Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swim can easily be with the private groups. We are at a cheaper group but considering a more expensive one. Plus, $80 a week private swim lesson and 1-2 weeks of swim camp)
I was never a swimmer, so I don't get what these lessons could involve. Once you've learned the stroke, you move your arms and legs faster than everyone else, and what else is there to know?
My daughter swims with one of the more expensive smaller clubs and it’s $4800/yr. I don’t know a single swimmer who does private lessons. I am curious about this too. What do the private lessons do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swim can easily be with the private groups. We are at a cheaper group but considering a more expensive one. Plus, $80 a week private swim lesson and 1-2 weeks of swim camp)
I was never a swimmer, so I don't get what these lessons could involve. Once you've learned the stroke, you move your arms and legs faster than everyone else, and what else is there to know?
Anonymous wrote:
(1) what is the sport?
(2) how much do you spend annually (or have you spent over the years)?
(3) what are most of the costs from (private lessons, travel, etc)?
(4) in hindsight, do you wish you'd steered your child to a cheaper sport, or less expensive activities?
Anonymous wrote:Swim can easily be with the private groups. We are at a cheaper group but considering a more expensive one. Plus, $80 a week private swim lesson and 1-2 weeks of swim camp)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are between $25-30K yearly for figure skating, so it sounds like a bargain to me! The majority goes to coaching as it’s all individually coached. She does around four half hour lessons a week and coaches are $100/hr. Ice time and travel make up the majority of the rest.
How do you afford it?
This question is getting really old.
Some people make more than you, PP!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are between $25-30K yearly for figure skating, so it sounds like a bargain to me! The majority goes to coaching as it’s all individually coached. She does around four half hour lessons a week and coaches are $100/hr. Ice time and travel make up the majority of the rest.
How do you afford it?
Anonymous wrote:We are between $25-30K yearly for figure skating, so it sounds like a bargain to me! The majority goes to coaching as it’s all individually coached. She does around four half hour lessons a week and coaches are $100/hr. Ice time and travel make up the majority of the rest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well our daughters sport turned into us buying a horse. So we are at about 27k a year with boarding, fees, vet bills, and then the competitions itself. Still worth it as she is very grateful and very hard working. She's been at the stalls everyday at 545 am since we bought the horse 17 months ago. Literally every.single.day.
Heh, a friend of mine who bought his daughter a horse said that a major advantage of it was "she's too busy to bother with boys".
I think there's literal scientific evidence to support this. Not that being too busy means you can't be into boys (althogh I think that's also true) but that girls whoa re into horses are less likely to have early sex etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well our daughters sport turned into us buying a horse. So we are at about 27k a year with boarding, fees, vet bills, and then the competitions itself. Still worth it as she is very grateful and very hard working. She's been at the stalls everyday at 545 am since we bought the horse 17 months ago. Literally every.single.day.
Heh, a friend of mine who bought his daughter a horse said that a major advantage of it was "she's too busy to bother with boys".