With winter's waning daylight comes another cause for seasonal despondence: empty pickleball courts stripped of their nets and dignity, their gates sealed off with padlocks ensuring that even the most tempted devotees stay out.
I admit I wasn't prepared for how crestfallen I'd feel when the nets came down at my regular outdoor pickleball haunts. A scene that delivered so much joy over the spring and summer went seemingly underground after that first snowfall of the year. But as it turns out, you can find a pickleball game in Minnesota's colder months — if you know where to look.
"There's actually a lot of options, but they're not well seen," said Twila Jesso, co-founder of the North Star Pickleball Association and administrator of the Facebook page Pickleball Minnesota.
This fall I started playing at my local community center once a week on gymnasium floors. Playing in a gym is not a pure pickleball experience — one can inadvertently whack the ball at a basketball hoop or a low ceiling. And because the gym is reserved for various uses, the rainbow of colored lines on the floor can feel disorienting during play. The ball also bounces differently than on an outdoor court, and the gym lighting can strain middle-aged eyes while you're chasing a fast-paced shot.
But the regulars there, mostly retired women, have been welcoming, and they can teach novices like me a good deal about the game. (They asked me recently if I used to play volleyball because of all the "diving" I was doing. Um, no, ladies — that's just clumsiness, and it's killing my back!)
Jesso says if you don't mind the makeshift nature of these gymnasium courts, they are your best bet. In some places, you can play for hours after paying a drop-in fee as low as $2.
More and more indoor pickleball destinations are cropping up to meet the demand, and court reservations in many cases fill up at a lightning pace in winter. Lucky Shots and Minneapolis Cider Co. in Minneapolis, Mega Pickle & Pong in Chanhassen, Picklebarn in Mankato, and the Premier Pickleball Club of Minnesota in Brooklyn Park all offer an outdoor court surface in indoor settings.
I share this with you because we, the casually obsessed, are legion. I was shocked to learn that our humble, warmth-averse state of Minnesota ranks fourth in the nation for our googling of "pickleball." Less surprisingly, we shoot up to No. 2 for our searches of "indoor pickleball," behind only Utah. People want to bang their pickleball and dink it, too — and cities, centers and private businesses have responded.