Category Archives: Gung Haggis dragon boat team information

Dragon Boat season again: Gung Haggis Fat Choy team hits the water on Sunday March 4th


Dragon Boat season again:
Gung Haggis Fat Choy team hits the water on Sunday March 4th

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat had an incredible season in 2006,
and we look forward to an even better season with so many returning
paddlers.  We welcome recreational and beginner paddlers… and if
we have enough beginner paddlers we will spin off a 2nd team for
beginners.

Our team emphasizes fun, food, and fitness and multiculturalism… in
that order.  Sometimes we say we have a foodie team that likes to
paddle.  But our paddlers have also decided to unleash their
competitive nature for 2007 and really want to improve for this
season… while still accomplishing fun, food and fitness and
multiculturalism.

Scottish and Chinese cultures are our namesakes, derived from our
annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner
fundraiser.  It's an eclectic and wacky dinner event that features
traditions from Scottish and Chinese culture fused with contemporary
post-modern Canadianisms – whaterver that is!
Our team uniforms feature lucky gold chinese coins + optional kilts.

Our 2006 season included races at Lotus Sports Club's Bill Alley
dragonboat regatta, False Creek Women's regatta, ADBF regatta, Alcan
Dragon Boat Festival, Kent Washington Cornucopia dragon boat Festival,
Vernon Dragon Boat Festival, Cultus Lake Women's regatta, Victoria
Dragon Boat Festival, Vancouver International Taiwanese Dragon Boat
Races.  Plus we also raced in the UBC Day of the Long Boats with
Tacoma Dragon Boat Association, and the Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival
Canoe regatta.  Paddlers signed up for the races they wanted to
attend and not every body attended every race… so we are very
flexible!

The 2007 season will see many of the same races – but we may pare down
the number, or pair up with other teams as we did for Victoria with the
Pirates dragon boat team from Chilliwack, or the FC women's regatta
with Tacoma DBA.

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team's first practice is Sunday March 4th.
We meet at 1pm for warm-up stretches and cardio
We are on water from 1:30pm to 3pm

We paddle from Dragon Zone – run by the Alcan Dragon Boat Festival
It's in the South East Corner of False Creek – immediately south of Science World
Best places for parking are on Quebec Street, 1st Ave near Mario's Gelato or 2nd Ave.

We will start Tuesdays after the
switch to Daylight Saving time – dependant on how much light is
available…

What to wear: fleeceys are good
at this time –  both tops and bottoms.  Rain gear if needed.  Definitely
a hat.  This will be a low intensity warm-up practice to shake off the
cobwebs, and develop good body posture and techniqe.

check out more on the website for:
Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat team

To join the team contact:

Todd Wong coach and clan chieftain
778-846-7090
e-mail:  gunghaggs @yahoo . ca

Gung Haggis Fat Choy paddlers enjoy the winter

Gung Haggis Fat Choy paddlers enjoy the winter


Gung Haggis paddlers trade paddles for snowshoes, skis and snow boards – photo Todd Wong

We
have a great bunch of people on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.  Many people have really
built some good friendships.  Everything we continue to do, somehow seems
to revolve around or include eating.

In December we met 3 times.  On
Friday, December 15th, some of us met to see the new James Bond
movie.  Afterwards we then met up with more team members at the Bacchus Lounge
at the Wedgewood Hotel.  This is a fabulous piano bar, and we were
almost right next to the piano, which featured a very enjoyable pianist
who sounded like Harry Connick Jr.  When we first walked in, he
was singing “Fly Me to the Moon” – one of the special songs that I
share with my girlfriend. Perfect timing!

We had 12 people (enough to paddle a dragon boat)
crowded around a table in the dining room – right next to a couple
having a romantic dinner.  Not to worry – the couple was very
nice, and offered up their table to us.  And it turned out that
the fellow was a film maker who had been researching dragon
boats.  I quickly told him that our team had been featured on CBC
Newsworld last year, French public broadcasting program Thalassa the
year before, and CBC French Telvision this year!

The Bacchus
Lounge was a great place to celebrate some of our team members'
birthdays. Christine and Daming in December, and Wendy's upcoming
birthday on January 1st.  We ordered 2 appetizer platters and 2
pizzas.  All were very good! Yum Yum!


Wendy and Jen ham it up while Jonas helps Dan with his snowboard – photo Todd Wong

The next day, some of us tried out snowboarding for the first time on Grouse Mountain
Jonas had offered to teach beginners.  I was the only skier, but
was also able to help the neophyte boarders too.  During an eating
break, I tried out Jen's board and boots.  I fell lots, and it
took me 3 tries before I could get to the top of the Paradise beginner
hill rope tow.  It had been 12 1/2 years since my only other snow
board try.  Now I remember why I have stuck to skies.  It's
easier, and I can still do my old free-style tricks.

Some of our
team members went snow shoeing instead.  We decided this would be
a great way for people not interested in skiing or boarding to join us
for a winter activity day.  Saturday, January 6th is our planned
snow shoeing day.  While on Grouse we also went for a sleigh ride
– pulled by a snow tractor.  It's a fun way to see some of the
sights on Grouse Mountain, especially for tourists.


On the winter sleigh ride with Jen, Tzhe, Todd, Wendy and Jonas – photo – Todd


Winter Solstice, December 22nd


The
gazebo features panels telling the story of the Moon Goddess and her
Jade Rabbit, created by Jamie, the new Marketing coordinator for the
Gardens – photo Stephen Mirowski

We met at the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden to take part in the Winter Solstice Lantern Festival  which is part of the city wide festivities organized by the Secret Lantern Society
It is very magical to see both the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Park and Gardens lit
up by lanterns.  There is also live music played in the Park
gazebo, and the new Hall of One Hundred Rivers.


Leaves that fell
off the tree in Autumn were saved, made into lanterns, then placed back
on the original tree theat they first fell off of.  – photo
Stephen Mirowski.

A highlight for me was meeting the new marketing coordinator for
the Gardens, Jaime, who lived 10 years in Beijing and speaks fluent
Mandarin.  He even has Scottish heritage, and his wife is
Chinese.  Imagine that!  We had a great chat about Gung
Haggis Fat Choy, and look forward to finding a special role for him!



A paper lantern
crane is lit up, next to blue LED lights in the courtyard of the Hall
of One Hundred Rivers – photo Stephen Mirowski.

After
taking pictures, sipping tea, walking amongst the lanterns, we then
spent lots of time (and money) checking out the wonderful items in the
gift shop managed by my friend Alexis.  Alexis first came to the
Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner back in 2002 and LOVED it!  It was
9:40pm and we headed up Pender St. in Chinatown, making our way to
Hon's Won Ton House.  More food!  Duck, Shanghai noodles,
Fried Rice, vegetables and pot stickers… yum, yum, yum.  It's
true, our dragon boat team identity and culture is rooted in
food.  I don't know of another dragon boat team with a food word
in it's name.

UBC Day of the Longboat 2006 – I paddle the distance equivalent of 16 dragon boat races in one day

UBC Day of the Longboat 2006 – I paddle the distance equivalent of 16 dragon boat races in one day

What a day!  I am utterly fatigued… completely tired.  My muscles ache.  I can't walk without my legs hurting.  I can't lift my drinking cup without my arm muscles complaining.  And there is this big silly grin on my face.

I paddled 4 races in the largest Voyageur canoe race in North America – the UBC Day of the Longboat.  Each race is 2km with a 10 person crew in a voyageur canoe. It takes place at Jericho Beach, at the Jericho Sailing Centre.  A dragon boat race is normally 500m long.  But sometimes we also race 250m sprints, and for special occasions there are 1000m and 2000m races.

I love Jericho Beach.  The Jericho Sailing Centre is last remaining hangar from the former Jericho Army base, where flying boats would patrol rum runners in the 1920's.  I remember in the mid-1960's, my father worked as a sign painter for the Army, at the base.  Seeing army tanks on the base was always a highlight, when we went to pick up my father when he finished off work.

5 paddlers from the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team raced with Tacoma Dragon Boat Association, for Mixed, Mens and Womens races.  It was the 3rd time we had raced with TDBA in the Day of the Longboat.  Earlier this year in May, we also raced with TDBA for the False Creek Women's Regatta.  Our Gung Haggis paddlers are Steven, Teresa, Joe, Ernest and myself.  We are joined by honourary GHFC paddler Kristine, plus Ron, Sara and Stuart from Scaly Justice dragon boat team, as the the Canadian contingent.

We started the day soon after 7am.  I set up our tents in the parking lot and brought bananas for everybody. This year we have started a tradition of hosting each other at races.  The weather was sunny – not the rain that had been expected.  Our friendship goes back to 2001 when we did fun mens and womens races together at a race in Seattle.

8:30am
First Mixed Race.  Because Tacoma doesn't have a full Mixed crew ready for the 8:10 start (due to border issues etc.), they are allowed to race at 8:30 with two other UBC teams.  I am paddling lead stroke.  We start off slow, in third place, but pass two boats on the way to the midpoint, where a runner jumps onto the beach to grab a baton.  Unfortunately, our runner can't get out because we are beached beside the boat in front of us.  We back up, our runner gets out.  We push our boat out, but the 3rd place team has now pulled in front of us.  On the 2nd turn, we pass the boat.  We overtake the 1st place team, on the way to the final turn.  We handily pull ahead and finish 1st.  It is the first longboat race for Steven and Teresa.  Steven has been paddling since the first dragon boat race in 1986.  Teresa started paddling at the end of April with us. In her rookie year, she has now paddled 9 events.  Wow!  In my first 3 years of paddling, we only had the Alcan Dragon boat Race locally.  We used to stop paddling after June.  Now we paddle from March to October.

The wind starts to blow up.  A strong Westerly…. pushing boats East.  Two more of our paddlers show up, Joe and Ernest.  They have arrived to paddle the Men's races with us.

10:20am
First Women's Race.  The women leave the start as third last in a field of nine.  Because of the strong wind, on the first turn after the start, many boats get pushed past the buoy marker and have to paddle back to go around it.  Our women's team paddles hard and moves up two places to finish 5th.

11:30am
First Men's Race.  I am paddling lead stroke. We have a slow start off the beach.  We take an outside west side route to avoid the jam-up immediately ahead of us, that allows us to paddle hard.  We pass a boat going to the buoy.  We race Eastwards to the baton pick-up point.  Coming up parallel alongside the beach, our runner jumps out to run to get the baton. What?!?!  the tide is up, the beach is shorter, the water is deeper!  He runs through the water.  I jump out of our boat to push the nose out to the water.  Our runner helps me push, we jump in and start paddling.  We pass a boat on the 2nd turn. We pass another boat going to the final turn.  We finish the race in 3rd place, passing about 4 boats along the way. We beach the boat nose first, Steven jumps out of the boat, and runs up the beach with the baton.  He looks for the gong.  He is a few feet East of the gong.  People shout directions.  He looks to his right, runs a few feet and hits the gong.  Whew! What a moment.

12:30pm
Women's Final race.  The Women get out to a good start in 3rd place.  They hold a good solid pace.  As the boat comes towards the beach at the baton point, the runner Sara jumps out.  Too deep!  The tied has come in.  The water is deeper than it was for the first race.  Sara is swimming to the beach!  She runs up onto the beach, grabs the baton, jumps back in the boat huffing and puffing – grabs her paddle and starts paddling!  What a trouper!  The team pulls hard on their paddles.  They finish in 3rd place.  First place goes to False Creek Women.

2:30pm
Mens Final Race.  It's a good competitive group of teams.  False Creek Men stand beside us.  TD Lightning. Synergy.  Coach Clem wants us to break ahead at the start by doing fast short strokes similar to the “ups” of a dragon boat start, instead of the slower strokes we had used in the earlier races. The airhorn goes off.  Clem runs from his chair to the boat, jumps into the boat, we paddle, Up! Up! Up!  Quick short strokes…. trying to match the False Creek Men's team beside us.  They inch up by twos, threes and fours, pulling ahead by threeboat lengths to reach the 1st turning buoy ahead of us.  Another team reaches the buoy as us at the same time, but battles alongside us all the way to the midpoint.  Our boats beach and our runners jump out to grab the batons.  We have a slower start off the beach, but we paddle a wider entry to the buoy, cutting it closely, nipping their stern, as they swing to the outside of the course and we draw a straight line to the next buoy.  We hold our pace, counting power series at all the right times, catching up to a boat, and pulling away from a boat. 

