I spent a week this past summer (2003) working as a volunteer waterski instructor at a
summer camp for teenagers in southern Indiana. The interaction with these teenagers is
probably a good gauge for the current state of waterskiing. Here are my impressions:

  1. Very few wanted to learn to ski on two skis. This is passe. Once the kids who wanted
    to learn got up on two skis, they invariably wanted to move on to something else (like
    wakeboarding or barefooting).
  2. Nobody wanted to slalom ski. Slalom skiing is dying out.
  3. Some kids wanted to kneeboard. Kneeboarding still lives! You can do it in all kinds of
    conditions and it doesn't require great athletic ability to enjoy it thoroughly.
  4. Almost all of the kids wanted to learn to barefoot waterski. Surprise, surprise! Actually
    the kids who learned how to barefoot waterski were the most excited and eager to tell
    others about their newfound ability. My only limitation for teaching barefoot
    waterskiing was the lack of available calm water.
  5. Almost all of the kids wanted to learn to wakeboard. Well, no real surprise there. The
    sk8tr boy or girl style is in.

My real surprise was the real and active interest these kids had in barefoot waterskiing. The
sheer joy and exhilaration on their faces when they succeeded in gliding on top of the water
on their bare feet was incredible to see. There is really no comparison with the other water
sports mentioned above. Even learning how to wakeboard was no match for the thrill the
barefooters experienced. It seems to me that wakeboarding has not overtaken interest in
barefooting, but has rather firmly supplanted classical waterskiing as the mainstream
watersport. The encouraging part for me is that just as many kids were interested in
barefooting as wakeboarding. Kids these days are into extreme sports and barefoot
waterskiing certainly qualifies as one!

As thrilling as it was to teach these kids barefoot waterskiing, I couldn't help but feel
sadness as well. Sadness, because many of these kids exhibited real talent and athleticism
that could take them far in the sport if properly nurtured and attended to. And therein lies
the rub: Most of these kids will probably never barefoot again. The barriers to entry into the
sport are numerous and formidable. Not only do you need access to calm water, but you
also need a suitable boat and relatively expensive equipment (wetsuit, shorts, boom,
handles, rope, etc.). In addition, you need a driver who is knowledgable regarding the finer
points of driving for a barefooter. All of these things conspire against the probability of
success in the sport for these young beginning barefooters.

My point is that the potential for success for the sport is there in terms of participation,
visibility, and economics. The problem is how to tap into this potentially enormous interest in
the sport, given the formidable barriers that new or aspiring barefooters face. I would be
very interested in hearing your ideas on how we (participants in organized barefooting
activities) could overcome these barriers and unlock the potential of the sport. Please use
the
Barefooter Forum on the ABC website for any feedback you may have regarding these
issues.

                                                                                                  Thor Thordarson
The Future of Barefoot Water skiing
Points to Ponder - Vol. 2