
My kid started in 9th grade, which is typical. He'd played B team-level travel soccer, but wasn't that great. Always a solid runner. He did XC freshman and sophomore year, but crew is the one that really "stuck." By junior year, he was getting nibbles from colleges, and he thought about pursuing it, but ultimately decided to stop after HS graduation.
It is an enormous time commitment. On a typical "practice" Saturday, we'd drop him off at the river at maybe 7 a.m. I thought it would be even worse, but usually college teams were out early and high school teams would get out around then. He'd be done around 11. On a regatta day, if we dropped him off at 7, he might be there until 5. Practices during the season were after school, and he'd get home at 7 or later. Practices during winter (brutal) were usually done at 5.
It was worth every minute. He really loved it and made great friends.
That’s wonderful. Will he ever row for fun (either at school or when he gets home) or is it not really that kind of long term sport?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wonderful sport!
My kid started in 9th grade, which is typical. He'd played B team-level travel soccer, but wasn't that great. Always a solid runner. He did XC freshman and sophomore year, but crew is the one that really "stuck." By junior year, he was getting nibbles from colleges, and he thought about pursuing it, but ultimately decided to stop after HS graduation.
It is an enormous time commitment. On a typical "practice" Saturday, we'd drop him off at the river at maybe 7 a.m. I thought it would be even worse, but usually college teams were out early and high school teams would get out around then. He'd be done around 11. On a regatta day, if we dropped him off at 7, he might be there until 5. Practices during the season were after school, and he'd get home at 7 or later. Practices during winter (brutal) were usually done at 5.
It was worth every minute. He really loved it and made great friends.
That’s wonderful. Will he ever row for fun (either at school or when he gets home) or is it not really that kind of long term sport?
Wut? Of course irs not a lifetime sport
Wut? Of course it’s a lifetime sport. You just have to live near a club. In our town in NE you can daily rent singles and we have adult rowing - both rec and competitive. I’m 52 and started in mid 40s.
Op - our town has crew and I’ve known several kids in the team and every single one stayed with it and loved it. I think it really helps that kids don’t start into
Middle/high school. And ours is a no cut sport. As PP noted - it’s a great recruiting sport for girls who want to row in college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wonderful sport!
My kid started in 9th grade, which is typical. He'd played B team-level travel soccer, but wasn't that great. Always a solid runner. He did XC freshman and sophomore year, but crew is the one that really "stuck." By junior year, he was getting nibbles from colleges, and he thought about pursuing it, but ultimately decided to stop after HS graduation.
It is an enormous time commitment. On a typical "practice" Saturday, we'd drop him off at the river at maybe 7 a.m. I thought it would be even worse, but usually college teams were out early and high school teams would get out around then. He'd be done around 11. On a regatta day, if we dropped him off at 7, he might be there until 5. Practices during the season were after school, and he'd get home at 7 or later. Practices during winter (brutal) were usually done at 5.
It was worth every minute. He really loved it and made great friends.
That’s wonderful. Will he ever row for fun (either at school or when he gets home) or is it not really that kind of long term sport?
Wut? Of course irs not a lifetime sport