Girls get their sea legs
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Marisa O’Neil
This week, Brownie Girl Scouts at the Newport Dunes Resort learned
the importance of keeping both oars in the water.
On Thursday morning, 15 rowers in three boats took their first
solo voyage at a weeklong camp, rowing around the placid waters of
the Back Bay. But to hear the squeals of delight and screeches of
excitement from the 6- and 7-year-olds, one might think they were
rowing through class-five rapids.
“We’re going under the bridge!” a girl in one boat shrieked as
they drifted to within 15 yards of the pedestrian bridge.
“Don’t panic!” another girl yelled frantically, as her boat
cautiously approached the shore.
A group of 45 Brownies, ages 5 to 8, took part in the camp through
the Girl Scout Council of Orange County. They learned the basics of
boating skills and safety, canoe paddling and rowing this week, but
that first time alone in a tippy boat can still be a daunting
experience.
“We were scared,” 8-year-old Costa Mesa resident Chelsea Davis
confided, once on solid ground. “All we were doing was going in
circles.”
Sydnee Higginson, 7, was quick to set the record straight.
“I wasn’t scared,” the Huntington Beach resident corrected.
The girls huddled together under the gray skies and recounted
their first row without their instructors on board. One problem,
6-year-old Rossella Juliano thought, was that they weren’t rowing
enough.
“The hardest part was turning in circles,” 7-year-old Anna
Kallinikos said. “And not panicking.”
Up on the beach, a second group of girls made bunches of daisies
from green pipe cleaners, yellow pom-poms and some white felt petals.
They added some googly eyes for good measure.
“I like going boating,” 7-year-old Kate Hesson said as she glued
an eye on a flower. “It gives you strength in your arms because it’s
hard to paddle.”
Katie and the other campers spent five hours a day on and around
the water at the Dunes, floating, crafting, playing, learning and
doing a lot of giggling. The annual summer camps will continue
throughout the summer with older Girl Scouts learning the intricacies
of rowing, kayaking and sailing, said Tricia Wedekind, assistant day
camp director.
Individual scouts from Orange County troops sign up for the summer
camp, usually with a friend or two, she said. During the school year,
scouts can come down for boating lessons with their whole troop.
“Boating is one of those things that’s very expensive,” Wedekind
said. “This exposes them to basic boating safety and fun in a safe
area.”
Newport Beach resident Jaclyn Martin, for one, was sold.
“Rowing is the best thing I can think of,” 7-year-old Jaclyn said.
“It feels good, and you get to see the world. And fish.”
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