Mike Wolfe has seen more and more new faces during his regular trips to the pickleball courts at Hathaway Park in Washougal as one of the fastest-growing sports in the United States continues to gain popularity in East Clark County.
The Washougal resident started the Columbia River Pickleball Club (CRPC) in 2012 with an initial goal of attracting 20 to 30 players for organized competition. Now the Vancouver-based club has 642 members, including 112 from its Camas-Washougal chapter.
“Pretty much all 112 play (at Hathaway Park),” said Wolfe, the chapter’s vice president. “And that’s just club members. The total number of people who play fairly often is 200-plus. In the summertime, we have over 40 people there every morning and another group in the afternoon seven days a week. Lately, more families and young people have been playing. It amazes me. I keep thinking that with more and more people wanting to play the area will become saturated, but it hasn’t happened.”
The growth of the local pickleball community has caused one problem, however. With more players comes more wear and tear on the courts. As a result, the playing surfaces, which were named Wolfe Courts last year in honor of Wolfe and his wife, Tawn, are in desperate need of repair.
“Our courts are becoming very popular,” CRPC Camas-Washougal chapter president Lynda Boesel wrote in a recent Facebook post, “and to have them resurfaced is long overdue.”