<?xml version="1.0"?>
<rss version="2.0"><channel><title>GLRF News</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/rss/1-glrf-news.xml/</link><description>The latest news from the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation</description><language>en</language><item><title>Valencia: the rowing regatta that never was</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/valencia-the-rowing-regatta-that-never-was-r270/</link><description>If you haven&#x2019;t heard, rowing at the Valencia Gay Games was cancelled. A screen capture from a phone was relayed to the glrfcentral desk in December, answering an inquiry from a participant.  We never were told.  This, in spite of three separate emails sent over the summer of 2025 asking about the event.  
 


	 
 


	This sudden silence is in sharp contrast to the original Valencia Gay Games bid in which the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation was specifically highlighted as the main liaison body that Valencia would work with for the sport.  When we saw this mention, we submitted an online message on their website but as often happens, those online messaging systems are ignored or don&#x2019;t work.  We followed up every year at the Sin City Classic in 2023, 2024, and 2025 where the Valencia Gay Games had a desk, asking about our email and providing our business card, and yet no replies.
 


	 
 


	Although there was some significant enthusiasm among a core group of Valencia rowers, the event never got off the ground due to rising costs to host the event, and a tepid interest from the gay rowing community (as of November 2025, there were only two registrations).  We knew something was amiss in April when rowing registration was not open but all the rest of the sports had opened for registration.  Rowing registration finally opened in late June 2025.  
 


	 
 


	The competition was slated to use the traditional Falucho/Lla&#xFC;t  open water fixed seat rowing boat.  This type of racing traces its roots to a competition among fishing boats to be the first to reach port and thus obtain a better price for their catch.  Falucho open water competitive rowing is most common in Spain although it is found in other parts of the Mediterranean.
 


	 
 


	The boat has a coxie and 8 rowers with one bow seat and one stroke seat and three double seats in the engineroom.
 


	 
 


	
 


	Photo courtesy of La Federaci&#xF3;n de Remo de la Comunitat Valenciana 
 


	 
 


	The sports desk at the Valencia Gay Games has encouraged rowers interested in participating to switch to dragon boat racing.  Apparently, no one told them that rowing and paddling are different sport styles and muscles.  Rowers face backwards and mainly push with their legs to power the oars. Paddlers face forwards and mainly pull with their arms, shoulders, and backs. Oops!</description><enclosure url="https://www.glrf.info/uploads/monthly_2026_04/PlazaDeLaVirgen1-640x417.jpg.4e64e620cec8729116c74b664876b84c.jpg" length="86925" type="image/jpeg"/><pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 18:38:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>New queer rowing romance See You At The Finish Line</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/new-queer-rowing-romance-see-you-at-the-finish-line-r268/</link><description><![CDATA[I am the author of a new queer rowing romance called See You At The Finish Line, set against the backdrop of the Oxford v Cambridge Boat Race. I did an event at Cambridge Waterstones last night which was attended by several LGBTQ+ rowers who mentioned how excited they were to learn of this book's existence, so I thought I'd do some outreach to your community. It is currently published in the UK and set to be published in Australia in August and the US and Canada in September, but is already available in many countries either on import or Kindle.
 


	 
 


	I will be reaching out to various queer rowing organisations, but hope you are happy for me to share this news here! The book has been called "a triumph" by Publishers Weekly, while Kirkus Reviews said "This sweet, slow-burn romance will appeal to readers who loved Red, White &amp; Royal Blue, but the dynamic setting and crisp banter in Hammett’s impressive debut are totally his own. A swoony, unputdownable story"
 


	 
 


	I rowed myself at school including on the Thames and at Henley and still keep it up on the erg, so I hope you find the book accurate enough in its portrayal of rowing!]]></description><enclosure url="https://www.glrf.info/uploads/monthly_2025_06/2b76f50c-3a39-47ac-aa87-3538261bd2d5.jpeg.9e3f7f220b11f71e702a14c74381362d.jpeg" length="117549" type="image/jpeg"/><pubDate>Thu, 05 Jun 2025 05:58:08 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>New Rainbow Logo Challenge Application Unveiled</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/new-rainbow-logo-challenge-application-unveiled-r267/</link><description>The Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation is excited to unveil the new Rainbow Logo Challenge application, appropriately on the start of June Pride month and with the launch of the 2025 Rainbow Logo Challenge. The application is the final part of the launch of GLRF Version 2.0.  
 


	 
 


	The premise of the Rainbow Logo Challenge is for organizations to incorporate rainbow colors in their social media and website logos.  The application displays each entry along with those media sites that feature an organization&#x2019;s rainbow-colored logos.  
 


	 
 


	Both GLRF members and guests can now directly submit entries for the Rainbow Logo Challenge, which facilitates the uploading of rainbow logos directly from clubs, programmes, organizations, and businesses.  This means the logos are the actual image instead of some version of right click and save.
 


	 
 


	As an international organization, the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation recognizes that some countries celebrate Pride month during months other than June: Deutschland, Danmark, Nederland, to name a few.  For that reason, we included a month selection feature for each challenge entry, and we also featured a field to allow for the local spelling of the month name.  We feel this allows for increased inclusivity, and a recognition that each of our rowing communities and global Pride month celebrations are unique.
 


	 
 


	The application now displays all challenge entries by year and presents a compelling list of clubs, organizations, and businesses that actively support the LGBTQ rowing community.
 


	 
 


	With the introduction of the optional month selection, the Rainbow Logo Challenge now becomes a year-long engagement, providing more sustained visibility and support for the LGBTQ+ community within the rowing world.  It acknowledges the diversity of Pride month celebrations globally.
 


	 
 


	We believe this new application is a positive change that can expand the reach and impact of the Rainbow Logo Challenge initiative</description><enclosure url="https://www.glrf.info/uploads/monthly_2025_06/glrf_prideavatar2022_lrg.png.400b3f91629b1ce2dd25490bf03f2c6a.png" length="21000" type="image/png"/><pubDate>Mon, 02 Jun 2025 03:09:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>2025 Sin City Erg Report</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/2025-sin-city-erg-report-r269/</link><description>The Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation hosted its fourth indoor rowing event, the Sin City Erg, on Sunday, 19 January 2025, in Las Vegas, United States.  The event is part of the multi-sport festival known as the Sin City Classic.  The event draws over 8,000 participants who compete in 24 (at last count) sport and club tourneys, and is the largest annual LGBTQ+ sporting event in the world.
 


	 
 


	Framed as the Global LGBTQ+ Indoor Rowing Event, the 2025 Sin City Erg was held in the gymnasium of the Cambridge Recreation Center.  Twenty-one ergs were laid out in a two-row semicircle that faced a large projection screen.  A total of 61 events were offered in 1X, 2X, 4X, 8X, PR1, PR2, and PR3, for men, women, and non-binary genders.  The team events use a feature of the Concept2 race software that allows multiple participants to race as one boat.  
 


	 
 


	A total of 20 participants competed across 37 entries in 8 events:
 


	 
 


	&#xB7;         Over 44 men
 


	&#xB7;         Over 44 women
 


	&#xB7;         Under 45 men
 


	&#xB7;         Under 45 women
 


	&#xB7;         Open Women
 


	&#xB7;         Open Men
 


	&#xB7;         Team 2X Under 45 men
 


	&#xB7;         Team 2X Under 45 women
 


	 
 


	Participants hailed from Washington, Maryland, Florida, California, and Nevada.
 


	 
 


	Medals were awarded for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd places.  
 


	 
 


	The 2025 Sin City Erg marked the first active use of the Regattas+ listing feature on the GLRF website.  Take a look. GLRF members added themselves to Members Going.  Images were uploaded to albums. Results were added to Files. Comments were posted. The Seat Search feature was used for a Team 4X event.
 


	 
 


	The Regattas+ feature is available to any GLRF member to add a regatta, ergatta, or camp/clinic that would be of interest to the LGBTQ rowing community and/or that a GLRF member will be attending and hopes to meet up with others.
 


	 
 


	Do you have news that would be of interest to our community? Any GLRF member can add a news article. As long as the news article is rowing-related, it will be approved!</description><enclosure url="https://www.glrf.info/uploads/monthly_2025_07/IMG_0944.jpg.751ebef2dda64bb4cbab30043102046a.jpg" length="2204677" type="image/jpeg"/><pubDate>Thu, 23 Jan 2025 08:00:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Regattas+ Seat Search Feature Goes Live</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/regattas-seat-search-feature-goes-live-r266/</link><description>Seat Search as a concept began at the 1998 Gay Games when the WHOars needed a coxie for their 8+ and 4+.  With the launch of Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation website in 2003, we offered a Seat Search feature for featured regattas.  The idea of using a database was not really feasible for the website tools we were using at the time so the capabilities were limited.
 


	 
 


	Fast forward to December 2024 and now Rower Seat Search and Club Seat Search is a default feature in any Regattas+ listing.  For example, if a GLRF member added the Head of the Yarra in Melbourne as a Regattas+ listing, a rower could submit a seat search to race in a boat, and a rowing club or program could list a Club Seat Search for an opening in their boat maybe for a cox or for 6-seat.
 


	 
 


	What&#x2019;s the difference between a Rower Seat Search and a Club Seat Search? For a rower whose club is not going to a regatta or who wants to race in more than just one entry, the Rower Seat Search helps a rower announce that they are looking for an open seat in a race.  For a club or program that perhaps wants to enter two races but only has rowers for one boat and is short one or more for a second race, the Club Seat Search helps a to fill a boat.
 


	 
 


	Each Seat Search entry leverages the GLRF member profile to display key rower and coxie profile of data that is important for filling a boat.  The Seat Search feature provides for three categories: sweep, scull, and cox.  Seat Searches can be made for each category, &#x201C;rower looking for &#x2026;&#x201D; and &#x201C;club seeking a &#x2026;&#x201D;  
 


	 
 


	If this was available in 1998, the WHOars would have submitted a Club Seat Search for a coxie.
 


	 
 


	Regattas+ is part of the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation community platform that enables members to add their own regattas, ergattas, and rowing camps/clinics.  Every Regattas+ listing creates community for LGBTQ rowers by providing a RSVP-like members going feature, comments feature, upload files, and share images.  
 


	 
 


	Whether it is the Head of the Mississippi regatta or the Covered Bridge regatta or a Eurogames regatta, GLRF is helping to create community among LGBTQ+ rowers.
 


	 
 


	Of course, allies can join GLRF and add a Regattas+ listing.  GLRF doesn&#x2019;t ask anyone&#x2019;s sexual orientation.</description><enclosure url="https://www.glrf.info/uploads/monthly_2024_12/SeatSearch_example.png.44a136ff623aa9f7c887d1cfad37ad60.png" length="262279" type="image/png"/><pubDate>Fri, 13 Dec 2024 17:38:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>2025 Sin City Erg open for registration</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/2025-sin-city-erg-open-for-registration-r265/</link><description>Registration is open for the 2025 Sin City Erg.  Positioned as the global LGBTQ+ indoor rowing event, the competition will take place on Sunday, 19 January 2025 in Las Vegas.  
 


	 
 


	The Sin City Erg will be one of 27 sports that are part of the 2025 Sin City Classic multi-sport tournament. The event is held every year over the United States Martin Luther King holiday weekend.  Over 8,000 athletes are expected to attend, with some sports attracting hundreds if not thousands of participants.  The largest sport participation totals from 2024:
 


	 
 


	
		Softball: 2,579
	
	
		Kickball: 1,482
	
	
		Women&#x2019;s Softball: 814
	
	
		Dodgeball: 761
	
	
		Volleyball: 492
	
	
		Soccer: 345
	
	
		Flag Football: 302
	
	
		Pickleball: 194
	
	
		Tennis: 183
	
	
		Sand Volleyball: 159
	
	
		Cheerleading: 159
	



	 
 


	The Sin City Erg has been held three times since 2020.  The big draw for indoor rowers is the selection of both individual and team events.  Using the Concept2 Race software, teams can be created from the athletes sitting on the ergs, creating double, quadruple, and octuple races.  The display shows the associated team boats racing down the course.  Perfect for teams, clubs, and programmes to compete against each other.  With 24 ergs, the opportunities to compete in a 2X, 4X, and 8X team event are endless!
 


	 
 


	If you only look at the Regatta Central counts for the 2024 Sin City Erg, you will be misled.  There were 16 participants in 27 entries for 11 events.  We had several walk-up registrations.
 


	 
 


	Bring your friends, partners, husbands, and wives.  There are sports in which they can participate as well as all the fun of Vegas!
 


	 
 


	Early registration closes on 15 November and regular registration opens on 16 November.  There are unlimited entries for one participant fee.  
 


	 
 


	The Sin City Erg is presented by the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation (GLRF).  Login to the GLRF website and follow the event and indicate if you are going!</description><enclosure url="https://www.glrf.info/uploads/monthly_2024_11/20240114_103946.jpg.f126160a77b704517eac54f0a2e4cd4c.jpg" length="2459178" type="image/jpeg"/><pubDate>Sun, 10 Nov 2024 19:43:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>GLRF Community Platform V2.0 Launched</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/glrf-community-platform-v20-launched-r264/</link><description>After years of promises and significant personal and developer delays, the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation&#x2019;s new online community platform is now live.  The platform was officially opened for new registrations on 21 October 2024.  What&#x2019;s so different?  Just about everything!
 


	 
 


	Probably the most important change is that V2.0 is responsive.  What does that mean?  For all you mobile users, you can browse and interact with the community with any mobile device, phone, or tablet, all day and all night.  Just type in the GLRF url, glrf.info, into any browser on your mobile and you will see and use just about every feature available that you would find on a desktop or laptop. 
 


	 
 


	Brand new to the V2.0 is  Regattas+  The section allows any GLRF member to list any rowing-related regatta, ergatta, and camp/clinic.  When we say any, we mean any: LGBTQ+-focused or not.  If you have a favorite rowing regatta, you can list it, and once listed, GLRF members can follow the listing to see who is going, track comments, see any uploaded files, and share images.  Every listing is designed to have an overview description (provided by a GLRF member) as well as links for the regatta website and registration.  Even better, any GLRF member can edit the listing if the description or dates or url is incorrect.  Best of all, there is a Member Going feature.  Yes, you can click &#x201C;I&#x2019;m Going&#x201D; and the rest of the community can see that!
 


	 
 


	Probably the most visited aspect of the community is the Gallery.  Not only renamed, but completely redesigned, the Gallery removes endless layers of categories and subcategories and simply offers albums.  GLRF members can create their own albums or add to existing with absolute ease.  Since the gallery is an intrinsic part of the platform, GLRF members can find the gallery albums connected with the Community Calendar Events section and the Regattas+ section.
 


	 
 


	Another major remodel was the Countries section.  Now found under Connections, the Members, section allows visitors to click on every country with a GLRF member and see member demographics by region and metroarea.  We have added a country moderator feature that allows one or more country-specific GLRF members to send emails to all or portions of a given country. 
 


	 
 


	The Initiatives section is brand new and supports the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation&#x2019;s goals to promote inclusion and acceptance, and to promote rowing in the broader LGBTQ+ community.
 


	 
 


	We encourage everyone to reconnect with our global rowing community.  Log in and update your profile, or if you have heard about our community but kept putting it off, take the plunge and register &#x2013; it&#x2019;s free! 
 


	 
 


	Oh, we almost forgot!  Yes, there is an app!  It&#x2019;s a PWA or progressive web app.  It looks and acts like a native application from the Google Store or the Apple Store but just works on any browser in a phone or tablet without all the updating and downloading.  Need some help? Click over to our FAQ's.</description><enclosure url="https://www.glrf.info/uploads/monthly_2024_10/Screenshot_20241028_232319_Chrome.jpg.5148be72c36f0688b9045f3953c4bad7.jpg" length="258052" type="image/jpeg"/><pubDate>Tue, 29 Oct 2024 06:41:10 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Twenty years at the Head of the Charles</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/twenty-years-at-the-head-of-the-charles-r263/</link><description>The Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation marked 20 years of hosting a booth at the Head of the Charles Regatta and Festival on 18 &#x2013; 20 Oct 2024.  Situated along non-profit row, the booth is 100 meters before the finish line and affords some great viewing as crews battle to the finish.  
 


	 
 


	The booth is located along a footpath fronting the Charles River.  The booth location creates a bottleneck among the foot traffic flow that creates incredible visibility for approaching crews, coaches, visitors, and parents.  Flowing from the finish line towards the main expo of the festival, everyone has to pass in front of the booth before they can peel off in one of several directions.    
 


	 
 


	There were displays for the Rower&#x2019;s Pledge, the GLRF global initiative to promote inclusion and acceptance in the broader rowing community, and for the 2025 Sin City Erg, in January 2025 in Las Vegas.  Booth visitors enjoyed inspecting the various GLRF t-shirts, hoodies, and headwear.  
 


	 
 


	In all the years of hosting a booth, this weekend seemed to be the best with only a touch of wind on Friday and sunny skies every day.  Yes, it was jacket chilly in the morning but by Noon, all of us began shedding layers.  At the booth we had GLRF members @DPH2002, @Bob715, and @Howie55.
 


	 
 


	Throughout the weekend, GLRF members stopped by to say hello. It was great catching up with @omac, @DESIGNINGJIM35, @rowrgrl, @OneChocolateRower, @chgorower, @jalfano, @philly_cox, @rasta,and several coaches and coxies whose userids we can&#x2019;t recall.  It was great catching up with allies John and Charlotte from Calm Waters Rowing, Chris from Rowing News, and Bobbie from the Crew Classic.   
 


	 
 


	Do you have images you would like to share from the Head of the Charles?  Create a new album or add to this one!</description><enclosure url="https://www.glrf.info/uploads/monthly_2024_10/HOCR2024_038.JPG.5054bfa2b1ee5a27bde9dd9fa46b7494.JPG" length="2451939" type="image/jpeg"/><pubDate>Sat, 26 Oct 2024 03:53:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>The Global Lgbtq+ Indoor Rowing Event</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/the-global-lgbtq-indoor-rowing-event-r262/</link><description>If you are new to the Sin City Erg, it is an indoor erg event that is part of the largest annual LGBTQ+ sporting event in the world, the Sin City Classic, that takes place in Las Vegas, Nevada United States. The event is held on the American holiday weekend called Martin Luther King (MLK). 
 


	 
 


	In 2023, there will be 27 sports at the Classic. Each sport is organized and hosted by its own sporting body, be it a local sports team or a national sports organization. The sports are held in various places all over Las Vegas while the &#x2018;festival&#x2019; if you want to call it that, is headquarterd at a block of three hotels on the Las Vegas Strip: Flamingo, LINQ, and Ballys (soon to be Horsehoe). 
 


	 
 


	The Sin City Classic started as a softball tournament but now has grown to an umbrella event that hosts parties for the participants, offers charity events, and serves to bring all the sports together for the weekend.
 


	 
 


	The Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation (GLRF) was aware of the Sin City Classic but never really understood the scope of the multi-sport LGBTQ+ tournament. In early January 2019, after reading a press release about a new addition to the Sin City Classic sports lineup, e-gaming, we had one of those revelatory moments that this would be a perfect spot for an LGBTQ+ erg event. After attending the 2019 Sin City Classic and experiencing the parties and watching some of the sports, we knew this would be the ultimate and perfect setting for an LGBTQ+ erg event.
 


	
		A central destination that is easy to reach for domestic and international air traffic.
	
	
		An extremely lgbtq-friendly city.
	
	
		An event that is held at the same time at the same location every year.
	
	
		More than just an erg competition &#x2013; a gathering of 8,000 sports-minded folk that offers something for everyone, including the husbands, wives, and friends that come along.
	
	
		The perfect setting for a potential annual meeting of the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation
	



	The Sin City Erg offers a competitive selection of individual and team events and the idea of including team events was specifically targeted for inclusive rowing clubs and rowing studios as well as LGBTQ+ rowing clubs so that teams could compete together against other clubs. These team events are accomplished by using an existing feature in the Concept2 indoor race software.
 


	 
 


	Beyond the Sin City Erg, the Sin City Classic offers a weekend getaway that provides not only lots of parties but also the chance to see shows, dine at amazing restaurants, explore the nearby parks, hike in the nearby mountains, visit museums, and of course, shopping. Las Vegas is actually a very family friendly location and GLRF is very proud that the Sin City Erg is open to age 13+. 
 


	 
 


	What is the tempo?
 


	
		12 January 2023: Thursday is the Early Bird Party
	
	
		13 January 2023: Friday has some sports already underway.
	
	
		13 January 2023: Friday night is the Registration Party where all the sports host a table in a ginormous ballroom at the Flamingo Hotel and where many of the athletes come to pick up their registration envelopes provided by the individual sports. There are floor games, bars, and some delicious eye candy since the adult industry hosts some booths as well.
	
	
		14 January 2023: Saturday is busy all over Las Vegas as the sports tournaments gets underway. The Sin City Erg setup starts at the Chuck Minker Sports Complex.
	
	
		14 January 2023: Saturday night has another big party.
	
	
		15 January 2023: Sunday more sports tournaments continue. The Sin City Erg event gets underway.
	
	
		15 January 2023: Sunday night is the closing party.
	
	
		13 - 15 January 2023: Alongside the Sin City Classic, the Hustlaball Las Vegas is also running at the same time.
	



	Truly the Sin City Erg is perfectly positioned as the Global LGBTQ+ Indoor Rowing event. Registration is open at Regatta Central.</description><enclosure url="https://www.glrf.info/uploads/monthly_2024_10/blog-0508263001669317669.png.cb88a800dd41c0e48bf05e391104e237.png" length="260559" type="image/png"/><pubDate>Thu, 24 Nov 2022 18:56:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>The Fear Amongst Us</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/the-fear-amongst-us-r261/</link><description>Fear simmers inside every LGBTQ person.  Even as society is deemed to be &#x2018;so accepting,&#x2019; every person who contemplates coming out today still trembles at the moment of revelation.  In video clips in 2022, you can still see people (celebrities/athletes) break down in tears, displaying the raw feeling of shame and fear associated with coming out.    What are these fears? Rejection by your teammates Discrimination by your school, club, or coach Retribution towards your place on the roster, to your gear, your house, your boat Isolation from your &#x2018;friends&#x2019; Judgement of you as a person because you are publicly part of the LGBTQ community Abandonment by your family Despisement of your orientation Resentment towards a perceived desire for special treatment  Before LGBTQ acceptance in society became so commonplace, the LGBTQ community kept to themselves, seeking safety in the self-affirming gatherings spots of LGBTQ neighborhoods, clubs, and bars.  When you looked a stranger or coworker in the eye, you didn&#x2019;t know what they were thinking or how they might judge you if you shared your sexual orientation or it was discovered.    All of these issues are still a part of the LGBTQ rowing community.  The shooting at the Club Q in Colorado Springs at midnight on November 19th reaches inside the soul of every LGBTQ person in the United States and draws out these fears.    Certainly, one or many could say this was the work and action of a lone, crazed person.  This is not how you, your club, and your boat feel but the threat is still very real.  This shooting puts us all on edge, forcing us to look around at strangers and teammates, wondering what they are thinking about you and the LGBTQ community.   There has been an outpouring of support on social media towards the LGBTQ community in Colorado Springs.  Those messages are comforting but don&#x2019;t have a significant meaning to the rowers in your rowing program or your rowing club.    We call on every rowing club and rowing program at every level in the United States to show your support for your LGBTQ rowers with a meaningful gesture and message of acceptance.  Display a rainbow flag, and it doesn&#x2019;t matter if it has five or 8 colors.  It&#x2019;s the message, and along with it, send out an email to everyone in the club or program that declares the importance of the action: that LGBTQ rowers are welcome and accepted and respected.  Just display the flag for three days or whatever time you feel is warranted but make sure the message goes out to the members.  It sets an example for your club or program and it sends a profound message.  We urge you to do this now, in the next few hours and days, while the hurt, the fear, and the doubt lingers within our minds.    If your club or program feels that displaying a flag falls flat, consider putting on a group row where everyone wears a type of rainbow clothing and when we say everyone, it will have a lot more meaning if the straight members do it than the LGBTQ rowers.   Finally, there could not be a more profound and lasting message of acceptance than if individual members of your rowing club or program sign the Rower&#x2019;s Pledge.  The pledge signatures are counted and displayed in total for a given rowing club or program.  That has meaning.     If you haven't done so already, order a free Rower's Pledge sticker to display on your locker, your office door, or in your boathouse.</description><pubDate>Mon, 21 Nov 2022 23:05:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Coming Out Is Not A Grand Ticker Tape Parade</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/coming-out-is-not-a-grand-ticker-tape-parade-r260/</link><description>11 October is National Coming Out Day in the United States. It really should be International Coming Out Day since so many LGBTQ+ people worldwide face the same issues and, in some cases, with much worse reactions.  For many people, coming out is the moment they make the public leap that has loomed in their conscience for years.  It is a moment of celebration and cause for applause.  It is also the final plunge into an abyss of fear and rejection that each person faces as they make their public announcement.    In the last few years, at the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation regatta booths, visitors have wondered if our organization is still necessary? Do LGBTQ+ rowers really need a sense of community, a way to connect and find other, like-minded folks?  Look at how open our society has become.  These people say: &#x201C;It&#x2019;s not an issue anymore.  At the secondary school level and at university, no one raises an eyebrow or passes judgement.&#x201D;   But it is an issue. There are so many people in the rowing community who are burdened with conformance and acceptance.  It isn&#x2019;t just the teammates, although that is the most biting in a person&#x2019;s mind.  It is the worry about what the coach will think, how he/she/they will treat them in practice, in racing for seats, and how the coach may change their view of a person&#x2019;s potential performance just based on someone who has &#x201C;come out.&#x201D;  Then there are the parents.  Then there are the teachers, the professors, and the hiring managers.   Do we need to treat this person with kid gloves because they came out? Do we have to watch everything we say? Do they need to be treated with deference? Will this person now be another political activist and everything we do on the team will be about equality and the words we use?   If there is one benefit of the Trump years, it has been the revelation that all these presumptive assumptions that the LGBTQ+ community is widely accepted is not true, and the simmering prejudices are revealed once again.  To verify that declaration, we look to the news story in the New York Times, today, 11 October 2022, that relayed an audio recording of three Los Angeles City Council members using caustic racial slurs about other council members and constituents.  In CALIFORNIA! In LA!  Prejudice remains deeply rooted in our lives.   Every person&#x2019;s conscience is filled with meeting expectations.  Rowing is a small part. From there, the perception and expectation of what someone will become has been communicated by friends, family, and co-workers.  It may be easy for Tabatha, Sam and Steven but that doesn&#x2019;t mean it is easy for others.   Coming Out is not the grand ticker tape parade everyone makes it out to be.  What follows after can be the most daunting.   Watch this Tiktok video by Barrett D. Carroll. It really says it all.   The Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation serves to inspirit those in the LGBTQ+ rowing community that we are there, in every aspect of rowing, and that the drive for acceptance and inclusion will continue.</description><pubDate>Wed, 12 Oct 2022 07:27:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Survey on Rowing Diversity Equity and Inclusion</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/survey-on-rowing-diversity-equity-and-inclusion-r218/</link><description>USRowing is running a survey on retention and experiences/perspectives with regard to diversity and inclusion.   The survey is being run independently by Truclusion and all survey responses will be viewed by them and not USRowing.  Truclusion will then provide a summary of the findings to USRowing with suggestions on how USRowing can become more diverse, inclusive, and sustainable.   You don't have to be a member of USRowing to take the survey!   Click this link to take the survey.</description><pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 2022 21:02:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Rowers And Rowing Venues In A Changing Political Climate</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/rowers-and-rowing-venues-in-a-changing-political-climate-r259/</link><description>By Brian Todd and John Olbrys   The United States is undergoing a marked shift in its political ideology as individual states enact a number of laws affecting both the LGBTQ+ community and the broader population.   Florida&#x2019;s &#x201C;Parental Rights in Education&#x201D; bill, more commonly referred to as the &#x201C;Don&#x2019;t Say Gay&#x201D; bill, took effect on 01 July 2022. At least a dozen states proposed similar legislation: Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Tennessee.   An 08 July 2022 article in the New York Times examines the explosive rise in book bans across the United States, mostly targeted at LGBTQ+-themed books.  The article cites challenges and protests in New Jersey, Arkansas, Illinois, California, Virginia, and North Carolina.  At least five states have passed laws that support removing books (that have received complaints) from libraries.   Bans on transgender youth sports participation are codified in eighteen states: Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas , Utah, and West Virginia.   These issues point to a geographic landscape that is becoming less and less friendly towards the LGBTQ+ rowers, coaches, and their families who travel to the biggest rowing venues around the East Coast, South, and Mid-West of the United States.   In response, the DC Strokes Rowing Club called for a boycott of the USRowing Masters Nationals Championships at Nathan Benderson Park in Sarasota County, Florida due to the recently passed &#x201C;Don&#x2019;t Say Gay&#x201D; law. They also implied that USRowing should avoid holding major national regattas, to include championships and trials events, in states with laws unfriendly to LGBTQ+ people to help guarantee their safety and comfort during these events.  Boycotting or avoiding holding a regatta in one state, such as Florida, with anti-LGBTQ+ laws would necessitate corollary similar actions for all other states listed above.  This would mean that USRowing would not host events in or on: Oakridge, TN; Chattanooga, TN; Harsha Lake, OH; Sarasota, FL; Oklahoma City, OK; and Austin, TX.   A multi-state boycott is a problem for a few reasons. First: USRowing would no longer hold races on the only purpose-built, World Rowing class A course in the country, Nathan Benderson Park. Second: the untenable position would alienate rowers in all those states affected by the boycott. Third, even as a boycott may steer money away from state coffers, it also deprives local LGBTQ+ and LGBTQ+ friendly organizations from revenue they might otherwise receive from the regatta-associated tourism. These businesses are on the front line in local communities, helping to support and promote LGBTQ+ visibility.     A boycott also hands the conservative agenda a victory by removing the presence of LGBTQ+ rowers and supportive rowing community allies at local regattas.  It is our view that having a visible presence in a repressive cultural environment challenges people to confront their personal bias and hatred as they interact and discover that the LGBTQ+ rowing community and their allies are their friends, neighbors, and respected, valued members of the larger community.   As an international individual membership organization, the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation (GLRF) currently counts 1,747 members in 43 countries of which 1,012 members are located in the United States. Those members live in 46 states and the District of Columbia. While GLRF respects the right of every member to support the DC Strokes call for a boycott, we as an organization must reflect our broader membership by supporting the rowers where they row. Acceptance and inclusion are the most important issues that LGBTQ+ rowers face at clubs, programs, and at regattas. LGBTQ+ youth in particular needs visible examples of their futures selves at rowing venues across the country.</description><pubDate>Sun, 10 Jul 2022 16:51:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>2022 Eurogames Rowing Event Nijmegen (NED)</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/2022-eurogames-rowing-event-nijmegen-ned-r217/</link><description>&#x200B;https://eurogames2022.eu/sports/rowing/ ROWING TOURNAMENT The match will be a board to board race over a distance of 750 metres. One on one races according to a knock-out system; if you win, you progress to the next round, but if you lose, you are out of the tournament. There are two lanes for the match and a uprowing-area.															Thursday 28 July									13:00-15:00									Time trials 750m all disciplines															 									15:30-17:00									Knock-out 1st round 750m all disciplines															Friday 29 July									9:00-16:30									Knock-out 750m all disciplines															Saturday 30 July									9:00-12:30									Knock-out 750m all disciplines															 									13:30-15:00									Finals 750m all disciplines															 									15:00-17:00									Open rowing event</description><pubDate>Wed, 13 Apr 2022 19:52:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Eurogames 2022 Rowing Invitation</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/eurogames-2022-rowing-invitation-r258/</link><description>Dear rowing enthusiasts,   Hereby we would like to invite you, your association and fellow rowing enthusiasts to attend and participate in the EuroGames 2022 Love to Move in Nijmegen from 27 July to 30 July 2022.   The EuroGames are an annual inclusive sports event; the edition in Nijmegen offers 19 different sports and expects around 2,000 participants of all levels, from beginner to advanced, to attend. For more information on this amazing meeting between sport fans, please visit www.eurogames2022.eu. All athletes are welcome! The EuroGames are an outstanding example of an event for the LGBTQI+ community and is thoroughly supported by the European Gay and Lesbian Sports Federation in particular.  RV de Waal, RV De Drie Provinci&#xEB;n and NSRV Phocas will organize a regatta during the EuroGames 2022! This regatta will take place along the Spiegelwaal in Nijmegen on 28, 29 and 30 July 2022. The various races will be held over 750 meters at a beautiful location right next to the historical city centre of Nijmegen. You can find the tournament details, costs and schedule on www.eurogames2022.eu/sports/rowing.   We would be incredibly honoured and pleased to meet you and your fellow rowers in Nijmegen. Furthermore, numerous fun side events will be organised during the sports tournament. Prior to the EuroGames you might want to enjoy the festivities of/or take part in the 104th 4Days Marches, the world&#x2019;s largest walking achievement event (www.4daagse.nl). Or you can travel to Amsterdam after the EuroGames, to attend the Pride Amsterdam from 30 July to 7 August (https://pride.amsterdam/). To ensure a great event, we wish to invite as many rowers as possible from all over Europe. Will you help us to reach all the rowers we can? If so, please share this e-mail with as many rowers, umpires and others associated with rowing as you can.   You can register via the website and also find more information there. We will keep you informed.   Met vriendelijke groet, With kind regards,   C&#xE9;derique Ortmans, Coordinator Rowing EuroGames 2022 Nijmegen    T: +31 6 53 40 40 31 E: rowing@eurogames2022.eu W: www.eurogames2022.eu</description><pubDate>Sat, 02 Apr 2022 02:31:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>2021 Sin City Erg Cancelled</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/2021-sin-city-erg-cancelled-r257/</link><description>It&#x2019;s time.  We need to call it, and we&#x2019;re not talking about the election.  The Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation has come to the conclusion that the 2021 Sin City Erg must be canceled.  This decision was not taken lightly, and it is particularly difficult just as we were starting to create momentum for the Sin City Erg event.  2021 would have been our second year to run the competition and it is unique in that our erg competition, focused on lgbtq+ participation, includes men, women, and non-binary categories, and we offer both individual and team competition.  A team category allows clubs to compete amongst each other (in 2x and 4x) as well as providing an opportunity for teammates to support their LGBTQ+ club members by participating in their squad or team.    We do plan to host 2022 Sin City Erg in Las Vegas, United States on 16 January 2022, and we encourage anyone interested in learning more about the event to subscribe to our email list for updates and announcements.   Although there is a set of decision making protocols published by various national rowing federations for rowing competitions, our concerns about the 2021 event began to develop with the publication of an article on 02 April 2020 in Science Magazine, suggesting that the coronavirus spreads through the aerosolization of the virus.    As rowers, we all know how hard we&#x2019;re breathing when doing a piece on the erg.  Then more news began to emerge about super spreader events at choral events where people are exhaling forcefully.  Over the next few months, the media and the focus of the coronavirus spread turned away from touching infected surfaces to wearing masks to avoid catching or spreading the virus.  The issue culminated with the American president, Donald Trump, contracting the virus, and no mention in any media article was made of him or anyone around him having contracted the virus from touching an infected surface or from touching their faces or eyes.  To us, it doesn&#x2019;t seem like an indoor rowing event is well suited in the current Covid-19 environment.   Certainly, clubs do have outdoor erg sessions, even before the emergence of the coronavirus.  To safely host an outdoor rowing event, competitors would have to be spaced at least six feet apart, and given what we now know about the aerosolization of Covid-19, the ergs would have to be spread much further apart.  A recent article in MSN News published on 13 October 2020 does support the possibility of hosting an outdoor event.   However, an erg competition requires that all the rowing machines be wired together and to a computer.  There is a minimum distance from the computer to the first rowing machine and also between the machines.    The competitive fervor of the event comes from the close side-by-side proximity of the competitors as well as the visual display of progress of the competitors in a racetrack-like display projected on a screen.  It is difficult to project the race display indoors and to try to display the video outdoors would be extremely challenging.    If an outdoor rowing event is pursued, then there is the weather, either too hot or perhaps too rainy, which in both cases is probable in Las Vegas in January.  Finally, there is the issue of masks which seem antithetical to rowing fast on an erg, and even if we could hold an event with masks, the burden of ensuring everyone, spectator and competitor, is wearing a mask [properly, over nose and mouth] makes the event extremely challenging, potentially a liability for GLRF, and turns the event from enthusiasm into unpleasant enforcement.   We held out hope that perhaps a vaccine would emerge that would allow the Sin City Erg to proceed but three media articles spread really cold water on that arousing hope: a Marketwatch interview on 01 August 2020 with Dr. Michael Osterholm, epidemiologist at the University of Minnesota, who states that the virus will be around for our lifetime and that effective vaccines are a long ways off. a Politico article published on 25 September 2020 that predicts how the Pandemic will finally end, suggesting that a return to normal will take place around November 2021. a Wall Street Journal interview published on 07 September 2020 with the CEO of Netflix, Reed Hastings, who projected that workers could return to work around six months after a vaccine had been distributed.  His statement implies when corporations will feel comfortable having people congregate closely, something that is a fundamental part of an erg event.  We also have subscriptions to daily email updates from the New York Times Coronavirus Briefing and the Los Angeles Times Coronavirus Today.  The news in the past few weeks has been extremely discouraging as the rate of new infections has risen at an alarming rate.  Two recent media articles about the rise of the infections helped cement our decision to cancel: a MSN News Intelligencer opinion article dated 12 October 2020 that predicts &#x201C;a fall and winter could make the cornonavirus not just more infectious but more lethal likely&#x2026;&#x201D; a Wall Street Journal article dated 15 October 2020 that looks at why Covid-19 is spreading again, and points to an issue the LGBTQ+ community can totally relate: being safe fatigue.  Finally, we found this Motley Fool article dated 06 October 2020 that paints a bleak picture of how Clark County and the City of Las Vegas are embracing a virus-safe environment.   All of these factors point to the possibility of infections among spectators, volunteers, and participants.  For us, even one infection is too many.</description><pubDate>Tue, 20 Oct 2020 20:31:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Eurogames 2020 Postponed</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/eurogames-2020-postponed-r256/</link><description>As most rowers are aware, a cascade of rowing regatta cancellations has occurred in the past 30 days around the world.     GLRF has been monitoring the Eurogames 2020 website for any updates.  On 16 April 2020, the Eurogames 2020 organization announced the postponment of the event with no proposed or published future date.  If you read the news announcement, it implies that the Eurogames 2020 organizing committee is hoping to bump their event into 2021, thereby pushing future Eurogames events further out.     Of equal importance is the legal terms of the status of the event: postponed and not cancelled.  This affects any athlete who has registered and paid.  In effect, it delays or prevents the automatic issuance of refunds.  The language of the Eurogames 2020 announcement about refunds appears bewildering.  They state that while the event is in the postponment status, there is no effect [change] on potential refunds.  However, if you read their earlier news post, Eurogames 2020 did change the terms and conditions such that the regular cancellation deadline has been moved back to 30 June 2020.     Still confused? If we are correctly connecting the dots, an athlete who has registered may request a cancellation refund, if they want, between now and 30 June 2020.  Reading the Terms section of the website, section 7, Cancellation Policy: if you cancel by 30 June 2020, you get a 50% refund of the 'participation fee' which is Euro 80 for EGLSF members and Euro 100 for non-EGLSF members.  The terms do not address the sports fee, which for rowing is Euro 20.  The terms seem to imply that sports fees, similar to purchased tickets, are non-refundable. if you cancel after 30 June 2020, you can get a 50% refund but only if you provide proof of illness. if the event is cancelled by Eurogames 2020 organizers, a refund of at least 70% of all fees will be made (implying that the refund could be more, and since they say "all fees," that might include the sports fees.)  Obviously, an event cancellation means a huge loss of income to Eurogames 2020 and that explains their deliberate use of the term postponment.  This is no different than the San Diego Crew Classic which canceled their event this spring.  In the Crew Classic email that was sent to vendors, they asked vendors to forego a refund and receive a 50% discount on a vendor booth for 2021.  The Crew Classic organizing committee, while not sharing the actual financials, implied in their email that the event cancellation would have a massive financial impact on their organization and their ability to host the event going forward.</description><pubDate>Sat, 18 Apr 2020 21:29:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Announcing Our First Partnership Rowing Travel Tour</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/announcing-our-first-partnership-rowing-travel-tour-r255/</link><description>The Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation is very excited to announce our partnership with Rowing The World.  This rowing travel company specializes in trips for rowers in many destinations around the world.  Because many gay and lesbian (LGBTQ+) travelers enjoy an opportunity to travel with like-minded members of their community, we thought it would be brilliant to create an LGBTQ+ focused rowing tour.    The Rowing The World tours are full package vacations (holidays).  The first LGBTQ+-focused trip will be magical Lago Maggiore in northern Italy, with a 7-day rowing tour beginning 27 September 2020. http://lgbtrowingtour.glrf.info  Everyone is welcome to enjoy the trip.  You certainly do not have to be a member of the Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation.  However, one of the benefits of our partnership with Rowing The World is a CDN$100 discount for GLRF OnTheWater members for the trip.   Although GLRF OnTheWater members do receive a tour discount, there are no revenue sharing arrangements with Rowing The World. All participants, including GLRF staff, pay the same tour price. For GLRF, the partnership creates an additional benefit for its members, to enjoy rowing in a recreational format with a community-focused environment. Note that Rowing The World offers a further discount if five or more members join the tour from one club.     If you or any of your club members have any questions, please contact Rowing The World at https://rowingtheworld.com/contact/  and you can also use this link to sign up for their general email list.   Here is a link to the poster promoting the rowing tour.  We hope you will post it at your club or forward it along to your members.   Ciao!</description><pubDate>Tue, 03 Dec 2019 21:49:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Black Friday/cyber Monday Deal On Lgbtq+ Rowing Tour</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/black-fridaycyber-monday-deal-on-lgbtq-rowing-tour-r254/</link><description>Rowing The World has published a special discount for rowers interested in the Lake Maggiore LGBTQ+ rowing tour.  Here is the excerpt from their most recent newsletter.      Fantastico!!!   Meraviglioso!!!</description><pubDate>Fri, 29 Nov 2019 03:29:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>The 2018-2019 Florida Rowing Center Season's Online Registration Is Now Open</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/the-2018-2019-florida-rowing-center-seasons-online-registration-is-now-open-r253/</link><description>This just in from Marlene Royle! The 2018-2019 Florida Rowing Center Season's online registration is now open.    Opening day: Friday, 21 December 2018 Closing day: Sunday, 28 April 2019 Click here to register for your session.  **** Work with our top notch coaching staff to raise your sculling to the next level. Read about the Florida Rowing Center's Professional Coaching Staff. Tuition includes:coaching, videotaping with critique, use of Florida Rowing Center's equipment for the on-water sessions daily hot breakfast with the coaches and other students a Florida Rowing Center T-shirt. A 10% discount is applied if booked one month in advance. We also offer group rates. For program questions please email: info@floridarowingcenter.com 211 Palm Beach/Treasure Coast PO Box 3588 Lantana, FL 33465</description><pubDate>Fri, 13 Jul 2018 22:50:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>GLRF hosts booth at 2017 World Champs</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/glrf-hosts-booth-at-2017-world-champs-r216/</link><description>The Gay + Lesbian Rowing Federation hosted a booth at the 2017 World Rowing Championships, 23 September &#x2013; 01 October 2017.   This was the first time GLRF has hosted a booth at a world championship elite event.  Examples of elite events would be Junior, Under23, and Senior championships, as well as the Olympics.  In non-Olympic years, the World Championships features 21 boat classes.   The event spans nine days, with the first day officially counted as the Opening Ceremony, and the competition then follows for the next eight days.  To be present for 9 days would have been too costly, so GLRF hosted a vendor booth on the final Friday, Saturday, and Sunday of competition, 29 Sep &#x2013; 01 Oct 2017.   Sixty nine countries (yes, we know &#x2026;) brought teams to compete at the event.  Although this was the first GLRF experience at a World Championship event, it appeared to go well beyond a high-profile regatta - more like a festival or regional fair.  The number of food and non-food vendors, beyond rowing, was amazing.  The vendors would change every day, and many folks had nothing to do with rowing.  This is understandable in that Sarasota County wanted to involve as many local businesses and residents as they showcased the new rowing venue to world.      Built specifically as a world championship rowing venue, the Nathan Benderson Park rowing facility is the first new rowing venue in North America since the Long Beach Marine stadium was built for the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics.  The venue was built specifically to World Rowing specifications, with 8 competition lanes, and separate warm up and cool down areas, separated by an embankment.   On the first day, the GLRF booth was located in what we described as the Family Fun area.  Although there were people and rowers walking by, we really didn&#x2019;t have the visibility we wanted.  The booth was behind the grandstands and all we could do was listen to the screams and cheers.  With the encouragement and initiative of the GLRF booth neighbor, Strokeside Designs, we both moved our booth locations to empty booth locations directly in view of the rowing course, and viewing tents.  Located exactly at the 1750m. mark, the GLRF booth was perfect to watch the final sprints of some spectacular races.  View the booth pics here.   The reception by World Rowing and the regatta committee towards was absolutely professional. We wondered what the reaction might be from the local community and/or the coaches and the athletes.  The former were super friendly, and the latter, mostly uninterested.  The fact that athletes didn&#x2019;t mob the GLRF booth isn&#x2019;t a surprise.  Most come to race, and leave.  Some coaches studied the booth, and a couple of the coaching staff stopped in for a shirt or two.  Even so, having the opportunity to be visible to countless athletes and their coaching and national staff entourage was worthwhile.   The weather in Sarasota was incredibly hot and on some days, unbelievably humid (muggy).  A few entries dropped out from the heat.  Yes, it rained.  The highlight of the event was the opportunity to step out of the booth and talk to the athletes.  All of them seemed very accessible and very nonchalant about their elite status.</description><enclosure url="https://www.glrf.info/uploads/monthly_2024_10/3246fc98da6257eaba93615900868c31.jpg.70ff7b0161c6e3cb7d92a7e3a979c177.jpg" length="679173" type="image/jpeg"/><pubDate>Mon, 02 Oct 2017 01:50:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Rowing Registration For Paris 2018 Opens 04 September</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/rowing-registration-for-paris-2018-opens-04-september-r252/</link><description>Rowers will be able to register for the rowing regatta for the Paris 2018 Gay Games starting on 04 September 2017.

  Since the regatta is being presented within the Gay Games multi-sport event, rowers will need to register as a participant for the 2018 Gay Games. This means each competitor has to pay a participant fee and a sports fee.   The participant fee is a fixed fee that provides your pass to the Gay Games event, and is currently listed at Euros 160.  That fee is time and subscription based and will  increase to Euros 175 on 01 Oct 2017 or earlier if subscription levels reach the next benchmark.  Even though rowing is only now being opened for registration, Paris 2018 has said rowers must pay the current participant fee of Euros 160 instead of the initial participant fee of Euros 120.   The rowing fee will be offered at a discounted fee of Euros 70 from 04 Sep 2017 - 24 Sep 2017.  After that, the rowing sports fee will be Euros 90.      It is important to note that the rowing page of the Paris 2018 website indicates the maximum participant level is 250 participants.  Update 19 Sep 2017: this maximum participant setting was originally posted at 100, and in typical right hand/left hand fashion, the web programmers inputted that as a maximum of 100 when the regatta committee had tried to communicate that number was a minimum.  The    Initial indications are that boat rental fees will be included in the rowing sports fee.  However, that may change and competitors need to be aware of that fact.   The Paris 2018 website lists exchange rates that are out of date.  Listed below are the current exchange rate for rowers. Keep in mind that credit card companies will charge a higher exchange rate than what is listed here, for their profit: Australia: EU 1 = AUD 1.51 Canada:  EU 1 = CAD 1.517.44 Denmark: EU 1 = DKK 1 New Zealand: EU 1 = NZD 1.6 Sweden: EU 1 = SEK 9.50 United Kingdom: EU 1 = GBP 0.92 United States: EU 1 = USD 1.19  The regatta will be held on the Lac de Vaires-sur-Marne (otherwise known as Lac de Chelles-Vaires).  The venue, originally built as part of the Paris 2012 bid for the Olympics, will be the site for the 2024 summer Olympics rowing, canoe, and kayak competitions..  The site is currently under construction to add a 250 meter white water slalom course, media spaces, and accommodation for athletes. Construction is scheduled to be completed in 2018.   The Paris 2018 regatta will offer events in open and masters categories in the following boat classes: single (1X) double (2X) pair (2-) quad (4X) four (4-) eight (8+)  GLRF members can join the All Oars group for Paris 2018 - http://paris2018regattagroup.glrf.info</description><pubDate>Wed, 30 Aug 2017 16:11:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Summer Sculling In London</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/summer-sculling-in-london-r250/</link><description>Craftsbury is nice but there are some other sculling clinics that are pretty nice.  London in the summer is nice. Combine a Tideway Summer Sculling Course with a vacation in England, Scotland, or Wales, and well, you have a very nice getaway planned.     But wait, you haven't tried the grey stuff - it's delicious, ask the dishes!  Yes, airfares to Europe are super cheap, and the Brexit effect has made spending in the UK affordable.   What's not to like?!   Tideway Scullers School   Summer Sculling Courses On the Tideway at Chiswick   The Alec Hodges Courses are week-long intensive courses at Tideway Scullers School, the country&#x2019;s foremost sculling club.    Courses are open to athletes of any sculling ability, both rowers and scullers, adult and junior, including beginners.   Summer course 1: 31 July-4 August Junior advanced course: 7-11 August Summer course 2: 14-18 August Summer course 3: 28 August&#x2013;1 September   The students will focus primarily on single sculling, working with a team of professional coaches, several with international-level experience. The curriculum will include video analysis, basic rigging, navigation on the tidal Thames, and racing (both time trial and side by side).   The price for the week is &#xA3;360, if payment is made before 31 May (&#xA3;375 thereafter). For more details please go to the Sculling Courses page of our website, http://tidewaysculle...cullingcourses/ and download an application form and the introductory membership form, which include the details of how to pay.   For any queries, email us at scullingcourses@tidewayscullers.com</description><pubDate>Sat, 22 Apr 2017 23:58:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Rowing Cancelled For 2017 Miami Outgames</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/rowing-cancelled-for-2017-miami-outgames-r251/</link><description>On 06 April 2017, the organizing staff of the 2017 Miami Outgames made the difficult decision to cancel the rowing regatta planned for the 2017 Miami Outgames.  The executive committee and the board of directors took the action after comparing the current and projected registration numbers with the fixed costs involved in hosting the event.    Since the event was not being hosted organically by the Miami Rowing Club, the Outgames staff was forced to rent the rowing club facility from the City of Miami Beach.  Additionally, the cost of setting the course in Key Biscayne Bay was significant.  The organizers had also hired an experienced rowing coach to assist with running the regatta.   In a phone call with the Miami Outgames sports director, Jordan Sellers, GLRF was told that the decision by one, large rowing club to withdraw from the regatta made the regatta appear to be economically ill advised.    The Miami Outgames was particularly saddened to make the decision after having worked so hard to properly structure the regatta after consultations with GLRF.  The event had received sanctioning from USRowing, boat rentals had been secured from two US boat manufacturers (a logistical task that was already underway in moving boats from the West Coast to the East Coast), a full jury of referees had been secured, and the event had been registered with Regatta Central (one of the US electronic regatta registration systems).   Rowers who had registered with the 2017 Miami Outgames will be able to receive full refunds, for both the participant fee and the sports.  Additionally, boat rental fees paid through Regatta Central will also be refunded.</description><pubDate>Mon, 10 Apr 2017 21:19:00 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>GLRF at 2016 USRowing Convention</title><link>https://www.glrf.info/activity/news/glrf-at-2016-usrowing-convention-r214/</link><description>GLRF hosted a vendor's table at the 2016 USRowing convention.  This was the first year that GLRF has hosted a vendor's booth/table at the convention.     The impetus for the display was the promotion of the GLRF Global Inclusion and Acceptance Campaign.  The display table included the 2017 Gods of Rowing Calendars, the Rower's Pledge t-shirts, beanies, hoodies, and the new Rower's Pledge sticker.  Much like a safe space sticker, the Rower's Pledge sticker is meant to be displayed at boathouses and clubs to indicate the open acceptance of gay and lesbian rowers.   The Rower's Pledge theme is meant to be a straight/gay neutral shirt that promotes the inclusion and acceptance of gay and lesbian rowers in any rowing programme, and complements the Inclusion and Acceptance Campaign.   USRowing is the national governing body for rowing in the United States.  The convention meeting moves around each year to give attendees a chance to see other rowing venues.  This year, the host was the Pioneer Valley Rowing Club.  They host three programs: a junior's program, a master's program, and a dragon boat program.</description><enclosure url="https://www.glrf.info/uploads/monthly_2024_10/6c9c6f88a52a77a5ccc5b1f874ee73f7.jpg.c94d4fbf1179cb7c20ca1080520663f1.jpg" length="718534" type="image/jpeg"/><pubDate>Mon, 05 Dec 2016 04:06:00 +0000</pubDate></item></channel></rss>
