Category Archives: Gung Haggis dragon boat team information

Photos from 2009 Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year's Eve Dinner

Gung Haggis Fat Choy is always a wonderful event for photographs.  Special thanks to our incredible photographers Patrick Tam, Lydia Nagai and VFK.

If you like their photos, please contact them and purchase them.  We have asked them to put “water marks” on their photos, so that we will advertise and promote them.

They help us with our event, because they believe in the community work and social consiousness raising that we do.

DSC_3928_103489 - Mayor Gregor Robertson doing the honours by FlungingPictures.
A wonderful job by everybody last night –
Veteran Gung Haggis performers Joe McDonald and Heather pronounced last
night as “The Best Gung Haggis Dinner yet”

And Dr. Leith Davis
(Director of Centre for Scottish Studies, Simon Fraser University) said it was the best Burns Supper she had ever attended – and she just
spent 2 weeks in Scotland for Homecoming Scotland!

Congratulations
to everybody.  The energy was brilliantly contagious and fun.  There
were lots of nice surprises in the program, with the Mayor reading a
Burns poem, a treatise on the details of scotch drinking, Parks
Commissioner Stuart Mackinnon singing A Man's A Man For A' That, and
hip hop artist Ndidi Cascade coming up from the audience to rap a verse
of Burns' Address to A Haggis.

But it was the performances by
Silk Road, Joe McDonald, Adrienne Wong, Jan Walls, Tommy Tao, Rita
Wong, Catherine Barr, Heather Pawsey & DJ Timothy Wisdom, Bob
Wilkins & the Gung Haggis Fat Choy pipe band,  supplemented by
Alland & Trish McMordie with Don Scobie from Seattle… and an
immortal address by Dr. Leith Davis – that knocked the audience over!

With wonderfully warm co-hosting from Gloria Macarenko and Catherine Barr….

And strong support from stage manager Charlie Cho, and sound technician Carl Schmidt.

Many
Many thanks…. to helping rise funds for Historic Joy Kogawa House,
Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop/Ricepaper Magazine and Gung Haggis Fat
Choy dragon boat team.

We will have some pictures available for you soon.

Thank yous and Blessings to
everybody!
Toddish

Patrick Tam – Flunging Pictures 
www.flunging pictures.com

DSC_3928_103489 - Mayor Gregor Robertson doing the honours by FlungingPictures.

661 – 20090125 – Robbie Burns’… – Patrick Tam photo set.

Lydia Nagai – Lydia Nagai Photography
www.lydianagai.com

IMG_0525 by Lydia Nagai.

Gung Haggis Fat Choy 2009 – Linda Nagai photo set.

VFK Photography

GHFC 2009 VF3_4418.JPG by vfk.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/24064901@N00/sets/72157613036584552/

GHFC 2009 VF3_4664.JPG by vfk Silk Road Music performing in front of life-size photos of Nellie McClung, Mungo Martin, Emily Carr and Todd Wong – courtesy of Royal BC Museum.- photo VFK


False Creek paddling after a rain storm in the fall…

False Creek is beautiful after a November rain storm –  the water is flat like glass, the sun is shining through broken cloud.  We paddle from Science World to Granville Island.

2008_Nov2 016 by you.
False Creek is a photographer's paradise.  There were 3 photographers stalking this heron from the sea walk about the docks when the False Creek ferry came in – photo Todd Wong

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team is continuing Sunday afternoon paddling sessions for fun and fitness.  Many of the team members took the day off to attend a book reading by team mate Dan Seto for the Heart of the City Festival.  But four of us were hardy souls, and we climbed into marathon canoes for our exercise workout.

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“This is beautiful” gushed Gayle, “The water is so flat.” Stephen and Gayle paddled the marathon canoe to David Lam Park non-stop.  – photo Todd Wong

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Brooke is a rookie paddler.  She joined the Gung Haggis team in July.  This was her first time in a marathon canoe.  I steered the boat.  – photo Todd Wong

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We paddled to Granville Island and tied the canoes up at the public docks.

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It had been a long paddle and we were deserving of some refreshments, so we went to the Backstage Lounge. – photo Todd Wong

Sun shines on Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta – Gung Haggis places 2 teams in A Final

Gung Haggis dragon boat team places 2 teams in A Final at Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta.

2008_Oct 035 by you.The Gung Haggis Fun Cranberry team takes the inside corner to pass another boat.  Gung Haggis “rookie of the year candidate” Alissa Fletcher lead strokes our team, Jane and Keng in 2nd seat, rookies Brooke and Karl in 3rd seat, followed by rookies Marion and Ryan in 4th seat.  – photo Todd Wong


We arrived before 9am, and the temperature was just above freezing.  Fog hid the river.  But the sun came
out… and it warmed us.

We had 2 teams:  Gung Haggis Fat Turky and Gung Haggis Fun Cranberry.  We had a strong and enthusiastic dragon boat team this year.  Last year we 7 non-Gung Haggis paddlers join our two teams.  But this year, we had 20 current Gung Haggis paddlers + 3 Gung Haggis alumni.

It's a crazy race finale.  Put 10 voyageur canoes on the water – 100 paddlers.
Point them in the same direction up river.  Sound the horn.  drop pumpkins in the water. 

Paddle towards a pumpkin.  Fight another team for a pumpkin. Paddle under the bridge.  Take a 1.5 km loop.  Go around a marker go to the other side of the river, where a paddler jumps onto the beach.  They balance a glass of juice on their paddle and walk up the beach, before jumping back in the boat.  Go back around the marker, then under the bridge to the finish line.

Do canoes bump into each other going around turns, and along the straight-aways?  You betcha!

But first of all, each team had to race 2 preliminary heats: 2 laps around a 250m length with turns for a possible 1.5 km distance.

2008_Oct 029 by you.

Here's the Gung Haggis Fun Cranberry team showing good form with big reach. After lots of initial boat bumpings in their first race, they broke free of the pack in their second race, and finished 1st – sending them to the A Final.

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While Karl and Raphael walk up the beach balancing glasses of cranberry juice on their paddles, the Gung Haggis Fun Cranberry team tries to catch up to the Gung Haggis Fat Turkey team. – photo Deb Martin

2008_Oct 082 by you.

With Karl and Raphael back in the boats (look for a yellow vested Karl who managed not to get run over by the boat), the GH Fun Cranberry team blocks the GH Fat Turkey Team from going forward.  But really both teams need to turn right to catch up to the Pirates team, who finally bailed their boat that they tipped over at their beach landing. – photo Deb Martin.

2008_Oct 083 by you.

Free from the beach, Gung Haggis Fat Turkey team goes after the Pirates.  Tzhe in lead stroke, Kristine and Hillary in 2 seat, Joe and Stephen in 3 seat, Jim and Dan in 4 seat, Raphael and Debbie in 5 seat, Todd steers – photo Deb Martin.


2008_Oct 085 by you.

Gung Haggis Fat Turkey team catches up to the Pirates team on the turn, and grabs the inside edge.  They will effectly hold off the Pirates team and beat them to the finish.  The Gung Haggis Fun Cranberry team is still catching up – photo Deb Martin.

Sun sets earlier on Gung Haggis dragon boat team practices: Last practice before Ft. Langley Race

Most dragon boat teams have long hung up their paddles, but the Gung Haggis team has their last evening practice prior to the Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival canoe Regatta this Thanksgiving weekend.

It's been a long dragon boat paddling season.  We started on Feb 17th Sunday afternoon, when a Global TV camera came out to film us for a “Best of BC” segment about cultural diversity.  Somehow paddling in dragon boats with kilts and celebrating our Chinese traditions in Canada qualifies.

First Practice: Gung Haggis dragon boat team team hits the water with a Global TV cameraman filming them to celebrate BC's cultural diversity

Global “Best of BC” review: Gung Haggis dragon boat team is part of World Class BC on Global News show Feb 26

Our last race of the season is the Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta.  There are no prizes, but lots of fun and lots of pride and bragging rights.  For tonight's practice we ran two boats: veterans and new/casual paddlers.  We ran the boats side by side and did some race pieces with turns.  It was lots of fun.  I think there were 10 on the veterans boat and 16 on the fun/casual boat, and the boats stayed pretty close together.

