Heraldnet.com
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2008 12:28 pm
ADVERTISEMENT

LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Blog
Jerry Cornfield
This just in: I-1029 to stay on ballot
Your town news
Julie Muhlstein
Columnist Julie Muhlstein's take on life in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Marysville Methodists glued to the Gulf
Latest gallery

The Evergreen State Fair
August 31. 2008 (34 photos)
[More Herald photos]
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Friday


Photos released of Lynnwood smash-and-grab susp...
Acrobat injured during circus' opening night in...
Speech excites local Republicans
Thursday


New Glacier Peak High School dubbed 'pretty rad'
Grim task of investigating Skagit County killings
County Council says it was denied access to budget
Wednesday


On the Kitty Hawk's last watch
Reardon keeping budget secret, some county lead...
Barista flasher charged with exposure; claims r...
Tuesday


Streets around Lake Stevens risky
Mukilteo couple to watch astronaut son blast off
Windows broken at Lynnwood parking lot
Monday


Fair's been quite a ride
Local delegates ready for GOP convention
Initiative targets illegal immigrants
Sunday


Everett lives in Scoop Jackson's shadow
On this weekend 40 years ago, Sultan really rocked
Bank records studied in Christian school sex case
Saturday
McCain's VP pick exciting to conservatives
Bothell road project will let colleges grow
Deputy is found not at fault in chase death
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Local News   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

Darren Breen / The Herald  (click to enlarge)
Everett High School senior Paula Welly is the captain of the Everett Rowing Association's girl's crew team and will attend Gonzaga University in the fall. Coach Hans Doerr calls Welly a "strong leader, with good athletic ability."
(click to enlarge)
The cover for Paula Welly's book "The Legacy, The History of Everett Rowing Association"
 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Friday, June 6, 2008

Young Everett rower digs into club history

Next week, Paula Welly will be in Cincinnati, Ohio, competing in the USRowing Youth National Championships. A few days later, she'll graduate from Everett High School.

She's used to juggling school and crew. In this year of visiting colleges and making big decisions, the 18-year-old has spent most every weekday afternoon at practice with the Everett Rowing Association.

No matter the weather, she helps row an eight-person shell up the Snohomish River, from Langus Park to Lowell. During the winter, after-school practice means indoor conditioning.

A rower with the Everett club since eighth grade, Welly this year had to squeeze an added requirement into an already packed schedule. Along with classes, rowing and college applications, she had to complete a senior project.

Called a culminating exhibition by the Everett School District, the project is required for graduation. It includes a thick notebook filled with proof of work done, an essay and a student's personal letter about the project, and an oral presentation before a panel.

Welly pushed herself far above and beyond the requirements. Her project is lasting. She created a book, "The Legacy: The History of Everett Rowing Association," chronicling the local history of a sport she loves.

"She got an A, great job," said Bruce Overstreet, Welly's teacher in a one-semester senior project class at Everett High School.

Overstreet at first thought Welly's idea was too ambitious. Now, he sees her book as exemplifying the idea behind senior projects. "The original concept was to find your niche and ­really pursue it," he said. For other senior projects, he's seen students run a marathon, record a music CD, and job-shadow with a campus police officer.

"It's an opportunity to test the waters of the real world," Overstreet said.

Testing the waters is an understatement. Welly used water, muscle and hard work to earn big scholarship offers. She turned down full-ride rowing scholarships to Clemson University in South Carolina, and to Syracuse University in New York. With a partial scholarship, she'll row for Gonzaga University in Spokane next year.

Her passion for rowing was sparked by her older brother's involvement in the sport. Michael Welly, two years older than Paula, went from the Everett Rowing Association to the University of Washington, where he was a coxswain on the crew team. She also started as a coxswain, but grew too large for that position of steering and calling out rowing rhythms from the back of a boat.

For the book, which she created using an online publishing program, Welly's mentor was Matthew Lacey. A former coach and head of the Everett Rowing Association, Lacey is now director of the Pocock Rowing Center in Seattle. Many of Lacey's photographs, along with those from the UW and others involved in Everett's rowing community, appear in the book.

"It was a unique idea, to pull together the history," said Lacey, 34, who rowed for the UW in the 1990s. As Welly's mentor, Lacey said he helped her find people and pictures, and "helped focus her enthusiasm."

"I basically ended up working for Paula Welly. She had a very good plan," said Lacey, adding that Everett is "steeped in rowing."

Now affiliated with the Everett Parks Department, the Everett Rowing Association was founded in 1982 by a group led by Martin Beyer and Lynn Dykgraaf. In the early days, the club used Everett's 10th Street boat launch area. The club's boathouse was dedicated in 1991 at Langus Park, along the Snohomish River.

One of the giants of Everett rowing is the late Dick Erickson, for two decades the Husky crew coach. Irma Erickson, Dick Erickson's widow, is among the many people Welly interviewed. Her book tells the history of the boats, each named for a person with a local link to the sport.

One of the newest racing boats is the Lon & Linda Welly, named in honor of the years of service and financial support Paula's parents have given to the club.

Lacey did his best to explain the sport's appeal. "It's getting out on the water, a couple inches above the water, and being able to interact with the environment," he said. "It's using every muscle in your body in perfect timing with everybody else, and creating something everybody enjoys -- speed."

He makes it sound so easy. None of it is easy, not the rowing, not the schoolwork.

"This kid really has a tremendous work ethic," Lacey said. "It's a beautiful thing."

Columnist Julie Muhlstein: 425-339-3460 or muhlstein@heraldnet.com.


1. Machinists itching to strike
2. Reardon seeks to cut 95 county positions
3. Acrobat injured during circus' opening night in Everett
4. An upside to Husky losses
5. Solitary foe disrupts Index gun range shooting test
6. Boeing Machinists to go on strike at midnight
7. Photos released of Lynnwood smash-and-grab suspects
8. Swindler's sentencing delayed
9. Man caught after 3-hour search around Lake Stevens
10. Silvertips' American boys
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Monroe slams shaky Shorewood in opener
Ferry lane grows one-mile longer
Bringing the world to Edmonds
FEMA turns to media to improve public image
Annexation's frustrations
A run for Charlotte
Annexation's frustrations
Minimalist food bars have local flavor
E-W aims for fifth straight league title
The Enterprise Online Newspaper

TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes


ADVERTISEMENT