We draw another good line coming into the final turn.  We paddle hard and to the finish line with a boat right on our tail.  Ernest our runner gets ready to jump out and run to the beach… too soon!  Ernest jumps into the water – just like he did in our first men's race when we were about twenty feet away on a low shallow tide.  But the water is too deep.  Our boat goes past him.  Clem grabs him by the life jacket and helps him up to pull him along.  as we beach our boat nose first. Ernest recovers and runs through the water to the beach. The other boat beaches their boat. Their runner jumps out and rings the gong.  Ernest runs up the beach and rings our gong.  We finish 4th, even though our boat hit the beach 3rd.  What a race!

3:30pm
The Mixed Final. It seems like only about 30 minutes after our last race.  We are ready to race again.  So far, I have paddled 3 races for 6km. – the distance equivalent of 12 dragon boat races.  The most I have ever paddled in a single day before was 5.  Starts and a higher stroke rate really wear you out.  We are going for a longer slower stroke rate.  I am tired, but feeling good.  The first time I ever did a 2km longboat race was with TDBA in 2004.  After my first race, I thought I might have a heart attack.  My heart rate was up.  My muscles felt really shaky. But I survived and did 4 races that day. I also didn't paddle much that year because I spent most of my time coaching the team.

This year, I steered all the Gung Haggis races because of a ski injury in April.  But I started paddling again in July for some canoe work, and I paddled a dragon boat race + a barrel race on Labour Day for the Vancouver International Taiwanese Dragon Boat Race.  Our training in September was all preparation for the longboat races.  By last Sunday, we had worked our way to paddling the equivalent distances.  In our last practice we paddled the equivalent of three 1.5 km race pieces spread over less than 90 minutes.

Again, I will be paddling lead stroke.  We get off to a good start.  It looks like we are one of the top three teams.  TD Lightning is on our left.  Another boat hits them on their left, they then collide with us. We get jammed up, because our left side paddlers have nowhere to stroke.  We untangle, and move towards the first turning buoy, but we have now drifted East of the buoy.  Darn! More work ahead. Clem steers us around the buoy.  We paddle hard to get away from a boat or two. 

Coming into the midpoint, lots of boats are ahead of us, beached and getting their batons.  We come in behind, Sara jumps out, gets the baton.  She joins me pushing the boat off the beach.  We take off before some of the boats still on the beach. We paddle hard, calling a power series.  We race another boat to the 2nd turning buoy, and pass them.  They hold tight with us, on our tail, but we leave them behind.  Another boat is up ahead to our left.  Clem steers a good path with a wide entry that gives us a good line for the buoy.  We cut them off.  But they are still behind us.

It's been a long race, and we are getting tired. They surge coming into the final stretch.  We call a power series.  Voices in our boat are yelling  “1-2! 1-2! 1-2!”  Our boat surges and doesn't back down.  We hit the beach.  Tina jumps out of the boat with the baton in hand.  She races up the beach and bangs the gong.  Wow!  What a race!  We hug each other as we get out of the boat. We cheer the other teams and call out, “Good race!”  We wear smiles. 

We give high fives to our team members who didn't race with us, but stand along the barriers cheering us on.  I walk past the medal podium where the False Creek Mixed team is receiving their little black canoe trophies.  I smile at Pat Bigonzi, whom I used to coach and paddle with back from 1999 to 2001.  Our paddlers walk back to our tents congratulating other paddlers, and patting each other on the back.  What a race.  Everybody was close in little packs.  Nine boats in three or four groups – all battling it out – not willing to give an inch.  Everybody paddling long and strong, deep and hard.

We take a group picture.  We share our friendships between Vancouver BC paddlers and Tacoma Washington paddlers. Americans and Canadians.  We vow to do it again. Tacoma invites us to come to paddle in some races there.  We offer to invite them to dinner when they come back to Vancouver races.  It's a good friendship.  3 of us join the final 3 Tacoma paddlers for dinner at Chianti's Restaurant for pasta, before they leave town, and our country.

Here are articles from our 2004 and 2005 races with Tacoma at the Day of the Longboat.

by
Todd
on Mon 04 Oct 2004 04:08 PM PDT

by
Todd
on Sun 02 Oct 2005 11:27 AM PDT

Gung Haggis Sunday afternoon dragon boat practice Sept 24th

On Sunday afternoon – we had a great paddle.