Gung Haggis practice Oct 7 08 1780 3 Joe ....samis

The weather is getting cold in the evenings.  Joe wears his thermal undies to keep layered for our last evening dragon boat practice of the year.- photo Dave Samis

Gung Haggis practice 1781 4 Todd ....samis

The sun is setting earlier and silhouettes coach Todd Wong – photo Dave Samis

Gung Haggis practice 1787 boats rafted together Oct 7 08 10 Samis-photo Dave Samis

We raft the boats together for a rest, and coach Todd gives instructions on how to avoid a collision.  Next he tells us that we are going to race to ahead to the pier in front, 1st team goes into the mini-bay and does a loop under and around the bicycle bridge, then out.

Gung Haggis paddlers come third in the UBC Day of the Long Boat – the largest voyageur canoe race in the world!

It's the biggest voyageur canoe race in North
America… maybe the world!  300 teams in the UBC Day of the Long Boat at Jericho Beach.

Day of Longboats 34A ...2008 TW by you.Gung Haggis Fat Choy team paddles to the finish in the first Community Mens race of the day – photo Todd Wong

We
had fun.  We paddled hard.  We had good turns, we had bad turns.  Boats
passed us, we passed other boats.  Lots of boats made tactical
errors…  including us. 


Okay… we were third of three Mens teams…
But in our heat of races, we also beat 3 UBC Alumni teams and 2 Women's teams, in our final heat.

We were the first boat racing a roster of 2 women & 8 men. 

We arrived for the first race of the day at 7:15am to ensure
everybody was ready for the first race of the day at 8am.  Only 3 Mens
and 2 Women's teams were in this first heat. 

Day of longboats 43 the site...Samis

Sunny skies greet the UBC Day of the Long Boat racers – much nicer than 2007's windey white-capped waves – photo Dave Samis

It's an
interesting race start.  All the teams are sitting in the boats at the
water's edge, held straight by volunteers in wet suits standing in the
water.  The steersperson of each team, is not in the boat.  They are
sitting in a chair, located high on the beach.  The start is sounded,
and the steerspeople leap out of the chair, racing for the boat.  They
jump into their boat, and the team takes off.  All the boats head
toward a single huge yellow triangular float, where they have to turn
right.  All the boats bump and jostle each other, trying to get their
first, or to get the better position.

Dave
Samis steered the Gung Haggis Fat Choy boat, Tzhe was lead stroke.
Between them were Gayle, Ernest, Stephen, Joe, Pash, Tony, Dan, and
Richard.  The boat was jostling for position against the TD Lightning
Men.   The Scaly Bytes teams was in the lead.  The teams paddled East
past the Jericho wharf, and raced towards the beach where a runner
would jump out of the boat to grab a baton, then return to the boat to
finish the 2nd half of the race.  The Gung Haggis team came in hard on
the beach, and had some troubles trying to push off.  Tzhe returned to
the boat, and helped push the nose out.  They had to back paddle to get
past another canoe that had come in beside them.

Day of the Longboats 28..last bouy ..GH with me steering

Gung Haggis team rounds the last yellow marker in their first race – photo Todd Wong

The teams headed North out towards the North Shore Mountains into
English Bay, then turned left around another big yellow float.  From
here to the end, the Scaly Bytes women's team was nipping at their
tail.  Paddling hard they headed West towards the Jericho Beach
Boardwalk.  They turned left in front of the Jericho Sailing Club, and
paddled straight to the beach, Scaly Bytes Women's team hot on their
heels.  It was a tight race.  Wow!

This is a tough race that involved not only strong paddling, but
also good steering for the three turns.  The big surprise is always
what do do for the beach drop-off.  At 8am, the water was fairly
mid-high.  But by the 2nd race at 11:40, the tide was down, and we were
switching strategies to deal with all the shallow water.

Day of Longboats 62 Todd racing to our boat...samis

Race start! Todd sprints to the boat – photo Hillary Wong

Day of Longboats 63 and they are off...Samis
All the boats take off! Try not to collide with anybody – get ready for “bumper boats” – photo Hillary Wong

For our Mens Community Final race, Gayle moved to lead stroke and
Todd took over steering.  We had a good lane for the race – 2nd closest
to the buoy.  Our start was fast.  We pulled away from the TD Mens team
on our left, and the TD Women's team on our right.  No collisions with
anybody.  I steered a good line for the turn.  TD tried to go on our
outside, but we took a wide exit and cut them off.  They cursed,
dropped back and cut to the inside shore.  We all raced towards the
beach. 

Meanwhile a lot of the teams behind us bunched up at the yellow
float colliding and bumping each other.  The Scaly Bytes team came up
behind us on our left.  TD took a tight line to the beach, but we
weren't going with them.  I had seen some teams get hung up on the sand
bard in their path.  We stayed further from shore, and Scaly Bytes came
up beside us.  As we approached the beach, we could see the water
getting shallower underneath our paddles.  It was exciting, we were in
the lead coming towards the beach.

Tzhe hopped out of the boat, ready to make the run through the
shallow water.  Oops!  The water was too deep – up to his thighs.  The
Scaly Bytes boat came up on our right and Tzhe got cut off from the
beach.  He pushed them out of the way, and ran up the beach.  We moved
the boat East along the water closer to shore, drifting past the Scaly
Bytes team as they waited for their runner.  Their runner jumped into
the boat, but we were blocking their way.  They moved forward bumping
us, as we drew right to stay close to shore, waiting for Tzhe to come
back. 

Darn but that beach was long…. TD Lighting Men took off from the
beach.  Another team took off headed for the yellow float.  Tzhe
arrived back at the boat, exhausted from the long run.  We dug in deep
and paddled away.  Richard was muttering “Damn, we're third again.”

Actually we were now in 4th place.  Another boat was right behind
us to our left.  They headed right towards the yellow float.  I took us
for a wider approach, cut in close and caught up behind the 3rd place
boat. 

“Long and
strong!” shouted Gayle in lead stroke.  They cut in front and we
bounced in their wake.  The moved to the right, and we pulled up beside
them.

“Go Long, Power Now!” shouted Tzhe.  We surge past them.  We looked
ahead.  We were slowly gaining on TD Lightning Men.  They were maybe
8-6 boat lengths in front of us.  The last yellow float was up ahead
for the final turn to the beach. 

TD Lightning made their turn.  We were still boat lengths behind,
but coming in for a good third.  The 4th place team came in tight for
the last turn and tight on our heels.  We surged for the finish,
pushing hard.  As we ran the boat up on the beach, Tzhe jumped out of
the boat.  He ran up the beach and banged the gong with the baton. 
Race finished.  Tony and Dan and Richard were all slumped over
exhausted.  We patted each other on the backs, and walked up the beach.

Tzhe  bangs the gong to finish the race at 12:48 – photo Raphael Fang

Scaly
Bytes Men's team was already on the podium congratulating each other. 
They ran a good race.  They are experienced paddlers and some of them
are our friends.  Ron and Stuart have paddled with us in the past.  It
was nice to see them get the little black canoe trophies. 

We were disappointed our race wasn;t better.  Our mid-race beach
drop-off didn't work.  We jumped out too soon.  But we know that we had
a great start and got to the beach area first.  We know that we passed
teams on the way to the finish.  We did the best we could.

Our team mates who came out to watch congratulated us on our
finish… Wendy, Jonas, Hillary, Deb, Alissa, Ryan and Raphael.  Some
of them have paddled voyageur canoes with us in the past, and know how
challenging it is.  Some of them haven't, and look forward to their
chance.

Now…. Ft. Langley Cranberry Canoe Regatta in 2 weeks.

UBC Day of the Long Boat: Gung Haggis dragon boat team gets ready for next practice 1:30 Sunday

The UBC Day of the Longboat is the largest voyageur canoe race in North America.  Take over 100 teams of university students, staff and community teams, give them one canoe orientation clinic, then put them on the water in heats of ten for a bumper car style race start.  It's crazy!


10 voyageur canoes race towards a single buoy to turn right, The Gung Haggis team is in the foreground. Todd is steering.  Kristine is lead stroke. photo Dave Samis.

