Anonymous wrote: I think you will regret not having access to a private swim club. Some of my best memories from when my oldest was little are playing our dolphin games in the pool. When she was four, we moved to an area with only a public pool. My husband said the public pool was “fine” and I had no experience to disprove him. I learned a few things. First, the public pool got so overcrowded that they literally closed the gates and would not allow anybody else in. Meer mortals could rarely swim. Secondly, there was no continuity in who you’d see there, meaning that people played dangeriously rough, or just acted like assholes. Think “Johnny, Billy is little please don’t splash him in the face” and Johnny’s mother saying to you”Why don’t you find another pool, we came here to have fun…, you don’t tell my child what to do”. The moms who couldn’t care less what their kids were doing suddenly swoop down on you when you dare to convey some good behavior lessons to their little darlings. This is on a day when you happen to have learned the names of the particular asshole. The normal “If you don’t behave, we can’t come back” doesn’t work because nobody cared about coming back. They had no friends or social customs or traditions that interested them. I also felt that the lifeguards were not as well trained or as observant as they should be . With private pools, you see the same folks again and again. People want to get to know you if you are at all personable. I was surprised how much I missed having access to a swim club. It’s a great way to spend time on a summer evening and on a random Saturday when you can’t think of something else to do. The cost may be steep, but it sure beats spending money to fix a marriage that got into trouble in large part because we had very little family activity or opportunity to socialize with other families. Swim clubs are wonderful for this purpose. I’d urge you to give it way more then a year given that getting back into that swim club could literally take years.
This is a very old post BUT I just saw it. I grew up in Arlington and went to Dominion Hills every summer. It had a real community feel! I have some incredible memories from my childhood playing at the pool! I was on the swim team for a bit followed by the dive team and in my adolescent years, I spent MANY a summer day at the pool with friends. It encouraged independence and kept us active and social! My parents enjoyed it too as my Mom would be sitting in the shade, watching us and reading a book or lounging in the water keeping an eye on us when I was in elementary school.
I have since moved out of the area down to Harrisonburg but now that I have a child of my own- I wanted to join a pool! My husband was resistant as he never learned to swim and thought it was a waste of money insisting we could drive to the public pool 20 minutes away that is ALWAYS crowded! The public pool is really just okay. There is no community feel, you have to be very careful with your belongings, and I just don't feel like it is relaxing.
I joined a private pool 5 minutes from my home this summer and I already love it! There's a wonderful and quiet baby pool, picnic tables, a nice playground, tennis courts, some food available to purchase and they hold fun events through out the summer. There's a 'dive-in' movie coming up next Friday night. People seem to know one another and bring their dinners or have pizza delivered. I love that I can pop on over directly from work and it doesn't add any time to my already long commute!
Apparently it is less of the norm around here as I've gotten a lot of grief from other local Mom's. These are Mom's who own very nice homes in the area that are worth a solid $100,000+ more than mine. They insist that they don't want to pay that 'ridiculous high amount' for a pool pass....oh well! Their loss. I'm hoping to get to know some of the Mom's at the pool--hopefully they will be friendly!!