Showing posts with label gaelic football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gaelic football. Show all posts

Sunday, November 8, 2015

My Brief and Wonderous Life as a Gaelic Footballer

Ever wonder what it would look like if soccer, rugby, and Aussie rules football all got together and had a baby? That biologically impossible child would probably look a lot like Gaelic Football.

The Bordeaux women's rugby team was a bit too intimidating so when I saw a poster for Burdigaela, it seemed like a perfect fit. Of course I would transition from Ultimate to Rugby and then to Gaelic Football. Obscure sport that no one has ever heard of/is not typically played in the place where I live? Check. Running around in a big field? Check. Co-ed? Bonus check! Let's play.

I joined in October last year when my Kiwi friend Laura and I decided it was time to meet some French people and get some exercise. I had gone to a pick up session with the local Ultimate team and found them to be strangely standoffish and not really that good for how serious they seemed to be about the sport. The Gaelic gang, however, were ridiculously welcoming, inviting us for beers and snacks after practice and offering us rides back to the tram so we wouldn't have to wait hours for the bus. It was also really encouraging that no one was super great at it. Of course we had a couple folks that grew up playing it in Ireland but most players were new to the sport just like me so I wasn't alone in mishandling the ball every 10 seconds.

If you have any sport sense at all, it's actually not very hard to understand. "Get the ball in the net/through the uprights" is pretty much the objective for any field sport, and they are both true for Gaelic. The tricky part is moving the ball around but again, once you get the hang of it, it's not so bad. Every four steps, you have to do something with it: kick it back up to yourself (called a solo), dribble it once (but not two times in a row), kick it to a teammate or hand pass it to a teammate by striking the ball with one hand WHILE IT REMAINS IN THE OTHER HAND. On defense, stop the other team from doing all those things.

Rain or shine, I was at practice almost every Monday and Thursday. I have never been very good at doing fitness on my own so the team really held me accountable for staying in shape. There is nothing better than hanging out with friends and getting a solid work out at the same time. Plus, it was nice having girlfriends again. There is something truly special about the bond that forms between women who play sports together and I was surrounded by a really fun, international and dedicated group of ladies. (The guys were cool, too!) Life was good.




It was snowing back home on this day. I was in shorts and a T-Shirt.

The best and worst thing about Gaelic Football is its obscurity. Since so few people play it, if you have decent hand eye coordination and stamina, you can get pretty good pretty quick. Unfortunately, that also means that playing in real competitions against other players doesn't happen very often. While my class schedule left me plenty of time to attend practices, I was often working on Saturdays when our rare matches were held.

The first match I played was at home in Blanquefort and it was an amazing day. If I had not twisted my ankle in the first match, it would have been even better. We played well, earning second place after Rennes, a team comprised almost exclusively of girls who play for the French national team. (All that Celtic heritage is what makes them so damn good...) That evening, there was a giant party for all the players that attended the tournament. Imagine a beer hall at Oktoberfest and that's kind of what we had going on at this restaurant. Endless food and booze, with singing and dancing on the tables. When we started to get too rowdy, we hit the club for the after party. We danced 'til close and thankfully the booze kept the pain in my ankle mostly at bay until the next morning...

Tchu tcha Burdigaela!!!

I know my body well enough to know when something is just general day-after soreness and when something is really wrong and this was definitely the latter. I once walked around for three days with a broken leg before seeing a doctor and I was not trying to repeat the same mistake. I limped over to the hospital (It was Sunday. Nothing else is open) and had the doctors check me out. At the time, the most intense pain seemed to be coming from my right leg and was awfully reminiscent of how I felt with my fractured fibula. They did an x-ray and luckily nothing was broken. They prescribed crutches and pain killers, anyway, neither of which they could give me there at the hospital (??) and sent me home. Is it weird that I was disappointed that all my bones were intact? If nothing's broken, why does it hurt so bad???

Within a week or so, my leg felt fine but my ankle was only getting worse. I broke down and borrowed some crutches from a friend (the ones with forearm support, not the ones that go all the way to the armpit) but I was so unstable on them that I gave them up for fear that I would bust my other ankle on all these damn cobblestones.

There was another tournament in April but I had to miss it because of class. It was probably for the best since my ankle was still pretty banged up. By May, it was still not great but I really wanted to go to the tourney in Niort. Again, it was an excellent day. I love competing and it proved to be a day of high level play with lots of excitement. I scored a bunch of points and finally felt like I was doing what I was supposed to be doing. Everything was starting to click, not just with me but with the rest of the team, too. We played as a unit. We ended up losing to Rennes in the final, and it was a bit sad because we gave them a much better fight in pool play; injury and fatigue were our biggest adversaries that day.



The finals were held in Paris but I was in the US for Jenna's wedding. When I got back, it was visitor season so that kept me from going to trainings very often, coupled with Jason's insatiable wanderlust and getting ready for all the weddings at the end of the summer. Once I stopped going regularly, it was easier and easier to find an excuse to keep me from going back.

September was upon us before we knew it and I was working extra hard to make up for all the time that we were away. I accepted every course they would give me, which meant classes on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nights. Although that still left me with Thursday evenings free, I was so tired by the time it rolled around that the last thing on my mind was spending another four hours running around out of the house. Also, there's this man that lives with me who I actually kind of like and it was surprisingly hard not having evenings together half of the week.

The final nail in the coffin was the fact that 90% of the people I was closest with on the team had left for bigger and better things in other corners of the world. As is usually the case, the team is the thing I like most about playing a sport and the team that I knew and loved just wasn't the same. There was also some drama between a few players and I didn't think it was handled very well by the executive board which left a bad taste in my mouth about the whole thing. In short, it was no longer a group I really could (or, honestly, wanted to) be a part of.

I can't say for sure that I'll never go back but it's just not in the cards for the moment. Maybe I will finally grow a pair and go check out the rugby team or try the Frisbee team again on a non-pick up night. Or maybe I'll find some other obscure sport to whet my fitness appetite. Anyone for a quick game of netball?

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Fall-ing in Love

They say no one can tell you when you're in love; you just know it. Well, baby, I am smitten.

I am in love with Bordeaux
As our summer drew to a close, I had to take a moment to appreciate how amazing it was. We visited six different countries, a dozen cities, and made countless new friends, all in just four short weeks. This is the kind of thing that's really only possible in Europe. International borders are fluid and never that far away, making it incredibly easy for eager travelers like us to get our adventure fix. Looking through the pictures back home in Bordeaux just reminded me how fortunate we are to be here and to be on this crazy journey together. We live in an amazing city that continues to surprise me everyday.
We finally climbed to the top of Pey Berland. Seen here: Pont de Pirre, St Michel spire, and the Grosse Cloche



September is the rentrée, when everyone goes back to work with colorful stories, fresh tans, and a positive attitude, which, I might add, is harder to find in France than a bakery without baguettes. It's always a blur of bisous and innumerable apéros en terrasse to catch up while the weather is still nice. Do you remember how happy you were to see all of your friends again on that first day back after summer break? It's like that, but all month and with way more wine.

One of many beautiful days in Bordeaux. Visiting Palais Rohan @ Hotel de Ville
Freshly scrubbed free of soot and grime. Thanks, Alain Juppé!
During the first weekend in October, we were treated to unseasonably warm weather for the harvest in Bourg. As a beer-loving American, I always had this vision of wine as being something chic and inaccessible for laypeople like me. Fancy glasses, fancy tastings, fancy words like "sommelier" and "connoisseur"... It all just seemed beyond my simple tastes. But then I came to Bordeaux and learned that vintners are nothing more than grape farmers who like to drink. Unlike last year, when all the grapes were ruined by the ultra-wet weather, we easily filled our harvesting baskets to the brim at every vine. There is something uniquely beautiful about getting out in the fields and being close to the earth after spending so much time in the city.

The harvester was much faster at grape-picking than we were.


Typical Jason
The fruits of our labor... GET IT?!??!?
No, you don't get to stomp on them.

La Garonne and the town of Bourg


I am in love with Gaelic Football
After nearly two years of laziness/cowardice, I finally decided to grow a pair and find myself a sports team. The women's rugby teams here are not really my speed (either novice students or semi-pro) and I found the Ultimate team to be uncharacteristically boring and not that friendly. Enter: Gaelic Football. A few of the girls from Chesapeake used to play in the off season or as cross training so I knew that the sport existed but that was about it. Since my life is apparently one giant serendipitous moment after another, I just happened to be at the CEL when one of the new teachers was hanging a promotional poster for the team. An obscure sport, you say? Where do I sign up? I sent the club president an email, dragged along my Kiwi friend Laura and trucked out to Bordeaux Lac to give it a try.

On our first day at practice, most of the team was in Sweden for a tournament so we had a very laid back initiation to the sport. Hand pass, kick pass, solo, dribble... There are a lot of skills to master and it's all a bit complicated at first glance, but I swear there is some method to the madness. Plus, if you've ever played any field sport ever, you realize very quickly that it's all kind of the same thing: Pass the object in some special fashion so that it gets to other side of the field. GO.

My hand-foot coordination, and thus my ability to consistently execute a solo (kicking the ball back up into your own hands) left a bit to be desired, but everyone was incredibly supportive and encouraging, even when I booted the ball in the wrong direction for the 72087th time in 20 minutes. The thing that really got me to stay, though, was this instant feeling of camaraderie. After practice, everyone hung around for a couple of beers and some snacks and without even mentioning it, we had offers for rides back into town from three different people. It felt so much like the days playing rugby and Ultimate back in the US that I immediately felt like part of the team and knew that I had found my niche. It's good to be home.

(I'm just right of center, in orange)
I am in love with my husband
Maybe it's corny to say it, but it's true. Do we just gaze into each other's eyes all day long, tears brimming because we're so overwhelmed by our love? No, because we have jobs. Ain't nobody got time for that. Do we ever fight about stupid things? Yes, because we are human beings. I can't tell you how many times we have bickered about my obsession with right-side-out socks or his inability to replace the toilet paper roll and HEAVEN HELP US if we have to make a joint decision on what to watch or where to eat...


But we're comfortable and we're happy. I like being with him. I like that he makes me laugh. I like that we are starting to know each other so well that we can be proactive about situations where the other might be upset. (Note to self: always eat before going to the market on Sunday morning. H'anger is a real thing.) Of course there are days when we seem a little out of sync, and they are that much more striking because we are normally in lockstep, but it just tells me that we're still figuring it out. And that's okay! We're growing together and learning together and making mistakes together. But we always figure it out and I am really looking forward to a lifetime of figuring it out with Jason.

*Cue sappy music and "awwww"s*

It's good to be in love.