The community team event is on Sunday Sept 28th, so this weekend we will do an orientation in the voyageur canoes.  The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat paddlers first entered this race supplementing the Tacoma DBA team in 2004.

read our past adventures at the longboat race:
2007: Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team braved the white cap waves of Sunday's UBC Day of the Long Boats

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

2005: UBC Day of the Longboat – Full contact voyageur canoe bumper car race mayhem

2004: Day of the Longboat: voyageur canoe race

Check out the race description from the website:
http://www.rec.ubc.ca/events/page.cfm?filename=race&ActID=27&path=longboat&term=0

Race Route Description

All
team members will begin in their boat, except for their runner, who
will start in a chair on the beach. Once the starting horn is sounded,
the runner will run to and enter their boat, at which point teams will
begin to paddle.

Teams will head straight for approximately
50m until they reach the first buoy. At the first buoy, teams will make
a 90 degree right turn, then race around a rocky point and toward the
Baton Pick-up location on the shore. Once the boat reaches the shore,
one team member must exit the boat and pick-up one baton from the
beach. After that team member has re-entered the boat with the baton,
the team will head back out towards the second buoy, where they will
make a 90 degree left turn. From there, teams will head to the third
and final buoy where they will make their final 90 degree left turn
towards the finish line.

Upon reaching the shore, the team
member wearing the team's race number will jump out of the boat,
carrying their baton and run up the beach to hit the gong.

Route Map

Click to enlarge


Sunday 1:30 Gung Haggis dragon boat practice.
I think we will go back to Sunday afternoons because:
more people had challenges meeting the 10am morning time.
Weather is getting colder too.

UBC Day of the Long boat – CLINIC ORIENTATION
4pm  – same as last year.

We have more men than women wanting to do long boat this year.
I
have switched the entry from MIXED to MENS.   Last year we raced 8 men
with 2 women, Sarah and Kristine – I am sure that Gayle and Pash will
be up to the task.

Last year our Men's team was right behind TD
Lightning, and they were surprised when they learned we had 2 women on
the boat.  We will certainly surprise them with Gayle and Pash!

UBC
Day of the Long Boat is a challenging but fun race.  2 km in a 10
person voyageur canoe, while English Bay waves bounce you up and down.
2
Races – 1st race around 9am, and 2nd race around 2pm (schedule to be
confirmed).  There is waiting around between races… and lots of UBC
students as there are over 100 teams.

Here is our team roster:

Todd W.
Tzhe L.
Stephen M.
Tony L.
Dan S.
Richard M.
Joe E.

MAYBE LIST
Ernest W.
Jim B.
Hillary W.
Jonas N.

Gung Haggis dragon boat team practice 2pm on Sunday

2pm Sunday practice for Gung Haggis dragon boat team

This is because of two reasons:

1)  It's Terry Fox Run Day in Canada…. 

     I encourage everybody to take part in a great Canadian tradition!
     We traditionally do not practice in the morning

     As a Terry's Team member, cancer survivor, I speak at Terry Fox Runs,
     and will be attending the Richmond Run at Garry Point Park 10am.

   

     Check my website for more information on runs www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com
     or check www.terryfoxrun.org

2)  Kelowna Dragon Boat Races – Sat/Sun  Sep 13/14
     Tony is racing with Sudden Impact Blac

3)  BC Seniors Games – Sat/Sun Sep 13/14
Steven Wong and Dave Samis are racing in Prince George for Seniors Games

Future practice Dates.

We will next practice every Tuesday 6pm – until Thanksgiving

Sunday Sep 21st is….practice

Usually we will follow with a voyageur
canoe practice for the UBC Day of the Longboat

Sep 28th
No Practice because of:
1) UBC Day of the Long Boat
2) Word on the Street Festival

Gung Haggis dragon boat team: Tuesday Practice – we race two boats with 7 first-time paddlers!

7 first-time paddlers came out on the dragon boats with the Gung Haggis team, and found themselves doing 3 sprint races.

DSC_8116
Dragon Boat racing is always more fun, when the boats are racing close together.  This picture features Gung Haggis dragon boat team racing against our friends GVRD 44 Cheeks in blue behind us at the Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival back in June. GVRD has quit paddling for now, while the Gung Haggis team continues paddling for exercise, fun and voyageur canoe regattas until November. – photo Ray Shum


What is the best way to introduce first-time paddlers to dragon boat racing?

