Abstract
The benefits of single‐gender experiences for females have been discussed in a variety of contexts, including education, sport and outdoor recreation. In both the discourses of female‐run outdoor adventure travel programs providing such experiences, and the leisure studies and outdoor education literatures, claims are made about the distinct social environment created on such trips and the positive outcomes for females undertaking them. Absent from these discourses is reference to empirical research exploring women's perceptions of such experiences, thereby allowing one to evaluate the merit of such claims. In what would initially appear to be an observation in a completely different vein, there is also a relative dearth of scholarly examinations within leisure and recreational studies of women's lived‐body experiences of their physicalities through active outdoor recreation, and the potentially empowering effects of them. This paper seeks to draw out the connections between these seemingly disparate observations through a qualitative examination of women's experiences of female‐only wilderness canoeing. While the reasons articulated by the women for undertaking such an experience did not explicitly identify issues related to their physicalities, clearly these issues resonated with and held implications for their experiences of them. This, in turn, provides substantiation for claims regarding the importance of the provision of all‐female outdoor experiences.
Notes
Correspondence Address: Lisa McDermott, Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2H9, Canada. Email: [email protected]; tel: 780‐492‐1025; fax: 780‐492‐2364
Much appreciation is extended to the editors and reviewers of this article for their helpful suggestions regarding it.
‘Health’ is written as such indicating that often with women, health itself is intimately framed through appearance concerns.
In recounting her experience of participating in a Rivers Day celebration, traveling the historic Fraser River in British Columbia, Canada, Newbury's (Citation1999) canoe was the only one of fifty that was sterned by a female. In a further gender transgression, her bow position was occupied by a well‐known and accomplished male paddler, whom Newbury noted endured ‘much good‐natured chiding for his “bow‐position” ’ (p. 4).