Members of this year's first Wounded Warrior dragon boat team row their way to the starting line for their first race of the weekend, July 19 at Sloan's Lake Park. Even though the team has been practicing for this year's dragon boat race for more than month, they haven't had a practice session with more than 15 participants, seven less than must be in the boat on race day. Come race weekend, the team was able to fill their boat and beat their personal record with a time of 1:19 during their first heat. (Marla R. Keown/Aurora Sentinel)

Home used to be Rickey Bennett’s only refuge.

Like so many other former military members returning to the United States after overseas tours, the transition back into life after combat has been daunting for the 52-year-old former Navy combat chaplain and aircraft weapons specialist.

Sports have become a significant lifeline for Bennett, who hopes to take another step forward July 19-20 as one of three Aurora veterans set to compete for the newly-formed Wounded Warrior Dragon Boat Team, which makes its competitive debut at the 14th annual Colorado Dragon Boat Festival at Sloan’s Lake Park.

Bennett’s used sports as a significant lifeline and clung to it a little tighter July 19-20 as one of three Aurorans who competed for the newly-formed Wounded Warrior Dragon Boat Team, which made its competitive debut at the 14th annual Colorado Dragon Boat Festival at Sloan’s Lake Park.

“I kindof have panic attacks being around large crowds and loud noises, so we’ll see; this is a stretch for a lot of us,” Bennett said a few days before the team competed.

“I’m a lot better than I used to be. For awhile there, I never left my house except to go to the doctor’s office. Sports is what got me out of my house.”

Bennett’s story is not unlike many other members of the team, which is made up of Wounded Warrior alumni, former members of the military who have suffered physical injuries, Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI) or have been diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), their spouses and civilian supporters.

Times were pretty dark for Bennett  — who has lived in Aurora with his wife since 1990 — after more than 20 years serving in some capacity in nearly every branch of the military.

In 2004, while serving as a chaplain in Housaba, Iraq, Bennett suffered a TBI when he was hurled across a courtyard and into a building head-first after an explosion ignited a weapons cache in a building next to him. Later, he was diagnosed with PTSD, an alarmingly common mental illness suffered by today’s soldiers than can often lead to depression or suicidal thoughts. Bennett didn’t want to come home despite his injuries because of the reality that awaited him.

“It’s a different world; everything over there is life and death,” Bennett said. “People over here are worried about not having a remote control for their TV, or that they can’t find it, but people over there don’t have legs. It helps you get a new perspective and shows you that a lot of things over here are trivial, minor. They don’t understand us and we don’t understand them. It’s mutual.”

Bennett’s inner turmoil caused him to avoid people, which took a toll on his health. Until a couple of years ago, when he began to get involved with some athletic programs through Adaptive Adventures — the organizer of the Wounded Warrior Dragon Boat Team — and he’s continued to get more and more active recently.

Adaptive Adventures employees who have known Bennett for awhile have seen him come out of his shell and become one of the more gregarious members of the group. He’s part of Team Semper Fi — with which he plans to run the Marine Corps Marathon in the fall — the Denver Rolling Nuggets’ wheelchair basketball team and he has an upcoming dive set for the Aurora Reservoir where he’ll try to earn his SCUBA certification. He never even knew about the existence of Dragon Boat racing — one of the largest sports world-wide which involves synchronized team paddling— or the Dragon Boat Festival, but he wanted to give it a try.

Chris Wiegand of Adaptive Adventures, the Wounded Warrior team coach, said the team element of Dragon Boat is an ideal way to help people used to military service and difficulty dealing with society come together.

“We have several people who aren’t comfortable in a social setting because they lock themselves up at home and kindof seclude themselves in their safest place,” said Wiegand, who suffers from disabilities himself. “We try to pull them out slowly and show them that a little fitness and healthy lifestyle can help the social component because you build trust in this team…We’re trying to get them to understand this is your new unit if you are returning home.”

Wiegand also wants the team to be competitive, which has required him to “do everything non-traditionally,” and much differently than when he works with Olympians in canoe events.

Fitting together a group of any kind is difficult enough, but people with medical challenges or who don’t have access to transportation makes it even more difficult. In fact, the Wounded Warrior team hasn’t had a practice session with more than 15 participants, seven less than must be in the boat on race day.

Also, instead of a drum used by most Dragon Boat teams to call out rowing cadences, the Wounded Warrior Team calls out its own cadence verbally and in unison to help coordinate its strokes. Bennett has been impressed with how the team has performed in practice sessions at times considering how little practice they’ve had together and the complete newness of the sport to some of them.

“It’s really neat when we are in a groove; we’re really moving and it’s exhilarating,” Bennett said. “Our coach is really encouraging and positive and very skilled. He’s taken people that basically knew nothing or hardly anything about the sport and teach us how to paddle. We’re not like Olympians or world class athletes, we’re just a hodgepodge of everything together. We’re kindof like the Bad News Bears, but I think we’re going to surprise some people and turn some heads. When we get in a groove, I’m telling you, we move.”

Besides the therapeutic aspect of the Dragon Boat race, there’s significant motivation for the Colorado Wounded Warrior team.

If it can beat the time posted by a team from Chicago, the Colorado team can earn the chance to compete in a national meet in Minnesota. From there, the possibility exists of a trip to Hong Kong for an international meet.

Notes: Due to high volume around Sloan’s Lake Park, parking for the Dragon Boat Festival is available at Sports Authority Field at Mile High for $5 per car. A free shuttle transports visitors to and from the park from 6:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. both days…the honorary chairpeople for the event are former Aurora Mayor Paul Tauer and his wife, Kate.

Courtney Oakes is Sports Editor of the Aurora Sentinel. Reach him at 303-750-7555 or sports@aurorasentinel.com. Twitter: @aurorasports. Facebook: Aurora Prep Sentinel

14TH COLORADO DRAGON BOAT FESTIVAL

July 19-20 at Sloan’s Lake Park, Denver

Saturday: Festival hours, 10 a.m.-7 p.m.; Dragon boat races, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Opening ceremony, 10 a.m.-noon; All stages, Noon-7 p.m.; Gateway to Asia Martial Arts Stage, Noon-7 p.m.; Sunday: Festival hours, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Dragon boat races, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; All stages, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Gateway to Asia Martial Arts Stage, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Lion Dance Extravaganza, 3:30- 5 p.m.

Courtney Oakes is Sports Editor and photographer with Sentinel Colorado. A Denver East High School and University of Colorado alum. He came to the Sentinel in 2001 and since then has received a number...