SEED CLUB

SEEDCLUB

Hong Kong 🇭🇰No.1 children's enlightenment cradle swimming class, VIP services for internal members and exclusive parenting tips from Olympic-level coaches.

This course is not open to the public and is only available to SEEDCLUB members for free.


SEEDCLUB is Hong Kong's first swimming club dedicated to developing the fundamentals of swimming for children aged 4 to 6. With the mission of "planting seeds, nurturing future swimmers" , it is committed to laying a solid swimming foundation for children during their golden enlightenment period, and to providing new and promising young swimmers for Hong Kong's swimming community.

course Working together with Olympic-level coach Mr. Zhang Diyong to personally design the teaching, using gamification to teach, solve the pain point of fear of water, and visualize the process, Zhang's coaching team can provide seamless connection for children, allowing them to plan their growth path to 18 years old from the age of 4 and reach the big stage of their dreams.

Kowloon Tsai Swimming Pool (pictured above) has completed the first phase of reconstruction work, and the main indoor pool will reopen on September 11, 2025.


Establishment SEEDCLUB The seeds will Original intention :

I have experienced all the pain that swimming children suffer, and I have found the answers!

As a father who has accompanied my daughter on her swimming journey for more than 9 years , I know very well that every struggle of a child is like a needle piercing the heart of a parent.

The following scenarios are not something I imagined, but rather the detours I (and many Hong Kong parents) have actually taken .

The "poolside tug of war" that takes place every time

When class finally arrives, the child comes up with all sorts of excuses to avoid going, sometimes even tearfully saying, "I don't want to go." Every time you leave the house, it's like a battle of willpower, leaving you exhausted both physically and mentally .

Every time you happily prepare your swimsuit and towel before leaving the house, your child will hug his pillow and say, "My stomach aches," "I'm so tired today." You've tried gentle persuasion, then a combination of soft and hard tactics, and finally, on the MTR train, facing his tear-stained eyes and the gazes of passersby, you can't help but scold him.

At that moment, you're filled not with anger but with a deep sense of guilt : "Am I forcing him like this for his own good, or am I ruining our precious weekend?"

You begin to wonder if insisting on letting him learn swimming is actually cultivating his perseverance or just wearing down your relationship. Looking at the wasted tuition and time, you feel a surge of frustration and helplessness.

Parental anxiety caused by stagnant progress

You see other kids in your class easily breathing and swimming to the other side, while your child is still stuck in the same spot. Coach Hea says, "He's just progressing slowly," and your heart tightens...

You begin to compare unconsciously, and your heart is filled with anxiety : "Did I choose the wrong method? Or is my child really not good enough?" This worry about your child's potential and the pressure of fearing that he will fall behind others keep you awake at night.

At the poolside, you see other children already darting through the water like little dolphins. The mother asks, smiling, "How long has your daughter been learning?" You reply with an awkward smile, watching your own child still clinging to the kickboard by the poolside, afraid to let go.

After sending your child home, you can't help but Google: "Why are children slow to learn to swim?" Your biggest concern isn't their progress, but whether their confidence will be eroded by their repeated failures.

The koala hug after the coach's roar caused a "childhood trauma"

If your child turns pale and stiffens as soon as they get close to the water, or refuses to let go of your hand after a slightly harsh instruction from the instructor, this isn't just fear; it's genuine dread .

Perhaps it was just a moment of hesitation, and the coach shouted a warning from the other side of the pool. From that moment on, your child, like a koala, clung to your thighs with all his might, his lips trembling as he said, "Daddy, I don't want to swim."

You look at this usually lively child, whose eyes are now filled with fear. Your biggest fear isn't that he won't learn today, but that the smell of chlorine in the pool and the coach's yelling will become a negative memory he doesn't want to touch from his childhood .

What you fear most is that this unpleasant experience will plant a seed of fear in his heart, turning swimming, which should be a happy sport, into a shadow that he will never want to touch in his life .

Missing the "golden age of 4" leads to choice paralysis

There's a plethora of swimming lessons on the market, and the information is confusing. You spend hours researching, only to find yourself increasingly lost.

You have joined several parent WhatsApp/Facebook groups. Some say that one-on-one private tutoring helps students learn faster, while others say that group classes provide the motivation for mutual help.

Swimming club A emphasizes competition results, swimming club B emphasizes fun learning, and swimming club C is a pyramid scheme that recruits members...

Everyone says that 4-6 years old is the "golden enlightenment period" and you can't get it back if you miss it. You fear that your poor choices will not only waste money, but also delay your child's irreversible "golden enlightenment period" between the ages of 4 and 6. You know a good start is crucial, but the fear of "one wrong step, all wrong" keeps you hesitant to make a decision, and time slips away.

You don't have to take these detours again

If any of the above points touches you, please believe that you are not alone. We can end your worries with "love and professionalism".

I have personally experienced each of the above scenarios, so I made up my mind to cooperate with Mr. Zhang Diyong, an Olympic-level coach recognized for his patience and love, and decided to establish SEEDCLUB .

Our purpose is to solve all of the above problems. We don't seek quick results; we seek to plant "happy memories" and "I can do it" confidence in children.

This is a swimming enlightenment course created by practical dads and top coaches. We will use professionalism and empathy to ensure that your child falls in love with being in the water from the first day.

This is not only to teach swimming skills, but also to solve the "pain" of parents from the source, using the right method to give children a safe and happy swimming enlightenment, and protect their curiosity and enthusiasm for the world.

Want your child to learn a unique swimming growth method, welcome to join us SEEDCLUB 's extended family.