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(ARA) - Inline skating has grown to become one of the most popular
sports in the country over the past two decades. Skating has been
proved to be excellent aerobic exercise, good for strengthening the
major muscle groups in the legs (and buttocks), easy on the joints, and
safer than many other common sports. Adherents also love it because it
is fun. Despite the advantages, however, the inline skating boom simply
passed over millions of adults.
To meet the challenge of
bringing skating to those millions, Rollerblade and tour operator
Zephyr Adventures have joined forces to create Camp Rollerblade,
"camps" in which adults learn to inline skate.
"I was fast
approaching 50 in the fall of 2003 and I knew that I needed to give up
jogging due to the pounding on my knees and hips," says Leslie Trotta,
a 51-year-old escrow office manager from California who attended Camp
Rollerblade. "I decided to try skating because it's such a great
low-impact activity. I learned about the camps through Fitness
Magazine, signed up, had tons of fun, made new friends, and learned to
skate safely."
In 2005, five-day Camps that include hotel
lodging, meals, and instruction take place on Hilton Head Island off
the coast of South Carolina and in the Southern Minnesota town of
Lanesboro. In addition, there is a two-day Camp Rollerblade Weekend for
adults scheduled in San Francisco's East Bay and a four-day Camp
Rollerblade for Kids scheduled in the Boston area, with more locations
to be added soon.
Camp Rollerblade is part of Rollerblade's 25th
anniversary efforts to spread the word that inline skating is a
low-impact, aerobic sport with a number of health benefits for people
of all ages. In fact, the average Camp Rollerblade attendee is 46 years
old. "We realize learning to inline skate can be a daunting thought,"
says Camp Rollerblade director Allan Wright. "We focus on the basics,
hire outstanding certified skating instructors, and progress only when
each individual is ready. Having fun is as important as learning to
skate."
"At 43 years old, divorced, and with a whole new life
ahead of me, I decided to make some changes," says Kris Cox, a 44
year-old systems engineer from Massachusetts, who attended the Hilton
Head skate camp. "When I made the decision to learn to skate, the Camp
Rollerblade office told me that I was about to embark on a life
changing event. I couldn't agree with them more."
Throw out
thoughts of cafeteria food and bunk beds. While kids are welcome,the
focus of the five-day residential camps is on adults and the
accommodations are in resorts rather than tents. Camp Rollerblade flies
in top instructors from around the United States and even Europe. In
addition, it has a proprietary system of skating instruction that
ensures participants leave confident enough to skate without assistance.
While
many participants are fearful of committing to five days learning to
skate, most have so much fun learning with other beginners they wish
the Camp was longer by the time it finishes. "We have a gap between the
perception -- skating is difficult -- and the reality, which is that
almost everyone can learn to skate, given proper instruction," says
Wright.
"At age 70, I thought it would be fun to get into inline
skating because it is not only great exercise but it can be a form of
meditation," says Jigger Warren, a 75-year-old massage therapist from
Arizona who attended the Minnesota Camp Rollerblade. "With skating I've
improved my balance, body control, agility, cardiovascular fitness, and
self esteem."
It just goes to show it is always possible to learn a new trick. For more information, visit www.CampRollerblade.com.
Courtesy of ARA Content |