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Sagging Number Of Older Nudists Bears Watching
By JOEL HOOD | SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL
August 9, 2007
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - In trendy South Florida, there are still places where people balk at Botox, laugh at lipo and let their body parts sag if that's what nature intended them to do.
They're called nudist resorts, and for decades, most have been impervious to the type of change that has rattled and reshaped life outside their secluded communities.
Now, faced with declining membership and aging residents, resorts locally and across the country are struggling with how to attract a younger generation to ensure the future of this laid-back and free-spirited lifestyle.
There are plenty of challenges. There are the usual misconceptions about nudist resorts; that they're all hippie communities or havens for perverts and deviant behavior. And then there's this, which might be the most daunting obstacle of all: Most twentysomethings don't seem to want to be naked around people who look like their parents.
"The lifestyle we're trying to preserve is going to die off unless we attract a younger crowd," said Amber Burge, the interim manager at the Seminole Health Club & Resort in Fort Lauderdale, one of only two registered nudist communities in South Florida. The other is Sunsport Gardens in the rural town of Loxahatchee Groves.
Like similar communities around the state and many across the country, these two resorts were born out of the free love era of the 1960s, when like-minded nonconformists gathered to create a place of independent thought and communal living to, quite literally, strip away societal norms. What followed in the 1970s and '80s is what some consider the golden age of nudist resorts in America. Seminole and Sunsport were swept up in the groundswell and became thriving rural, tree-lined communities far removed from city life.
While these communities remain, these are now lean times for many resorts threatened by a generational divide, said Carolyn Hawkins, spokeswoman for the American Association for Nude Recreation of Kissimmee, which represents more than 250 clubs and resorts in the United States and Canada. More than 90 percent of its 50,000 members are over 35 and a large percentage of those are well into their 50s and 60s, Hawkins said.
In response, nudist resorts are launching outreach efforts to local colleges, hosting dances, marketing online, reducing costs and even organizing strip poker tournaments geared toward bringing in young blood. However, success has been minimal, resort owners said.
"The younger population has no problem with nudity, but they don't seem to want to sit around with old people," said Joe Lettellier, president of the Paradise Lakes nudist resort near Tampa, which hosted a strip poker event in January 2006. "I feel the pressure to figure out the younger folks. You can't give up on them."
Membership at the Davie resort, which was founded in the mid-1960s but changed ownership last year, has dipped to about 250 today from a high of around 800 in its glory years, Burge said. There are 31 full-time members at the 10-acre park, but only two younger than 30, Burge said, including her 19-year-old daughter, Stacey Myers. Owner Patrick Toma guessed the average age of park visitors to be 45 or 50.
Myers said college-age men and women who are curious about nudism often feel pressure from others to deride the lifestyle.
"I've had friends here at Seminole who've said they weren't getting naked, and within five minutes they're in the pool," she said. "We definitely need a lot of younger members. Some cute boys maybe."
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Copyright © 2007, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Sagging Number Of Older Nudists Bears Watching
By JOEL HOOD | SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL
August 9, 2007
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - In trendy South Florida, there are still places where people balk at Botox, laugh at lipo and let their body parts sag if that's what nature intended them to do.
They're called nudist resorts, and for decades, most have been impervious to the type of change that has rattled and reshaped life outside their secluded communities.
Now, faced with declining membership and aging residents, resorts locally and across the country are struggling with how to attract a younger generation to ensure the future of this laid-back and free-spirited lifestyle.
There are plenty of challenges. There are the usual misconceptions about nudist resorts; that they're all hippie communities or havens for perverts and deviant behavior. And then there's this, which might be the most daunting obstacle of all: Most twentysomethings don't seem to want to be naked around people who look like their parents.
"The lifestyle we're trying to preserve is going to die off unless we attract a younger crowd," said Amber Burge, the interim manager at the Seminole Health Club & Resort in Fort Lauderdale, one of only two registered nudist communities in South Florida. The other is Sunsport Gardens in the rural town of Loxahatchee Groves.
Like similar communities around the state and many across the country, these two resorts were born out of the free love era of the 1960s, when like-minded nonconformists gathered to create a place of independent thought and communal living to, quite literally, strip away societal norms. What followed in the 1970s and '80s is what some consider the golden age of nudist resorts in America. Seminole and Sunsport were swept up in the groundswell and became thriving rural, tree-lined communities far removed from city life.
While these communities remain, these are now lean times for many resorts threatened by a generational divide, said Carolyn Hawkins, spokeswoman for the American Association for Nude Recreation of Kissimmee, which represents more than 250 clubs and resorts in the United States and Canada. More than 90 percent of its 50,000 members are over 35 and a large percentage of those are well into their 50s and 60s, Hawkins said.
In response, nudist resorts are launching outreach efforts to local colleges, hosting dances, marketing online, reducing costs and even organizing strip poker tournaments geared toward bringing in young blood. However, success has been minimal, resort owners said.
"The younger population has no problem with nudity, but they don't seem to want to sit around with old people," said Joe Lettellier, president of the Paradise Lakes nudist resort near Tampa, which hosted a strip poker event in January 2006. "I feel the pressure to figure out the younger folks. You can't give up on them."
Membership at the Davie resort, which was founded in the mid-1960s but changed ownership last year, has dipped to about 250 today from a high of around 800 in its glory years, Burge said. There are 31 full-time members at the 10-acre park, but only two younger than 30, Burge said, including her 19-year-old daughter, Stacey Myers. Owner Patrick Toma guessed the average age of park visitors to be 45 or 50.
Myers said college-age men and women who are curious about nudism often feel pressure from others to deride the lifestyle.
"I've had friends here at Seminole who've said they weren't getting naked, and within five minutes they're in the pool," she said. "We definitely need a lot of younger members. Some cute boys maybe."
More articles
Copyright © 2007, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
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