Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Following. My DS wants to focus on basketball but he is a great soccer player too. But a kid cannot do 2 travel/select sports in the same season without having to skip games or practices, and yes travel coaches expect your loyalty to that sport, mandatory practices. And many sports are becoming almost year round (certainly basketball).
Can you recommend a year round basketball program in NOVA please? preferably close to 22043. Thank you.

Anonymous wrote:Following. My DS wants to focus on basketball but he is a great soccer player too. But a kid cannot do 2 travel/select sports in the same season without having to skip games or practices, and yes travel coaches expect your loyalty to that sport, mandatory practices. And many sports are becoming almost year round (certainly basketball).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dance dance dance and dance. Did I mention how much I love dance for scheduling ease? I can count on classes being roughly the same day and time for years. No weather issues except for the rare ice storm. No rescheduled games. No sitting in a gnat infested field. I can go pick up groceries or get something done. I don't have to sit there just in case of a storm or something. Dance is my favorite. Swim is almost as good for the same reasons. Swim loses points for summer swim meet weather issues.
I can schedule with ease when the activity is consistent. Soccer and baseball are the worst for this stuff.
Music lessons are good schedule wise but not exercise based.
Ugh. Did one year of dance at ages 4/6 with my girls and that was more than an enough. Dance “competitions” are only one step removed from there children’s pageant circuit.
Anonymous wrote:Dance dance dance and dance. Did I mention how much I love dance for scheduling ease? I can count on classes being roughly the same day and time for years. No weather issues except for the rare ice storm. No rescheduled games. No sitting in a gnat infested field. I can go pick up groceries or get something done. I don't have to sit there just in case of a storm or something. Dance is my favorite. Swim is almost as good for the same reasons. Swim loses points for summer swim meet weather issues.
I can schedule with ease when the activity is consistent. Soccer and baseball are the worst for this stuff.
Music lessons are good schedule wise but not exercise based.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We already have had conflicts with soccer and baseball for our 4.5yr old! We told the kids they can each have 1 sport each season. The older kid can have a sport + cub scouts.
Swim lessons are between sports seasons and I schedule private lessons so they can go the same day.
Even with those limitations, I rely on my parents to cover 1 day a week.
Seriously...choose sports with consistent schedules. It is life changing.
I get it, but when the kids love one of the sports with an inconsistent schedule, are we supposed to tell them it’s dance or nothing?
Dance, swim, gymnastics, figure skating, karate, music lessons, really any non- field, or court sport. Kids only know what you tell/show them, so show them activities that make family life easier. You drop the skin cancer risk significantly too.
LOL, they only know what you show/tell them in early elementary. That stage doesn’t exactly last forever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We already have had conflicts with soccer and baseball for our 4.5yr old! We told the kids they can each have 1 sport each season. The older kid can have a sport + cub scouts.
Swim lessons are between sports seasons and I schedule private lessons so they can go the same day.
Even with those limitations, I rely on my parents to cover 1 day a week.
Seriously...choose sports with consistent schedules. It is life changing.
I get it, but when the kids love one of the sports with an inconsistent schedule, are we supposed to tell them it’s dance or nothing?
Dance, swim, gymnastics, figure skating, karate, music lessons, really any non- field, or court sport. Kids only know what you tell/show them, so show them activities that make family life easier. You drop the skin cancer risk significantly too.