Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another for Field Hockey.
Especially at the younger and rec levels field hockey is almost uniformly wonderful.
Once you get to the club level with tryouts that result in lots of cuts, parents in all sports start to resemble one another. Everyone is great when their kid will make the team as long as the check clears and everyone gets equal playing time. When 50 girls show up for 15 spots and only 13 of those 15 will really play, things change. I've seen it across multiple sports with multiple kids and it always holds
Anonymous wrote:Synchronized swimming. Very girly. Costumes, makeup. Hotels full of girls wearing costumes and makeup. Lots of people performing swimming routines to girl bands and women’s empowerment music. If you like Girl Scouts, you will love synchro!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every sport has pockets of supportive parents and pockets of intolerable ones.
This. But in general, rec sports have been wonderful for my kids. We do play soccer, but we have the best teams. Laid back parents, nice kids, it's great. One of my kids played on 2 other teams before this one, and one of those was also great and the other was a complete dud (checked out parents, kids barely showing up bc they played higher level soccer somewhere else etc).
So any sport that has a rec team would be my suggestion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Climbing is a really supportive sport and the parents are chill.
That’s not a sport
Anonymous wrote:Climbing is a really supportive sport and the parents are chill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ISO engaging activities or sports leagues that my 8-year-old daughter might enjoy this fall. She's not particularly interested in soccer, which seems to be the go-to for many of her school friends. Instead, she enjoys playing tennis casually and has shown curiosity about lacrosse. Are there any lesser-known sports or activities that your kids have enjoyed? Maybe something that combines a bit of learning with physical activity?
My girls who didn't enjoy soccer loved softball. If you're looking for learning, softball has a reputation as "the thinking girls' game." At least in northern Virginia I'd say most of the independent softball leagues are superior to most of the little leagues (McLean Little League being the most notable exception, but some of the others seem to be coming along), DC basically only has little league softball, and I don't know about MD.
Like PPs said, you find pretty chill vibes in rec - usually, there are exceptions - but any time there's an escalation in competition it's hit or miss.
Anonymous wrote:wrestling
Anonymous wrote:Another vote for Cross Country and track as good, and for baseball as bad.
Anonymous wrote:ISO engaging activities or sports leagues that my 8-year-old daughter might enjoy this fall. She's not particularly interested in soccer, which seems to be the go-to for many of her school friends. Instead, she enjoys playing tennis casually and has shown curiosity about lacrosse. Are there any lesser-known sports or activities that your kids have enjoyed? Maybe something that combines a bit of learning with physical activity?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another for Field Hockey.
Especially at the younger and rec levels field hockey is almost uniformly wonderful.
Once you get to the club level with tryouts that result in lots of cuts, parents in all sports start to resemble one another. Everyone is great when their kid will make the team as long as the check clears and everyone gets equal playing time. When 50 girls show up for 15 spots and only 13 of those 15 will really play, things change. I've seen it across multiple sports with multiple kids and it always holds