Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Contort for sport
Never thought of yoga as a competitive pursuit? Cathy Huntrods wants to bend your ear ...and other parts of you, too
Local yoga teacher Cathy Huntrods envisions Manitoba as a hotbed of yoga talent and she's building her dream by hosting the province's first annual Hatha Yoga Asana Championship.
The regional competition -- happening April 29 at Park Theatre Café -- will serve as a qualifier for the Western Canadian Hatha Yoga Championship in May. That will determine who goes to the prestigious international championship in Los Angeles June 9.
The competition is open to all Manitoba yoga enthusiasts. Participants are required to contort their bodies during a three-minute routine consisting of five mandatory poses and two advanced ones chosen by each competitor.
Huntrods, who owns Bikram Yoga Winnipeg, says she hopes the event will be an "awakening" for Winnipeggers to the world of yoga. She says the city has lagged behind the West Coast by two decades in its yoga savvy.
The mother of two admits that many Winnipeg yoga studio owners she contacted about her event were skeptical about pairing yoga with competition and opted not to participate in promoting the event.
"If it helps you to have a stage and it inspires you to do more, be more, that stage is a good thing," she says.
Huntrods often refers to the yoga competitions she's attended as demonstrations.
"But it's more like a group of souls offering the story of their bodies up in prayer," she says.
Huntrods was a fitness instructor and marathon runner before she delved into yoga six years ago.
"My body was getting very stiff and very sore. I knew that if I want to keep moving and age the way I want to age, I've got to change something," says Huntrods, who took up hot yoga which is performed at in room heated to approximately 40C.
Experts say performing yoga at that temperature increases flexibility and makes achieving yoga poses easier.
"I did not like it," says Huntrods, who eventually opened up her own hot yoga studio five years ago. "But my body liked it. My body responded like nothing else."
Her inspiration to start a regional yoga championship in Winnipeg?
It was the world yoga championships in Los Angeles where she has volunteered since 2008.
"I'm just totally inspired by what they are doing. My practice improves just by watching (the competitors)," says Huntrods, who is particularly motivated by meeting Joseph Encina, the 2011 International yoga champion.
Encina was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis as a kid and had limited flexibility as well as painful joint inflammation. An overweight child, he also suffered a heart attack. As a teen he discovered yoga and it changed his life.
"As a studio owner, you hear all time the excuses," says Huntrods. "Whatever it is: 'I've got an ingrown toenail. I stubbed my toe. The rain is too wet. The sun is not bright enough.'
"To see someone (like Encina) take the stage and have that kind of composure, it's beautiful."
At the worlds, she also met Vancouverite Brad Colwell, the head of the Canadian Yoga Federation, who called her earlier this year and encouraged her to start a regional yoga championship in Winnipeg.
Colwell, who has judged the world yoga championships, will be a judge in the upcoming competition in Winnipeg.
"You're looking for that person who goes on that stage who shows absolute control, flexibility and depth," says Colwell, who is on a mission to spread yoga from the West Coast to the rest of the country.
He admits this competition will be a learning experience for everyone involved.
"It's fairly fresh," says Colwell. "People are still learning how to do it. There will be a lot more amateurs than there will be professionals this year. But that won't take too long for it to turn the corner."
He says watching the world yoga competition is awe-inspiring and he would like to see more Canadians from all regions represented at the prestigious event.
His favourite element of the world championship is the "Cirque de soleil style craziness" that competitors display.
"It usually happens when those two advanced postures come out at the end," says Colwell, noting he will be looking for three male adults, three female adults and three youths to represent Manitoba in the western regional competition happening May 19 in Calgary.
Sarah Sarsfield, a student at Huntrods' Osborne Village studio, hopes to become the adult female champ for Winnipeg.
The massage therapist and former dancer has entered the local competition and been practising her yoga routine just about every day since January.
"It's really exciting to be training for something," says Sarsfield. "It's bringing back memories of dancing -- but in all the good ways. It's really more about celebrating."
The Elmwood resident says hot yoga has helped her not just with her body, but with her everyday life.
"If you can get through a class there, even if you have to lie down for half the class, you can get through anything. It's like it teaches you how breathe and how to be comfortable with discomfort," she says.
"It sounds almost cliché, but then you actually do see sort of more beauty in the world."
The Manitoba Hatha Yoga Championship is happening April 29 at Park Theatre Café, 698 Osborne St., from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tickets are $10 in advance and $12 at the door. For more information, log onto the Canadian Yoga Federation site at www.canyoga.ca/competitions.php
Follow Shamona on Twitter: @ShamonaHarnett
Have an interesting story idea you'd like Shamona to write about? Contact her at shamona.harnett@freepress.mb.ca
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition April 23, 2012 D1
More Columnists
- Back to Top
- Return to Columnists
Poll
Most Popular Columnists
- Katz bogeys again
- Tell husband you're not talking to her... maybe tell him why
- 'It's a beautiful story': There's not always a tomorrow to say you're sorry or make things right
- Ex-Jets MacLean, Carlyle on Sochi coaching list
- Mount Carmel Clinic: An oasis of acceptance in a judgmental world
- More than a new boss
- Beckham a true pro from start to finish, detractors be danged
- Brunch day is gone, focus on eating well
- Granddaddy of the mock doc takes to TV
- New Blue stadium lives up to the hype; now it's up to you
- Katz bogeys again
- 'It's a beautiful story': There's not always a tomorrow to say you're sorry or make things right
- Burke will be back; he's just that good
- When money talks, it says, 'End fighting in the NHL'
- New Blue stadium lives up to the hype; now it's up to you
- Mount Carmel Clinic: An oasis of acceptance in a judgmental world
- Tell husband you're not talking to her... maybe tell him why
- There's more to the story than golf
- Cancer doesn't care who it may kill
- CFL gains when draft picks go south
- Goodbye, Susan; a privilege to know you
- Twins are theirs, but province doesn't agree
- Bun Brouhaha: Kitchen staff's snap firing worthy of reality TV
- Beloved piece of Winnipeg's music history deserves better
- Cyclists, cars, and cops don't mix
- Facebook pokes Manitoba
- Winter is coming
- Dugouts could change the game
- Katz bogeys again
- White sucker right for Manitoba
- Katz bogeys again
- 'It's a beautiful story': There's not always a tomorrow to say you're sorry or make things right
- 'It's a beautiful story': There's not always a tomorrow to say you're sorry or make things right
- New Blue stadium lives up to the hype; now it's up to you
- Late deal in workplace sex-harassment case
- 3D printers will make outsourcing so yesterday
- Explore Desire seminars to 'push the boundaries'
- Going gluten-free doesn't mean giving up foods you love
- Cancer doesn't care who it may kill
- Mount Carmel Clinic: An oasis of acceptance in a judgmental world
- Katz bogeys again
- No better place to be than Fort McMurray
- Twins are theirs, but province doesn't agree
- 'It's a beautiful story': There's not always a tomorrow to say you're sorry or make things right
- Bun Brouhaha: Kitchen staff's snap firing worthy of reality TV
- Dugouts could change the game
- Happily selling shoes at age 89
- Facebook pokes Manitoba
- White sucker right for Manitoba
- New Blue stadium lives up to the hype; now it's up to you
- Cyclists, cars, and cops don't mix
- Selinger's ability to sell case weak link in tax-hike plan
Ads by Google












You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.