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British Columbia

Pickleball is one of Canada's fastest-growing sports. But the paddle and ball can make a racket

Pickleball is a growing sport that appeals to people of all ages and abilities. Some residents who live near outdoor courts have complained about the noise.

Some residents who live near pickleball courts have grown sour on the burgeoning sport

Pickleball is growing in popularity, but some who live near outdoor courts say the sound can be maddening. (CBC)

Pickleballhas been a blessing forsome during the COVID-19 pandemic, offering up exercise, fresh air, and a chance to socialize outdoors.

But for some who live near pickleball courts, the cacophony thatcomes with the burgeoningsport can be a curse.

Many pickleballers play their sport on reconfigured outdoor tennis courts. The sporthas ties to tennis, but uses a paddleinstead of a racket, and a hard ball instead of a fuzzy tennis ball. The results can be noisy.

Connie Ball, who lives nearpickleball courts in Blue Mountain Park in Coquitlam, B.C., hasbeen fighting against the sound for 18 months.

"You can't go down for a nap," she said of the noise. "It's just invading. It goes right into our home."

Connie Ball says her Coquitlam, B.C., home has been invaded by noise from a nearby pickleball court. (CBC)

The courts in Blue Mountain Park wererepurposedin 2020 for pickleball, but after noise complaints from Ball and other neighbours, the city limited play to the hours of8 a.m.to 8 p.m., with a one-hour break at noon.

The battle for court space is playing out across the region.

Organizers like Erin Davidson of the PoCoMo Pickleball Clubare trying to find a balance.

"Noise, land value, and land availability need to be taken into consideration," Davidson said.

After months of planning, the Vancouver Park Board and the Vancouver Pickleball Association recently announced theywill turn several tennis courts into pop-up pickleball courts, although no timeline has been given.

George Harvie, the mayor of Delta, B.C.,has written a letter to pickleball officials voicing support for the sport, but also asking themto consider altering equipment to reduce noise.

"It can be quite annoying," Harvie said. "It's like a perpetual aluminum bat hittinga baseball," he said.

But the president of the Vancouver Pickleball Associationargues that usinga softer ball would change the nature of the sport.

"It would be equivalent to making hockey players use sponge pucks," Greg Feehan said.

Feehan said he is sympathetic to noise complaints, noting that in addition to the sound of paddles hitting balls, pickleball is a "very boisterous" sport filled with chatter between players.

Noise complaints, he argues, highlight the need for better facilities for a sport that has grown faster than anyone anticipated.

Pickleball continues to grow

The sportdates back more than half a century to its beginnings in Washington state.

After playing golf one summer day in 1965, congressman Joel Pritchard and businessman Bill Bell returned home to Bainbridge Island, Wash., to find their families sitting around with nothing to do, according to USA Pickleball.

The property had an old badminton court. Pritchard and Bell searched for badminton equipment, but couldn't find a full set of rackets, so they improvised and started playing with Ping-Pong paddles and a perforated plastic ball.

From its modest roots, the sport's popularity has surgedin recent years. The pandemic has prompted even more people to pick up a paddle.

Steve Deakin, Canadas top-ranked player, says the sport brings people together. (CBC)

Karen Rust, president of Pickleball Canada, says a recent Ipsos survey indicates there are around 900,000 households in Canada playing the sport, up from an estimated 350,000 two years ago.

Steve Deakin, who competes in pro-level tournaments and is Canada's top-ranked doublesplayer, says pickleball has broad appealamong people of all ages and abilities.

"With pickleball, I find I can get four beginners on a court that haven't even touched a paddle, and have them playing within five to 10 minutes," Deakin said.

With files from Dan Burritt and Aly Thomson