Keng,
Gerard, Teresa, Stephen M., Tzhe, Barbara, Steven W., Rita, Joe and
myself showed up to paddle, Deb steered.  We went all the way to Cambie
St. Bridge – with a short rest to simulate Ernest jumping out of the
boat on the beach to grab a traffic cone, then jump back in the boat –
then we paddled back to Dragon Zone – all to do a dry run for UBC Day
of the Long Boat – about 1500m. 

Coming
back to the dock, we found Pirates paddlers Ian and Cory – who had just
finished attending “Body Worlds 3” at Science World – stepping onto an
Aquabus.  They asked us for a ride to Granville Island (of course we
made them paddle), and Dan joined us too!

Again – we paddled all
the way to Cambie St. Bridge, paused for a short rest to simulate
Ernest hopping out to grab a traffic cone.  Then we paddled all the way
to Granville Island.  We made good time with only 13 paddlers.  We are
doing a longer stroke with a “kick” before the exit.  Excellent for
creating a glide.  These paddlers are going to take it up to the next
level for a strong foundation for next year's team!

And then Deb and I hopped back over the The Word on The Street – to check out the displays, say hi to friends, and buy some great books!

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team – BBQ wrap up dinner

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team had a season wrap up dinner last night. 

Guess what?  We cooked Haggis Won Ton!!!

many hands make haggis won ton

the boiled version

close up

The haggis has been thawed and
mixed with chopped celery.
Steven, Ernest, Queenie, Angie
& Jane



presentation is everything.
Ernest displays the goods.



Check out photos at
http://www.flickr.com/photos/53803790@N00/

A BIG BIG thank you to paddler Dan for hosting the team bbq. 
Dan is a 2nd year paddler who has really blossomed as a paddler. 
He loves the sport so much now, that last year in his rookie season he
joined a team going to San Francisco.  This year, in addition to
paddling 7 events with Gung Haggis, he also paddled in Calgary and
Kelowna with Acme Dragons, and will soon be going to Philadelphia to
paddle dragon boats.  We love Dan, and we are happy to share
him.  He has a real big heart!

And that's what we want on our team – good hearted people with big hearts!

It
was great that we had 30 people there, with so many absentees sending
good wishes.  This year we built up a large roster of paddlers for
the team.  We did not have to go outside our roster for races at
Lotus Barnet, ADBF Regatta, Alcan, Vancouver Taiwanese, or Vernon
races.  We joined up with Tacoma for the False Creek Women's
regatta and with the Pirates for Victoria.  In Kent we brought a
full crew with paddlers from 4 other teams, but only at the Cultus Lake
Women's regatta did we have to “borrow” paddlers for our races.

Deb and I constantly this year, had said – “this is the best Gung Haggis team ever!”  

Unfortunately
– no medals for the team this year – but really good friends, great times, overnight road
trips (Kent, Vernon, Victoria), lots of paddle events (9).   WOW!

This was the first time we ever cooked haggis at a team event.  Usually
we do a wrap up at a Chinese restaurant – but we never ever brought out
a haggis other than the BIG Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner.

Special
thanks to Deb and Ernest for bringing the haggis and the won-ton
wrappings, for everybody pitching in to wrap, and for Jane cooking the
won tons, boiled, deep-fried, + boiled haggis (pictures to come).

Special thanks
to Julie, for teaching Polynesian Dancing, and to Marian for playing
Nova Scotian tunes on my accordion.  We will have to do something for
the next kilts night at Doolin's on Oct 5th.  Maybe at 8pm – we can do
our singalongs.

Special
thanks to Rita for creating the photo montage.  It's a wonderful
collection of memories from our paddling summer.  Hopefully we can
create a 8 1/2 X 11 photo for everybody.  Deb and I are very
thankful to the team for the this gift and the many others, for our
efforts in coaching and managing this wonderfully fun dragon boat team.

It
was great hearing everybody singing together for “When Asian Eyes Are
Smiling” and “My Haggis Lies Over the Ocean”, + Loch Lomand (You Take
the High Road).  And… wonderful to hear Ernest singing  Auld Lang
Syne in mandarin Chinese.

Many many more thanks to everybody for attending, contributing and being a part of our special team spirit.

Peace &
Blessings, Todd