Skip to main content
Login to MyChart

Help us elevate and expand our care, make breakthroughs in biomedical science and improve community health and wellness.

Donate today

Search UVM Health

Riding the Dragon

Riding the Dragon

Cancer made me into an athlete.


November 01, 2024

Mary Cicaloni, RN, is an intake and referral nurse at Home Health & Hospice

But I’m getting ahead of myself. 

I came to Vermont in the 1970s to take my first job as a nurse at Central Vermont Medical Center. About 10 years ago, I joined Home Health & Hospice as an intake and referral nurse. Our team works together to welcome new patients and understand their needs so our clinicians can start caring for them.

I am a survivor of breast cancer – an experience I share with my mom and two sisters, who were also survivors. As I healed, I yearned to meet more people like me – people who understood the challenge I’d overcome and what it felt like to come out the other side.

At UVM Medical Center’s annual breast cancer conference, I learned of Dragonheart Vermont, a dragon boating organization based in Burlington that originally started with a team of breast cancer survivors. I was drawn to the sense of togetherness, so I gave it a try.

Joined by 20 ladies in a single dragon boat, we paddled back and forth along the Burlington waterfront, flanked by other dragon boats powering through Lake Champlain’s cool summer waters. All told, about 75 of the crew members were “sisters” – fellow breast cancer survivors. Another 125 were people who just love to paddle and work together.

In the dragon boat, I found camaraderie, forged by shared experience, banter and a drive to win. We paddle together and we paddle hard. In the boat or on the job, I love teamwork.

In the 10 years since my first paddle, I’ve become an athlete, an advocate and a national champion. Our boat won gold in three divisions at the national championship last year and our team recently returned from Ravenna, Italy, where we finished 6th at the Dragon Boat World Championships.

Many of our club members are in their 60s or 70s – our oldest sister is 92. None of us want to slow down. This sisterhood has given me newfound confidence in my body, and I’m healthier than ever. Even my doctor tells me: “Don’t stop paddling!” 

Mary Cicaloni, RN, is an intake and referral nurse at Home Health & Hospice, where she has worked for 10 years.  

844-UVM-HEALTH

Give to a Healthier Future

Help us elevate and expand our care, make breakthroughs in biomedical science and improve community health and wellness.

Healthier communities. Healthiest lives. Together.

University of Vermont Medical Center

111 Colchester Ave
Burlington, VT 05401

802-847-0000

Golisano Children's Hospital

111 Colchester Ave
Burlington, VT 05401

802-847-0000

Central Vermont Medical Center

130 Fisher Road
Berlin, VT 05602

802-371-4100

Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital

75 Beekman Street
Plattsburgh, NY 12901

518-561-2000

Elizabethtown Community Hospital

75 Park Street
Elizabethtown, NY 12932

518-873-6377

Alice Hyde Medical Center

133 Park Street
Malone, NY 12953

518-483-3000

Porter Medical Center

115 Porter Drive
Middlebury, VT 05753

802-388-4701

Home Health & Hospice

1110 Prim Road
Colchester, VT 05446

802-658-1900

© 2026 University of Vermont Health
Jump back to top