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While the Head of the Charles celebrated its 50th anniversary, the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation proudly hosted our tenth year-in-a row vendor booth at the regatta from Friday, 17 October - Sunday, 19 October 2014. The significance of a ten-year running vendor booth was more than just a presence. It implied an acceptance within the broader rowing community. Many of the vendors stopped by to chat and catch up, ask how we are doing. Companies like JL Racing, Sew Sporty, Calm Waters Rowing, Patagonia. Regatta Sport, Sykes Racing, Hudson Boat Works, Wintech Racing,
 
The primary goal of the booth is visibility among the various parts of the rowing community. With a location just downstream (100 yards) from the finish line, thousands of people walked past the booth. For some, it was a new and happy discovery. Excited remarks like "I never knew this existed" are not uncommon. For others, it can be a double take and for wont of a better description, a revelation. Yes, the GLRF booth got that reaction from the Dutch National Team.
 
But after ten years, many rowers have come to know GLRF. As the USRowing Women's Great Eight patiently waited for a long line of boats to move along, we chatted with several of the rowers as they stood in front of the GLRF booth. Likewise, the USRowing Mens National Team members stopped by the GLRF booth to get some wild spandex tights for an upcoming party. They seemed as much at ease as when they waited for the start of their race at the World Championships in Amsterdam in August.
 
The 2014 GLRF booth served as the launch for the new GLRF Brew Pride Neon tank tops. We named them Brew Pride after finding an urban slang dictionary listing for the word 'Brew.' As much as we wanted to raise our hands in defiant protest of definition four, we liked definition five better. Based on the sales for the weekend, we seem to have a real winner with the design and neon colors.
 
Many GLRF members stopped by or waived to say hello, including @dsm1412, @omac, @gina_sage, @ebb11, @philly_cox, @vpereziii, @rowrgrl, @chrislovedc, @neochen, @suedisney, @wmoudry, @arower, @pauloevanston, and the DC stud, @arabus.
 
As usual, the hosting of the booth could not have succeeded without the dedicated support from GLRF members @Howie55 and @seagull, who are amazing and wonderful. On Sunday, @Bob715 joined us for most of the day, encouraging men and women to take advantage of the GLRF clothing optional booth policy. Quite a few shoppers were delighted with the results!!!
 
But enough of the Charles. Now it's time to get ready for the 2014 Head of the Schuykill!

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At first, it was civil war. Then a tentative diplomatic cease fire was reached, although skirmishes have continued outside the official channels among more radical elements of each organization's members. Finally, an athlete spring uprising, if you will, has begun to emerge, calling for a One World Event.
 
What are we talking about? The Gay Games and the World Outgames, two international multisport events that take place every four years, at intervals that border by one year the other event. So, the 2013 World Outgames took place in Antwerp and the 2014 Gay Games took place in Cleveland. In 2017, the World Outgames will be held in Miami, and in 2018, the Gay Games will take place in Paris.
 

GLRF supports the athlete uprising.
Take the survey.

 
If you're new to this saga, you're probably doing a huh, an eye-rolling whatever, or a total face twisting whattttt? It can all be traced to money. These events are expensive to host and their success depends on sponsorship, athlete attendance, and often times, support from the regional or local municipality. The Gay Games began in 1982. The first sign of money problems arose when a Winter Gay Games was attempted in 1986 but was canceled due to a lack of sufficient funding and logistical problems. In 1998, in Amsterdam, the event almost got canceled at the last minute (we are talking athletes arriving at the airport close ...) due to a funding shortfall . A similar problem arose in 2002 when the organizers of the Sydney Gay Games declared bankruptcy before the start of the event. In 2006, the licensee of the Gay Games, known as the Federation of Gay Games, could not reach an agreement with the then hosting organizing host, Montreal, because of disagreements on the size, scope, and budget for the event. Negotiations failed and the license was revoked and awarded to Chicago. Montreal responded by creating an independent event called the Outgames. To be fair, the Outgames have also encountered similar funding issues. The 2006 World Outgames filed for bankruptcy several months after the event, and the 2013 World Outgames had to be repeatedly downsized in scope due to costs.
 
Why is this drama showing up within the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation blog? Rowing is a sport that has been a part of all of the World Outgames and a part of some of the Gay Games As an organizational member of the Federation of Gay Games from 2002 - 2006, GLRF was one of only two organizations that voted against the withdrawal of the license agreement with Montreal. GLRF members can read the recap of that pivotal meeting here. Our concern has been for the rowers and the athletes. With the costs to attend the event continuing to escalate, rowers cannot afford to fly hither and thither, two years in a row. The result are regattas that are not well subscribed and a waste of volunteer and race officials time, and a regatta that is less than competitive.
 
After several failed attempts over the last three years to bring the two licensees of these two events together and create a One World Event, a new survey has been created to gauge the opinion of the most important players involved, the participants.
 
 
 

GLRF supports the athlete uprising.
Take the survey.

 
If you are keen to read the latest diplomatic treatise that both organizations have carefully worded to meet each organization's need to keep the high ground, here it is:
OneWE-Status-Report-05AUG14v4.pdf

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It was a rather mild day for rowing on Sunday 10 August 2014 in Cleveland for the 2014 Gay Games Rowing Regatta. With partly cloudy skies, a slight breeze out of the southeast, and temperatures only peaking near 80 degrees Fahrenheit ( 27 Celsius) and the humidity at a relative low of 58%, rowers could focus on their races instead of heat exhaustion.
 
The 2014 Gay Games rowing event, originally planned as a 3200m. head race, was shortened to a side-by-side (Henley style) 1272m. sprint river race. The race start was up river and headed down river, through two major turns to finish in front of the Cleveland Rowing Foundation boathouse. Sixteen clubs or squads submitted 68 entries for 16 planned events. Two events did not have entries so the net events were narrowed to 14. For the results, click here.
 
Although there were 172 participants, the low number of entries created an event schedule that was slated to run from 08:20h - 12:20h, including three, 30 minute breaks. Unfortunately, the hosts of the regatta, the Cleveland Rowing Foundation, were unable to secure a full river closure (they get that right once a year for the Head of Cuyahoga in September). So the race schedule was suspended twice as commercial barge traffic motored through the course.
 

 
The regatta's first event was a Board race, with two eights representing the boards of the two organizations that supported the organization and execution of the regatta, the Western Reserve Rowing Association and the Cleveland Rowing Foundation. As Kirk Lange, head coach of WRRA and the executive director of the Cleveland Rowing Foundation explained, "the boards wanted to demonstrate their support for the regatta and did so in a manner truly befitting the rowing community." Western Reserve won the race in a time of 4:50.5
 
The local commitment to the regatta was evident from the number of local entries (over half of the event):
Western Reserve Rowing Association (25 entries)
Greater Columbus Rowing Association (11 entries)

Since the race was not sanctioned by USRowing, the entire event was run by 100 volunteers, including officiating. The City of Cleveland's focus on the safety of the participants was phenomenal. Unbeknownst to rowers, police on horseback patrolled the entire length of the race course.
 
It was medals galore for participants as some races were sorted into two sections, handicapped by age and time, and both sections receiving medals for first, second, and third place. Even events with only one entry raced and medaled (the Gay Games guidance to the regatta committee was very clear: "if they enter, they race and they medal.").
 
The ten most popular events were:
men's open 1x (10 entries)
women's 4+ (9 entries)
mixed 8+ (9 entries)
men's 4+ (7 entries)
men's 2x (5 entries)
mixed 2x (5 entries)
mixed 4+ (5 entries)
women's open 1x (4 entries)
women's 8+ (4 entries)
men's 8+ (4 entries)

Although gay and lesbian rowers were definitely in the minority for the event, there were family members in many of the races, and of course, there was no doubt about the entries for the San Francisco Bay Blades, the DC Strokes Rowing Club, the Chicago Rowing Union, and two squads of women rowers from Northampton, MA who competed under the name of Pioneer Valley Pride.

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GLRF hosted a booth at the 2014 USRowing Youth National Championships Regatta 13 - 15 June 2014 on Lake Natoma outside of Sacramento, California, United States. Approximately 1500 participants from 132 clubs competed in 357 entries. The racing venue is the site of junior regional championships, collegiate regional championships, and masters regattas.
 
The lake, as it is called, is actually a dam downstream from the more infamous location and dam, Folsom Lake. Folsom is known around California for its notoriety as a large prison facility. Less well known is that Folsom Lake plays a crucial role in California's water supply, capturing a huge source of runoff from the Sierra Nevada mountains.
 
The 2014 regatta marked the first time that the USRowing Youth National Championships were held on the west coast and this marked the first return of GLRF to the regatta as a vendor. GLRF had previously hosted a vendor's booth at the 2007 Youth National Championsip in Cincinnati, Ohio. The GLRF booth at that regatta was not without controversy. The regatta organizing committee, made up of parents of from a group of local catholic schools, had deemed the GLRF presence inappropriate and it was not until USRowing intervened that the booth was approved. Even so, after the GLRF booth was opened, the regatta committee stalked in and blatantly declared what was and was not appropriate for display and sale. (Example: Mark Tewksbury's book, Inside Out - Straight Talk From A Gay Jock, was immediately banned.)
 
Fast forward to 2014 and a different venue and the reception is 180 degrees different. GLRF is warmly greeted by the Sacramento State Aquatic Center staff. The volunteers and employees not only waive but some self-identify and express their happiness at the GLRF presence. Athletes and parents hoot and holler over the wild and crazy spandex and there is a fair amount of exhaling as everyone discovers the joys of 12 months of naked Warwick Rower Calendars, displayed for sale.
 
The regatta is the culmination of a nationwide series of regional championships and serves as a guide for the USRowing Junior National coaches seeking candidates for the 2014 US Junior National Team as well as collegiate coaches on the lookout.
 
The caliber of the rowing was amazing to watch and the strength of character, the warmth, the support of the rowing community was palatable.

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The DC Strokes Rowing Club hosted the 21st annual Stonewall Regatta on Sunday, 01 June 2014, on the Anacostia River in Washington DC. The regatta has been held continuously since its founding in 1994 in Pelham Bay, in New York City. Over the years, the regatta has moved twice, first to the Potomac River and then again to the Anacostia River where the DC Strokes practice.
 
The regatta brings with it a tradition of water movement. In 1994, at Stonewall Regatta I, the tidal flows in Pelham Bay caused the regatta starting line to be moved several times as the bay became shallower. On the Potomac River, crews raced downstream, with moving currents and eddys. On the Anacostia River, the course has been laid out both downstream and upstream.
 
Up until 2014, every regatta used a floating start that sometimes created havoc because of the fast currents and/or winds. This year brought a new level of sophistication to the regatta with the introduction of fixed starts using stake boats. For most of the morning, the stake boats served the regatta committee with devotion and obedience. However, around 1 pm, the tide began to flood and no amount of resetting the anchors could subdue the rebellious and changing stake boat positions. In a blink of an eye, the practiced regatta committee shifted to their accustomed burden, floating starts, and the races continued like clockwork.
 
The 21st annual Stonewall Regatta reached a new milestone with 195 entries, beating by one entry the 2007 Stonewall Regatta. Overall, 411 participants, including a number of GLRF members, competed from 26 clubs, 7 states, and 4 countries. The regatta had 35 planned events but with a lack of entries, the net number of events was 28. The most popular events were the Mens Master 4+ (5 races), Womens Master 4+ (5 races), Mens Master 1x (4 races), the Womens Master 1x (3 races), the Mens Master 8+ (3 races), the Womens Master 8+ (3 races), the Womens Master 2x (3 races), and the Mens Open 1x (3 races). Results Stonewall Regatta21.pdf
The weather was perfect with water that rivaled the huge lean wall mirrors at Crate and Barrel until 2 pm when it was obvious somebody put everything on sale .... Warm sunshine and awesome music spun by a truly talented DJ (was he gay?) lent a distinct air that the DC Strokes are here, they're queer, and they're very glad to welcome the straight rowing community.

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GLRF hosted a booth at the American Collegiate Rowing Association (ACRA) Championships 24 - 25 May 2014 on Lake Lanier in Gaivesville, Georgia, United States. The racing venue is the site of the 1996 Olympic rowing competition.
 
ACRA was was formed in 2008 to provide a means for American university club (non-varsity) programmes to compete at the end of the school year. Membership is open to all collegiate, junior college, and community college teams that are not eligible to compete for the NCAA or IRA Championship.
 
The event brought competitors from all over the United States, including the Mid-Atlantic, the Northeast, the Midwest, the South, and the West Coast.
 
The event's popularity has grown every year. In 2013, 57 schools competed, bringing 844 men and 442 women to compete in 1x, 2x, 2-, 4+, and 8+ boat divisions. Attendance at the 2014 event saw attendance rise by almost 10% with 64 schools competing.
 
The GLRF booth was enthusiastically embraced by the athletes, many of whom were unaware of the organization. The crazy spandex shorts and tights were once again the hot item for sale, much to the consternation of a few uptight coaches (homophobic or just worried about his/her resume stature?). A new product featured at the booth got a lot of attention: The Coxies Cure. The product is championed by actors, musicians, and voice over speakers who rave at its almost instantaneous ability to restore a hoarse voice.
 
The GLRF booth also served as the official soft launch for the newest feature of the GLRF website: Categories of the Rowing Community. The new Categories application offers all aspects of the worldwide rowing community a means to connect and network and create groups for their specific area of interest. Currently the Categories application offers separate community platforms for Adaptive, Coaches, Coxies, Juniors, Masters, OpenElite, Race Officials, University, and Women.

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GLRF hosted a booth at the 2014 USRowing Southwest Juniors Regional Championships at Lake Natoma, east of Sacramento, California, United States, 03 - 04 May 2014.
 
The regatta followed by a week, the 2014 WIRA Championships, held at the same location.
 
Warm weather brought lots of happy faces as the crews battled it out on the course. The regatta is so packed with juniors entries that Friday afternoon is devoted to time trials just to sort out the weekend entries.
 
Athletes, Moms, and Dads visited the GLRF booth, even pushing the ever more wild and crazy spandex on the sometimes shy teammate, son or daugher. Unlike last year, when GLRF was shamed for displaying the naked calendars at a juniors event, a Juniors coach praised the GLRF presence and commended the many sales items and how they delighted the junior rowers
 
The big sellers at the GLRF booth were sunglasses, lots of wild and crazy shorts, and the GLRF BiSweptual shirts.

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For the third time in four years, GLRF hosted a booth at the 2014 Western Intercollegiate Rowing Association (WIRA) Regatta Championship at Lake Natoma, east of Sacramento, California, United States 26 - 27 Apr 2014.
 
Like the 2014 San Diego Crew Classic, rain (in California?!) threatened to dampen the regatta vibe. Crews practicing on Friday afternoon returned to the shore soaked to the bone. Luckily, the temperature was warm enough that most of the mens crews were happy to strip to the waist (and sometimes a bit lower ...;)) and the womens crews made it a sports bra afternoon !!!! o)
 
Heavy rain continued through Friday night but stopped at 5:30 am, just before all of the vendors began to set up. The races started on time and the wind didn't pick up until Sunday midday. Sunday's championships victories went to a variety of talented crews: University of California, Santa Barbara, Western Washington University, Sacramento State University, Loyola Marymount University, and San Diego State University, among many of the victors.
 
GLRF was happy to welcome visitors at our booth from almost every school at the regatta. As usual, the wild and crazy spandex shorts and tights were the big hit although many of the rowers stopped to ogle the naked rowing calendars. The GLRF Bisweptual shirts and Sweet Release shirts were once again the big hits.

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For the first time since the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation began hosting a vendors booth at the San Diego Crew Classic in 2004, rain threatened to complicate the booth layout. Luckily, the rain clouds cleared at 06h30 on Saturday morning and with some quick towel work, the GLRF booth was ready to open for visitors dry and with all gear on display at 07h00.
 
The booth featured the 2014 Warwick Naked Rowers calendars (men and women), a staple of the booth for several years, and the huge collection of wild and crazy spandex racing shorts, tights and headbands. The boys have gotten over their "concerns" and the market share of buyers for the crazy spandex seemed to be close to 60% for men with many of the guys opting for the shorter, "volleyball" cut shorts!
 
The GLRF BiSweptual and the Sweet Release shirts proved popular as well as the Come Out and Row shirts.
 
Thanks to the generosity of Tom Gallagher, owner of Sykes North America, the booth was able to showcase a wide selection of Under Armour shirts for sale.
 
The weekend weather, as usual for San Diego, was sunny, clear, and warm. The only challenge came when the afternoon winds began to pick up, forcing the starting line officials to repeatedly realign the starting lineups.
 
The Crew Classic draws 3700 junior, university, open, and masters competitors from all over North America, competing in the eights-only 2000m. sprint race. The most notable international club was a team from the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club rowing squad, which fielded both mens and womens entries. GLRF was happy to share our membership materials with several of the Hong Kong rowers who visited the booth.

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The just released World Rowing press release highlights some signficant rule changes adopted at the 2013 FISA Extraordinary Congress. Given that most national rowing federations use or inherit the FISA rules for their own rowing rules, these changes will have some significant impact on local regattas.
 
Masters Rowing:
 
 
Adaptive Rowing:
 
 
Regatta starts:
 
 
Regatta finishes:
 
 
Gender reassignment is now codified:
 
 
We'll post more when there is more information about gender reassignment. If there is a doctor in the GLRF community, we'd love it if you added a comment on the importance of adding hyperandrogenism to the medical provisions.

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