Lake Mercer Dragon Boat Association, USA, Inc.
(formally Central Jersey Dragon Boat Club, USA, Inc. )
A New Jersey 501(c)3 non-profit Corp.
A registered New Jersey Charity

Lake Mercer is rated as one of the three premier racing courses in the
United States.  It is the official training site for the Olympic training site for
the United States National Rowing Team.

Princeton Warriors was established in 2000 as a breast cancer survivor
dragon boat team.   This team was established as a support group for
those who are in the healing process and to have fun on a vessel of
healing along with the people who have gone through the cancer
treatment process and who have won the biggest battle of their lives.

Princeton Warriors, a dragon boat team for cancer survivors  held their
first dragon boat festival in 2000 with only two teams participating.  In
2002, the club held the "First Ever Breast Cancer Dragon Boat Festival in
the Eastern Region".

The  Central Jersey Dragon Boat Club (name changed in 2007 to Lake
Mercer Dragon Boat Association- LMDBA) due to a reorganization to
align and better  identify with Lake Mercer our home venue.    In the
beginning the mixed men and women team was formed to accommodate
the family members and friends  who wanted to spend quality time with
their survivor.   In addition,  a youth team which comprised of students
from the local high schools and colleges was established.  In their  first
year - 2007 Dragon Boat Races,  the Lake Mercer Youth team came home
with the 1st prize trophy and gold medals!

The teams practice on Lake Mercer, Mercer County Park, West Windsor.  
Every Saturday at 11:00 a.m. On the So. Post Road side of the lake.


The Dragon Boat Festival (History)
by Zhao Bo
________________________________________
The following article is reprinted from Volume 1, number 2 of the
newsletter of Families with Children from China of the San Francisco Bay
Area.
According to the Chinese traditional calendar, Duanwu jíe—known in
English as the Dragon Boat Festival—takes place on the fifth day of the
fifth lunar month. This year it falls on June 20.
Chinese festivals are usually associated with special foods as well as fun
(“heat and noise”). On this festival Chinese people prepare and eat
zongzi, and the excitement is provided by dragon boat racing—hence
the English name for the holiday. To understand the Dragon Boat
Festival, and most things Chinese, you have to know a little history.
Ancient history.
Legend has it that the festival commemorates the life and especially the
death of Qu Yuan (c. 340-278 B.C.), the first great poet in Chinese history.
He lived during the Warring States period (a time when China was
divided into several warring kingdoms) and was a high-ranking official in
the state of Chu. At that time his homeland was under siege by another
powerful state called Qin. The king of Chu did not recognize Qu Yuan’s
correct stand or appreciate his suggestions for saving their country.
What is more, treacherous officials slandered him, and at last he was
sent into exile. On the fifth day of the fifth lunar month, when he heard
news that the capital of Chu had fallen into enemy hands, he threw
himself into the Miluo River (in present-day Hunan province) and
drowned.
What is the connection between Qu Yuan and dragon boats? (I’ll get to
zongzi later.) Qu Yuan, a great patriot, was loved by the people. When
villagers heard he had thrown himself into the river, they rushed in their
boats to try to save him, but they were too late. Dragon boat races
commemorate their rescue attempt.
If you happen to visit southern China around the time of this festival and
are in a town with a river, you will surely have the chance to see some
magnificent racing. Along the riverbanks on houses projecting over the
water hundreds of people, both locals and tourists, wait for the races to
begin. The boats themselves are long and narrow, with a colorful dragon’
s head high up on the bow. Each one holds at least fourteen people, all
dressed in gorgeous ancient costumes. The man standing at the front of
the boat with a small flag in his hand is the captain; the one standing at
the back is the drummer, who beats a big drum to mark the rhythm for
the oarsmen to follow. With the bang of the starting gun the dragon boats
rush forward like flying arrows, amid the loud banging of drums and
shouts from the onlookers. It’s an unforgettable scene.
But what do zongzi have to do with all this? Legend has it that when Qu
Yuan drowned, his body was never found. People felt very sad and
worried that his body would be eaten by the creatures in the river. So
they threw packets of rice into the river to feed the hungry animals and
asked them to eat the rice instead of Qu Yuan’s body. Those packets
were zongzi. Another legend says that the people offered zongzi as
sacrifices to the soul of Qu Yuan. To prevent the food from being eaten
by animals, they wound it with brightly colored thread, which they
believed would scare away dragons and other aquatic beasts. Nowadays
you can see at the festival markets beautiful model zongzi made of paper
and covered with colorful silk thread.
Today people all over the country eat zongzi on the Dragon Boat
Festival. Here’s how you make them: First get some bamboo leaves—a
special kind about two palms long and about three to four fingers wide.
Soak them in water, and clean them with soft brushes. They will serve as
the wrappers for the zongzi.
In the meantime, soak glutinous rice in cold water for several hours.
When the rice becomes fat, it’s time to make zongzi. Take two or three
bamboo leaves, overlapping the edges to form a funnel. Put glutinous
rice inside, wrap it up in the shape of a pyramid, and tie it with a string.
[Ed. Note: Easier said than done! Mere mortals will need an experienced
person to demonstrate.] Boil them in a deep pot for hours, until the rice is
cooked. This kind is called “plain” (bai) zongzi, which you eat with sugar
or honey. The Beijing style has rehydrated dried dates inside. In
southern China people like to put bean paste or pork soaked in soy
sauce in the middle of the rice. [Ed. Note: The southern style is easy to
find ready-made in Chinese supermarkets in San Francisco.]
Another custom of the festival is to wear xiangbao, “fragrance pouches”
made of colorful cotton or silk embroidered with small animals, plants, or
flowers. The inside contains a kind of perfume to ward off poisonous
creatures such as scorpions. But nowadays many people, especially
children, like them just as beautiful festival decorations.
Several other customs are associated with the Dragon Boat Festival, and
perhaps I’ll write about them next year. I hope you will bring your families
to China some day to celebrate the festival with us.

Zhao Bo lives in Xi’an, Sha’anxi province, where she works in the
Foreign Languages Department of the Xi’an Institute of Architecture and
Technology. For permission to reprint this article, please contact Amy
Klatzkin (klatzkin@leland.stanford.edu).

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