Rallying the Community
Linda Dyer
Linda Dyer's enthusiasm is spreading like a wildfire. When she and her husband John brought dragon boat racing to Vermont in 2004, they began a movement that has "awakened the dragon" in people around the state. Since then, more than 120 breast cancer survivors and supporters have joined the Dragonheart Vermont team and hundreds more have paddled, sponsored, volunteered and supported their mission.
Dragon boating is an ancient Chinese sport that has been embraced by the breast cancer community as a way to "paddle to recovery." An active fourteen-year breast cancer survivor, Dyer is the picture of health today and attributes much of her fitness, both physical and mental, to dragon boating. Her determination to bring the challenging sport to Vermont breast cancer survivors was based on the desire to foster feelings of connection and empowerment among the community. They started out with a borrowed boat and five team members and have ridden the wave of Dyer's infectious energy to grow exponentially in the past three years.
With the inaugural Lake Champlain Dragon Boat Festival in 2006, Dyer sparked enough interest around Vermont to raise the money to buy a new ultrasound machine for the Radiation Oncology department at Fletcher Allen. After a winter of sock sales, garnering corporate sponsorships, rallying team captains and organizing entertainment, the 2007 festival is already several times larger and may have secured its place as a fixture in the summer waterfront schedule.