Give them a race!

On Tuesday night, we had six students and one teacher from Killarney Secondary join the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.  For the past two years I have coached the Killarney team, with teacher sponsor Stuart Mackinnon, who is also a paddler on the Gung Haggis team.  I
asked Gung Haggis paddlers to be good role models and to help mentor
the Killarney paddlers.  We had the newbies sitting in the back, and
matched with experienced paddlers.

Each boat had 16 paddlers per boat including coach + steers.  I coached one boat with 3 first time paddler students, 1 first-time teacher, 3 experienced students, + 7 experienced Gung Haggis paddlers.  Gayle coached the other boat with 3 first time student paddlers + 1 experienced student + 11 experienced paddlers.

We each circled The North Side of East Basin, then headed towards Cambie St. Bridge, and caught up at David Lam Park.
We
did a mini race piece with Hon's Won Ton team.  They only had 8 paddlers in a
6-16 and were very surprised they stayed even with our lead boat, especially since they are a first year team.  But a
lighter weight in a 6-16 against heavily loaded Gemini boat that sit deeper and heavier in the
water… is what happens.

We paddled almost to the Granville St. Bridge,then turned around and came beside the house boats on Granville Island where our paddlers switched sides, to help exercise both sides of their bodies.

After the races, I asked some of the experienced students, if we ever had races like that on their first day in the boat.

“Nooooo….” was the answer. 

Did the first-time paddlers enjoy the race?

“Yesssss…..” was the answer.  I think they are still shy.

Trying to coach 20 brand new paddlers at the same time, can be a very frustrating experience, as much of the time is spent trying to teach people how to put their paddle in and out of the water at the same time.  But by introducing the first time paddlers onto boats where they were partnered with experienced paddlers, they could watch the paddlers and feel how the boat surged with each stroke of the paddle.  With only 3 paddles going out of time on each boat, the boats really flew much faster than any of the earlier Killarney practices back in the Spring.  Hopefully we have inspired the new paddlers to tell their friends to come join the dragon boat team at Killarney.  And after the students graduate, they can join the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.  Hmmm… maybe we now have a dragon boat farm team!

After a brief warm-up, we did another
race piece… to the Cambie St. Bridge.  The other team won again, by
about 3/4 boat length.  same as before.  We picked a paddler off their
team… Dan Seto.

Another Race… switch sides… back on the good side for most.
We won by about 4 seats…. VERY CLOSE!!

LOTS of FUN!

NEXT Practice Sunday 2pm (not 1:30pm)
Because lunch at Hillary's + Terry Fox Run Day….

Special Kilts at Doolin's: Tim's Birthday + Frommer's shows up to review the night life!

Kilts Night
is always special when the Gung Haggis dragon boat paddlers show up…. especially when the “Halifax Wharf Rats” are playing their celtic tinged folk and rock songs!

HPIM2978 by bunnybears.
Happy Birthday Tim!  Bass player Tim Renaud of “Halifax Wharf Rats” with Alissa and Marion of the Gung Haggis dragon boat team – photo Todd Wong/Bunny Bears.

It's “Kilts Night” – the first Thursday each month.  We meet at Doolin's Irish Pub.  If you wear a kilt, you receive a free pint of Guinness beer.

There is great music by the Halifax Wharf Rats” which specializes in Canadiana music with a celtic twist of folk and rock.

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Deb, Marion and Hillary enjoy a pint of Strongbow and Guinness. – photo Marion

When you can learn thewords to songs like “Farewell Nova Scotia,” “Alberta Bound,” “Four Strong Winds,” and “Barrett's Privateers,” – you know you're Canadian.

And when you can wear a kilt and look around you at your friends all wearing kilts, and realize that half of them are Canadians of Asian ancestry, and you don't think that's weird – then you know you are amongst your friends on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team… and that feels Canadian.

Vancouver's heritage is full of diversity, and nothing brings people together easier than music and a good drink.

Welcome to Kilts Night – Gung Haggis Fat Choy style!

