WFLA News Channel 8 The Tampa Tribune CentroTampa.com

Suncoast Pinellas News

Print This Print Bookmark and Share

Suncoast Pinellas > News

Seniors In Care Center Take To Video Bowling

Photo by Cheryl Bentley

Olive Tucker, 86, a resident of Peninsula Care and Rehabilitation Center in Tarpon Springs, prepares for a Nintendo Wii bowling tournament.

ADVERTISEMENT

Published: March 20, 2009

On a recent afternoon, a group of seniors at Peninsula Care and Rehabilitation Center in Tarpon Springs got into a friendly argument about someone sneaking in extra turns.

The thing that sparked such passion was Nintendo Wii Sports, a package of videogame simulation of five sports. Wii Sports players mimic actions performed in the real game through a handheld pointing device.

The Peninsula seniors were playing the bowling portion of the game. They were in good company. President Barack Obama, according to news reports, is a fan of Wii bowling, which he plays with first daughters Malia and Sasha.

"They're using new technology," observes a proud Cathy Wagner, the center's quality of life program director about the Peninsula's players. "Just because they're living here in a nursing home doesn't mean they shouldn't be involved in the outside world."

The game gives the players physical skills such as using their arms in a range of motion as they would if they were holding an actual bowling ball.

The handheld device promotes eye-hand coordination. "It's not that easy," Wagner said about the art of simulating a bowling game with the device. Players must push down on one button to start the frame and hold another button the same time they release their arms to simulate the bowling movement.

The package also includes tennis, golf, boxing and baseball. The Peninsula staff thought the bowling portion would be more appropriate for the seniors because many of them had bowled both as adults when living independently and at the center, where staff formerly set up traditional bowling games.

She has found many seniors to be resistant to playing a game using technology, Wagner noted. She was only able to recruit a handful of residents to serve as either bowlers or cheerleaders, but considers that a good beginning.

From the looks of the seniors who were playing the game, it seemed as real as the real thing. They cheered one another when one of them got a strike and commiserated when all but one of the pins was knocked over.

"I like it," said 86-year-old Olive Tucker. "At first it was hard to learn, but I like it now."

"I got two strikes tonight," she said with a twinkle.

She formerly bowled with real pins and ball at the center, Tucker noted, but she enjoys Wii bowling just as much.

Staff members like it, too, said Wagner, because they don't have to contend with bowling balls and pins, as they once did with the actual game.

The Tarpon Tigers, a team of four seniors and an alternate, is preparing for a big match via the Internet on March 25 with bowlers living at the Tarpon Springs center's sister facility, the Pinellas Park Care and Rehabilitation Center.

Wagner is already stirring up center spirit. She has recruited other seniors to serve as cheerleaders for the Tigers and she herself added a cheeky "Go Tigers!" that day to an e-mail to staff at the Pinellas Park facility. She is preparing to decorate the facility on the day of the event.

She thinks the Tigers will win, Wagner says. They have been Wii bowling for six months. The Pinellas Park team just started.

She wants the Peninsula residents to be connected to the world, rather than retire from it, Wagner explains. As well as connecting them through high-tech bowling, she had discussions of current events every Sundays. Many of the seniors appear to be fascinated by Obama, she says.

The center is on the right track, she says. "With Wii bowling and the news, you see them being involved in what's going on in the world."

Share this:
Loading Comments...
Loading
Print This Print Bookmark and Share
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement

IYP and SEO vendors: SEO by eLocalListing | Advertiser profiles
Oops! Your email could not be sent because of the following errors: