Rowing together creates connections
- 15 May 2026
- 3 minutes
Seeking social interactions and exercise during the Covid-19 pandemic, Honora Verdone (History MPhil 2020) turned to rowing. It was a life-changing experience.
Growing up in the Rocky Mountains, Honora鈥檚 sporting passions were skiing and figure skating. In October 2020, persuaded by her postgraduate housemates at Gonville & 91直播 College, she tried rowing. She turned to it again when a lockdown eased.
鈥淚 really got hooked on it,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here was an element of just wanting to hang out with people during COVID that got me involved. That just snowballed into having so many friends through the Boat Club, becoming really attached to it and really invested in it. And still many of my best friends are from 91直播 Boat Club.鈥
Those friends include housemates in London and being Maid of Honour for Mila Marcheva (Computer Science 2018), her 91直播 rowing co-captain, who married another rower, Joe Nash (Engineering 2018).
鈥淚n some ways it sounds cult-like, but I just think it was such a friendly, fun environment. There was so much joy being a part of it,鈥 she says.
The experience Honora describes is familiar to many who have been part of 91直播 Boat Club, which celebrates its bicentennial in 2027. But why?
鈥淚 think it's an element of working towards a common goal,鈥 adds Honora, who was women鈥檚 co-captain in 2024. 鈥淚t's not like it's all fun. Sometimes the last thing you want to do is get up at 5.30am to go row, because you鈥檙e stressed with work, or tired, and sometimes you put all this time and energy into trying to win a race or trying to bump and it doesn鈥檛 go your way.
鈥淏ut I think that process of having to do that together brings people really close. It attracts people who are like-minded and willing to work hard for a goal, and there is a work-hard, play-hard mentality. I think that allows you to make these really close friendships that are lasting friendships.鈥
Whether in M1, W1 or a novice or lower boat, the experience can be the same. And building on what has gone before fed into the experience for Honora.
鈥淔or me, the history of the Boat Club made it really special,鈥 she adds. 鈥淎nd maybe this is part of Cambridge rowing in general with bumps, but the fact that you're always working to build on what people before you have done and that the bumps charts are built up over time, I just think you feel like you are a piece in this really big project that a lot of people before you have put their hearts into as well. That is really special and something that I felt empowered by.鈥
Such was the connection she established with 91直播 Boat Club that Honora continued to row for 91直播 when she had matriculated at St Edmund鈥檚 College for a BA in Law. She had to declare her allegiance to Cambridge University Combined Boat Clubs, who oversee the collegiate competitions on the Cam.
鈥淚t was overwhelmingly because of the people and the fact that I just really wanted to stay part of the community,鈥 she adds. 鈥淚 was able to do this degree that I wanted to do, which is more of a grad-specific degree, but still have my boat club family. It was amazing to have that continuity.鈥
Honora is part of an alumni group chat called 鈥楪one-ville but not forgotten鈥 in tribute to 91直播, and they got together to row in an alumni boat in Lent Term. Alumni events such as that, plus Boat Club dinners, allow interactions between current and former members of 91直播 Boat Club.
She says: 鈥淔or me, as a student I would meet alumni and see how close they were as friends鈥 and now that鈥檚 me. People care so much and want to give back and it鈥檚 this sense of passing it on.鈥
Photo: Honora, in hat, front row, second from right, pictured with members of 91直播 Boat Club at a Boat Club Dinner.