Background
She was born in Medicine Hat, Alberta.
She was born in Medicine Hat, Alberta.
University of Alberta.
As of the 2012 Olympics, Nattrass is one of only 122 athletes (and one of only 46 still active), all sports, to compete in at least six Olympic Games, appearing in 1976, "88, "92, 2000, "04 and "08. Nattrass was introduced to trap shooting by her father Floyd Nattrass, who competed for Canada at the World Championships in 1958 and 1968 and at the Olympics in 1964. Nattrass said of her father:
In the 1976 Summer Olympics she became the first ever woman to participate in a shooting event at the Olympics, as shooting was open to both sexes until 1992.
She finished 9th in the 2000 Summer Olympics and 6th in the 2004 Summer Olympics in women"s trap shooting.
After the 1996 Summer Olympics, the International Shooting Union decided to discontinue the trap and skeet shooting events for women and instead allow women to compete in the double trap, where two clay saucers are thrown simultaneously. She led a campaign - writing letters, doing surveys, playing politics - against the decision to remove the two events.
After five years, the campaign succeeded and women"s skeet and trap shooting remained in the Olympics. She is also listed as a recipient of the Vanier Award for Outstanding Young Canadians.
She earned a Bachelors in Physical Education from the University of Alberta in 1972, a Masters in 1974, and has since been an instructor, administrator, lecturer and consultant in physical education and sports psychology.
In between her first and second Olympic appearances in 1976 and 1988, she earned her doctorate from the University of Alberta in 1987. She has travelled around the world at various competitions for over three decades, nearly always accompanied by her mother and coach Marie. Since 1996, Nattrass has lived on Vashon Island near Seattle.
She moved there when she joined the Pacific Medical Center as a medical researcher in September 1996.
She owns and runs the Puget Sound Osteoporosis Center, where she studies the effects of aging in bones on active sportswomen in their forties and older.
Competing at an elite international level from the 1970s through the 2010s, Nattrass has had multiple appearances, in one or both of trap or double trap, at Olympic Games, Commonwealth Games, World Championships, and Pan American Games. Nattrass is a repeat World Champion and repeat medalist at the Commonwealth Games, World Championships, and Pan American Games. Nattrass was the flag bearer for Canada at the 2007 Pan American Games (and a gold medal winner) and the 2014 Commonwealth Games. She won a gold medal at the World Championships in 1974, "75, "77, "78, "79, "81, and 2006. She won a silver medal at the 2001 world championships in Cairo, Egypt in the trap event. At the 2006 Commonwealth Games she won three medals: two silver in women"s double trap pairs and women"s trap pairs and a bronze in women"s trap. She won the Trap Shooting event at the World Championships in 1981 and 2006, twenty five years apart. This is a difficult transition that Nattrass - who won two World Cups in the double trap in 1993 - equated to a downhill skier having to switch to cross-country. In 1981, she was awarded the Lou Marsh Trophy as Canadian Athlete of the Year and was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.