Skateboarding star on the rise

Isla is a pint-sized powerhouse with a passion for skateboarding and positive mental health
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Remember this name: Isla Poa. You might just hear it again at the Olympics in the near future, when Isla's proudly representing the silver fern in skateboarding. 

For now, six-year-old Isla is a Year 2 student at Havelock North Primary. But after school and on weekends, she's flying high – literally. "It feels like I'm flying when I go up the rails and jump off," she says, bubbling with excitement. 

It's more than just a thrill. Skateboarding is teaching Isla valuable life lessons. "If I fall, I just get up and try again," she says. "It's frustrating sometimes, but I just try again." 

Mental Health Foundation
Early beginnings

Early beginnings

Isla's love for skateboarding began at two, when her dad Kaleb, rediscovered his own passion for the sport and bought himself a new skateboard. Isla started rolling around on it, and at her next birthday, she got one of her own. Regular visits to the local skatepark followed and that’s where she met 15-year-old Tiara, who became her first coach and best friend. "They have an amazing relationship," says Isla's mum, Chloe. 

Isla's passion also connected the family with Wellness Riders, a non-profit promoting physical and mental wellbeing for tamariki (children) and rangatahi (youth) through skateboarding. Isla and her family were on a road trip over Christmas, talking about goals and New Year’s resolutions when the idea of Isla doing a bowl challenge around New Zealand came up. The challenge?  To skate 100 skatebowls in 100 days and raise funds for the Mental Health Foundation.  

Two days later, on New Year’s Day, Isla was dropping into her first skate bowl. 

Life lessons

The plan for Isla’s 100 bowls in 100 days Challenge is to visit as many different skatebowls as possible, so there’s a road trip in the works which will take in Gisborne, Flaxmere, Hastings, Napier, Auckland, Mangawhai, Te Awamutu, Fielding, Wellington, Palmerston North, Chistchurch and Tauranga.  

Isla’s family is happy to support her passion for skateboarding because it’s about fresh air, freedom from devices, resilience, life lessons, and the fact she does it all with a huge smile. "We chose the Mental Health Foundation because we know mental health is just as important as physical health," says Chloe. "Resilience, confidence, and self-assuredness are all important for a great life." 

By day 10 of her challenge, Isla had already smashed her $1,000 fundraising goal, and now it’s sitting at over $1,600. She also gained the attention of national TV with a story on Seven Sharp.  

"Happy, excited, and proud," is how she describes the support she's received. She has a message for everyone: "It's okay to be sad, but if you're sad every day, then you won't have good days." 

Her advice for dealing with frustration? "Play with something else and try again or walk away if someone's being mean." 

Life lessons

Celebrations planned

Isla Poa, at just six years old, is already showing the world what it means to be resilient, determined, and full of joy. And she's doing it all on four wheels. 

And when day 100 rolls around, you’ll find Isla having a huge bowl party with the skate community, her friends and everyone who has donated and supported her challenge. What a great day that will be.  

Follow Isla's skateboarding and fundraising journey on Instagram below: