Anonymous wrote:Wrestling. And there are immense college scholarship opportunities for girls who wrestle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fencing. DS has been fencing for a few years. He has a couple of practices per week and a few tournaments per season. The gear can get a little expensive. Tae Kwon Do is similar to this, but more expensive. Every belt level and tournament costs money.
I'm surprised you think fencing is affordable. My son's club runs about $500 a month minimum, and that doesn't include equipment, tournament or travel costs and fees.
Like with anything, it depends on where you are. We attend a club in Chantilly and its $135 monthly, so long as you have an annual commitment. If you really want to go the cheap route, they have all of the equipment that you need their and you can borrow it every practice or bring your own. Its a small club, but the instructors are great.
So you pay $1620 per year. That is way more expensive than rec soccer or rec basketball options in Bethesda.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Golf is where it's at for girls in terms of college scholarships, so your investment while she's young may pay off! Plus, you already know how to do it so it's something you could do together.
But seriously, don't listen to me, my daughters and I ride horses and my husband is always aghast at how much it all costs. He almost choked when he found out the horse my daughter was petting was for sale for a quarter of a million dollars. (Not our horse, just to be clear).
Golf is incredibly, incredibly expensive if you want to be good.
Also, if you are chasing a women's golf scholarship realize that there is a good chance you will end up out west or in the south.
What does that mean? I guess my Stanford degree means nothing.
NP here. I think they meant that the golfing schools are on the West Coast or in the southern states (warmer weather year round, and all that).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Golf is where it's at for girls in terms of college scholarships, so your investment while she's young may pay off! Plus, you already know how to do it so it's something you could do together.
But seriously, don't listen to me, my daughters and I ride horses and my husband is always aghast at how much it all costs. He almost choked when he found out the horse my daughter was petting was for sale for a quarter of a million dollars. (Not our horse, just to be clear).
Golf is incredibly, incredibly expensive if you want to be good.
Also, if you are chasing a women's golf scholarship realize that there is a good chance you will end up out west or in the south.
What does that mean? I guess my Stanford degree means nothing.
Anonymous wrote:tennis
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Golf is where it's at for girls in terms of college scholarships, so your investment while she's young may pay off! Plus, you already know how to do it so it's something you could do together.
But seriously, don't listen to me, my daughters and I ride horses and my husband is always aghast at how much it all costs. He almost choked when he found out the horse my daughter was petting was for sale for a quarter of a million dollars. (Not our horse, just to be clear).
Golf is incredibly, incredibly expensive if you want to be good.
Also, if you are chasing a women's golf scholarship realize that there is a good chance you will end up out west or in the south.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I were chatting about what sports to put our toddler DD in when she is old enough and the convos quickly turned to what we didn’t want her in!
He says we need to do all we can to steer her away from hockey, which he played, and where ice time is early, equipment is expensive, and games were far to drive to. I countered back that we should also avoid my sport, golf, which had pricy lessons, long tournaments, and big time commitments. So what sports aren’t a big time suck on time and money? Everything we can think of has obvious or hidden costs and time constraints (one set of friends have to volunteer 75 hours for their child’s swim team each season, another spends over $10k on travel soccer fees).
Disclaimer: of course we want our kid to find her passion (if it’s even sports), and we plan to expose her to lots of different types, both individual and team, plus learning to swim of course. This is a more lighthearted post vs “don’t stifle or force your kid” post...
Anonymous wrote:Any rec sport is cheap. You and your DH must be from wealthy families—golf and hockey are both expensive hobbies.
Rec soccer, basketball, volleyball, Flag football, softball, and summer swim are all popular and inexpensive.
But what will happen is you will end up Doing what she is interested in regardless of cost.