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A writer and photographer Derrick Lepper, for Frommer's travel guide showed up researching Vancouver's night life.  They took a picture of Marion pulling the darts out of the dart board – photo Todd/Marion

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Yvonne and Tony showed up sans kilts, but promised to wear kilts for next month – photo Marion

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A favorite activity is to dance to the Proclaimer's song “500 Miles” Leanne, Hillary, Alissa, Jim (hidden) and Todd- photo Marion

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And we raise our hands as we dance and sing… Leanne, Raphael and Tony – photo Marion

Next Kilts Night is Oct 2.  First Thursday of the month for October!

Gung Haggis dragon boat team makes C Group final at Taiwanese Dragon Boat Races


Gung Haggis team paddling in a barrel race (10 paddlers) on Saturday.  Wendy is drummer and Todd is steering.  Lead strokes are Colleen and Hillary, followed by Sher & Raphael, Brooke and Cindy, Dave & Tony, Jonas & Devon.  photo courtesy of Ben Lee

It was our final dragon boat event of the season (sniff, sniff).

Special thanks to Captain Ernest
for leading our team for the Vancouver International Taiwanese Dragon
Boat Races.  We had a good core of paddlers and some good developing
paddlers + some guest paddlers. 

Future races are:
Sep 28th, Sunday, UBC Day of the Long Boat – 10 paddlers
Oct 11th, Saturday Ft. Langley Cranberry Canoe Regatta  – 10 paddlers

TAIWANESE RACE REVIEW:

We performed well on Saturday and Sunday, posting 2nd, 3rd and 3rd in
our preliminary and semi-final races.  We made it to the top 3 finals
out of 5 heats.  We raced against some pretty experienced recreational
teams and paddlers in C Group, such as Elephant & Castle, Draco
Stealth (Calgary + Vancouver paddlers), Synergy Rice Rockets.

We had fun racing the fun races… It's always good to get extra time in the boats.  On Saturday, we did a barrel race and had good compliments from other paddlers.  Our time of  2.33.46 made us 7th of 12 teams.  Fastest was FCRCC at  2.01.06 Slowest was The Eh Team 2.53.52

On Sunday we had a good Nogard race too… coming the closest ever to grabbing the flag on the way back.  We weren't the fastest team to the flag, but we had one of the fastest turnarounds, and when we changed direction we were very close to the flag.  Our team switched seats, started paddling.  We kept the flag close to the boat, but we were too close to the flag.  Paddles hit the flag, and when Jane reached to grab the flag, it dipped down out of her reach…. by inches…   We turned everybody around in the boat, and went to go pick up our flag.  Then we grabbed the last remaining flag, and handed it to the boat that forgot to get their flag.

With a time of  3.58.94 we were 11th out of 15 boats, probably the fastest of the teams who missed their flags.  Fastest time was FCRCC at 2.58.27 Flying Butts were 4.18.84 and Race Face United was DNF.

Unfortunately for us at year's Taiwanese Dragon Boat Races, we didn't have much paddler depth. Usually we always have at least 2 extra paddlers.  But Labour Day weekend holidays and work schedules took their toll.  We rotated 2
Saturday only paddlers for 2 Sunday only paddlers.  This race, we almost always
raced with 18 paddlers – no spares.  And once on Sunday morning – we
were waiting for a missing paddler because we had no spares. 

With so many new and smaller paddlers on our team, we were only 10
seconds slower than Scaly Justice Bytes' 3rd in B Division, 7 seconds
slower than Eh Team's 3rd place in our final, 3 1/2 seconds than
Naluwan Lightning Silver's 3rd place in the D final.  Resting
tired paddlers and having more experienced veteran paddlers for depth
could easily have made up 5 seconds or so that is needed to catch a medal.

But that's racing… We can't control the other teams, but we can control our own abilities on the boat.  We had fun, we felt good, and we can be proud of our accomplishments this weekend.

Final rankings and times are posted on www.dragonboatwest.net

You can see our final race here (we are at the end at the 1:15 mark):

C Final
http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=IpK-2Gd29wU&fmt=18
(The
chase boat had to park near the party cruise boats to keep an eye out
as they came out, so only about half the race could be recorded)


see other races: