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The swim club uses the Carl R. Samuelson and Robert. B. Muir Pool at Williams College and attends regional meets on the weekends.

Williamstown Swim Club Offers New Option

By Stephen DravisWilliamstown Correspondent
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Some 45 boys and girls have joined the new non-profit Purple Valley Aquatics club to pursue competitive swimming under the tutelage of Williams College varsity swim coach Steve Kuster

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — For the area's newest youth sports program, things are going swimmingly.

Williams College varsity swim coach Steve Kuster started Purple Valley Aquatics this year to give boys and girls another outlet for instruction and competitive swimming opportunities.

So far, youngsters have taken to PVA like, well, like fish to water.

"Right now there are 45 kids in the program from 5 years old to 18," Kuster said recently.

"It's a non-profit program, so we were trying to keep it running and keep costs reasonable, which is difficult to do. I think 25 to 30 is what we were expecting. Having 45 is great. I think it's a really good start.

"It's nice to see a vision come together."

Kuster said he has been thinking about the idea of a club team for Williams' Carl R. Samuelson and Robert. B. Muir Pool for years, and this year he felt the pieces were finally in place.

"Until this year, it didn't seem like the time was right, mostly based on the coaching in the area," he said. "If I started this team, who would be there to help me?

"A new assistant coach, Nick Stone, joined (the Ephs) and was very interested, and another woman who moved into the area, Karrie Honecker came on board. As far as getting it started, that was one of the biggest pushes: the fact that there were good coaches in the area who were excited about doing it."

Of course, Kuster himself brings a wealth of experience to the table. As head coach of the men's and women's swimming and diving programs at the college, he has helped build the most dominant program in the New England Small College Athletic Conference and trained NCAA individual champions.

Honecker helped develop 2012 Olympic Gold Medalist Lauren Perdue at the Greenville Swim Club in North Carolina. Stone is a former conference champion at Hope College in Michigan and a former assistant coach at Ithaca College.

That roster of coaches is what convinced Williamstown's Charley Stevenson to bring his two daughters, 7 and 9, to Purple Valley Aquatics. Each had previous experience swimming competitively, and their enthusiasm for the sport has only grown this season, Stevenson said.

"We really got into swimming because we wanted the kids to swim well, but they got excited about the team aspect and the competitive aspect," he said. "We know a lot of the people involved (with PVA), and we were excited about it.


"We were perfectly happy at the YMCA, but when the opportunity arose to change leagues and have the kids with the coaching staff the caliber that Purple Valley Aquatics offered, it was an exciting opportunity to pursue.

"The kids love it."

It did mean one big change competitively for the Stevenson girls and others who moved to PVA. Instead of swimming in dual meets and three-way competitions, the PVA club goes to large regional meets on the weekends at places like Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Smith College and White River Junction, Vt.

"It was certainly an adjustment, coming in and getting a sense of playing 'in the big leagues,' " Stevenson said. "At the first one, the kids were intimidated."

But that feeling was short-lived.

"The great thing about swimming is it's a team sport but it's focused on individual performance," Stevenson said. "It's not, 'Did I win a ribbon?' but, 'How did I do against my performances in the past?'

"The standard isn't, 'Can I beat that child?' The standard is, 'What can I do to improve myself?' "

Not everyone who swims for PVA swims competitively, and not every child comes in with competitive experience. But it is not a learn-to-swim program, either - at least not yet.

Kuster said the baseline requirement is to swim a lap of freestyle and a lap of the backstroke.

"Aside from that, there's no need to be elite or anything like that," Kuster said. "We've had tons of people who played around in the pool and knew some strokes but were doing organized swimming for the first time.

"This past weekend at Union, a lot of kids who never raced before did it for the first time."

Find out more about Purple Valley Aquatics at its website, www.purplevalleyaquatics.org.
 


Tags: swimming,   youth programs,   youth sports,   

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Puppets Teach Lanesborough Elementary Pupils About Friendship

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

The newest batch of puppets that have joined the school. 

LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — Puppets named Melody and Simu gave a lesson on friendship to Lanesborough Elementary School students last week.

Classes were called to the music room throughout the day on Thursday to learn about the trials and tribulations of making friends, how friends work through disagreements, setting healthy boundaries, and more.   

While the teachers were inanimate, the topics they covered were very real.

Sponsored by Bedard Brothers Chevrolet, the shows were presented by the Vermont Family Network's Puppets in Education. The school also received five puppets of its own to continue teaching.

Program and Curriculum Manager Karen Sharpwolf said the puppeteers are tackling these subjects from a "pro-social perspective and also the problem-solving perspective."

"This is a brand-new program this year," she said.

"Teachers have been asking for a friendship program all last year because they're noticing that kids are having trouble making friends after coming out of COVID. There's just sort of some social skills that need a tune-up."

For prekindergarten through second grade, the show offers basic information about building friendships and for third and fourth graders, it offers guidance for friendships when they go awry.

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