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From races to art trails – fundraising events round up

From races to art trails – fundraising events round up
Verdi's Run & Raisesome ice cream, renamed for the Herts 10k

Rennie Grove Hospice Care is benefitting from this year’s Herts 10K while St Giles Hospice has announced an art trail for next summer. More on these events and others below.

Ice cream support for Rennie Grove Hospice Care Herts 10K

In a bid to encourage people to sign up and run the Herts 10K race this October, Verdi’s Italian restaurant in Clarence Park St Albans has teamed up with race organisers to rename their popular Rum and Raisin ice cream to RUN AND RAISESOME! The Herts 10K is the flagship fundraising event for Rennie Grove Hospice Care and organisers are going all out to make this year the biggest event to date. Posters and signage on the ice cream cart in the park and in-store on the menus will alert shoppers to the newly named flavour; whilst QR codes take them directly to the online sign-up page. The Herts 10K 2022 takes place on Sunday 9 October 2022.

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City Hospice holds Forever Flowers display at Cardiff Castle

A display of sunflowers will open to the public at Cardiff Castle on Saturday 30 July. Thousands of Forever Flowers will feature in the display designed by award-winning local artist Katherine Jones. Organised by City Hospice, the Forever Flowers campaign provides an opportunity for people to unite and remember cherished family members, friends, colleagues and loved ones with unique and lasting tributes. The display is free to visit and will run until Sunday 14 August. Supporters will be able to collect their Forever Flower during the final weekend of the display and following the event. There is also an opportunity for personalisation as the flowers can be engraved after the display at a significantly reduced cost at participating Timpson stores. Forever Flowers supports the work of City Hospice, Cardiff’s local hospice.


Cyclists Fighting Cancer conference bike world record attempt John O’Groats to Lands End finish 28.05.2022 ©Exposure Photo Agency Ltd

Cyclists Fighting Cancer challenge people to the PB for CFC

Cyclists Fighting Cancer is challenging people to be their best selves and break a personal best by taking part in their ‘PB for CFC’ challenge fundraiser this summer. Whether it’s running their fastest ever 5k, deadlifting their goal weight or making the most of the summer sunshine and trying a new water sport for the first time – participants can set their own Personal Best challenge to get fit, keep active and help a child living with cancer. The PB challenge can be completed solo or with a team.


Charities take part in British Transplant Games

July saw thousands of transplant patients, live donors, supporters, and guests will come together in Leeds for the Westfield Health British Transplant Games, the flagship event of charity Transplant Sport. 22 organisations from across the UK have come forward to show their support for the Games, generating over £400,000 and providing resources to ensure that the transplant community can reunite once again safely, after the UK lockdowns and shielding. The list of organisations includes long-term partners Westfield Health, Kidney Care UK, Anthony Nolan, the Donor Family Network, Icon Creative Design, Liquid Public Relations, and organisers MLS and NHS Blood and Transplant. Support includes Leeds City Council and the University of Leeds providing accessible facilities to host the Games’ sporting events, and local media company The Ark securing free, high-visibility outdoor advertising spots.


St Giles Hospice announces art sculpture trail for 2023

St Giles Hospice has officially announced the launch of March of the Elephants, a public art sculpture trail due to take place in Summer 2023. The event will celebrate the vibrancy and creativity that our community has to offer as well as showcasing a spectacular variety of talent across Lichfield, Tamworth and Sutton Coldfield. March of the Elephants will see St Giles Hospice team up with event experts Wild in Art, who have been delivering world class public art events across the globe for over ten years. More than 60 elephant sculptures will bring colour and joy to the streets, parks and open spaces across Lichfield, Tamworth and Sutton Coldfield, for ten weeks before being auctioned off to raise funds for St Giles Hospice. Decorated by local and national artists, designers and illustrators, the elephants will form an ‘unforgettable’ trail of colourful sculptures for visitors to discover and enjoy. The free public art event is set to benefit the whole community, with hundreds of thousands of people expected to join in the fun.


a close up of a woman's trainers

Walk & Talk Trust holds 2022 Big Smile walks

The Big Smile is the name that the Walk & Talk Trust has given to its annual summer series of guided fundraising walks for adults across the North of England, this year taking place in July. There is no registration fee, with people asked to reach instead a £99 fundraising target. Funds raised through the Big Smile will enable the Trust to donate thousands of pairs of walking boots to schoolchildren and to groups of disadvantaged adults across the region. Additionally, the Trust will organise and promote walks for schools and support groups. July’s walks included around Beamish Museum, Tynemouth, and Raby Castle.

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Indianapolis Motor Speedway, NASCAR, IndyCar all agree: Hold ‘events’, not just races

Indianapolis Motor Speedway, NASCAR, IndyCar all agree: Hold 'events', not just races

INDIANAPOLIS — On Friday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, it was announced that the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship will return to the iconic venue next September as the headline event of a full weekend of action dubbed the “IMSA Battle on the Bricks.”

For the first time since 2014, the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship will compete on the 14-turn, 2.439-mile road course in a two-hour, 40-minute race.

The event was described as a three-day festival showcasing the pinnacle of sports car racing, with unparalleled fan access to the garage area throughout the weekend so race fans in the IMS infield can get up close and personal with their favorite sports cars, drivers and team.

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Outhouse races returning!

Outhouse races returning!

After a two year pause due to the pandemic, the Cochrane Outhouse races are returning.

Event organizer Dan Kroffat says that the over 20 year-old event is scheduled to take place on Sunday, August 28th barring any complications.

The format for the races is similar to a popular Stampede event says Kroffat.

“It’s almost like the chuckwagon’s, we do them in heats and then we eliminate the teams that are losing in their heats, and then we have a final runoff between the two finalists to determine who will be the 2022 outhouse world champion.”

In addition to races a special award will be given to one of its organizers, that has helped make the races the success that it is says Kroffat.

“We’re going to be honouring Karrie Peace, who had run the Outhouse races for years, so this year we want to take the opportunity to thank her so we’ll be presenting her with a citizen’s award.”

Kroffat also says that the races will be open to sign up for next week under a new group.

“We will have a contact set-up, and it’ll be through our new group, just formed recently in Cochrane, the Rocky Mountain Rotarians. This is a group of young business leaders who have now come together and they will be serving the community in every way they can.”

Lastly Kroffat says that Cochranites should start to get excited for the return of the races.

“I would suggest people get out and oil up those wheels on the outhouses, because we’re coming back and it’s going to be a lot of fun.”

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Bed Races and Sidney Days are among key events returning this summer – Saanich News

Bed Races and Sidney Days are among key events returning this summer - Saanich News

Sidney Days are returning to Canada Day festivities and traffic in downtown Sidney will look mighty different later in August.

Mayor Cliff McNeil-Smith welcomed the return of Sidney Days but also put it in a larger context.

“The return of Sidney Days after a two-year hiatus shows our community is emerging from the pandemic in a very positive way,” he said. “Given the tragedy unfolding in Ukraine, I know the community will want to gather, as we have done for generations on Canada Day, to celebrate the freedoms we cherish and may sometimes take for granted.”

Sidney Days open on June 30 with live music starting at 7:30 p.m. at Beacon Park, followed by fireworks scheduled for 10:15 p.m.

Sidney Lions will host a pancake breakfast at 8 a.m. on July 1 at the Mary Winspear Centre. The Canada Day Parade presented by Peninsula Celebrations Society down Beacon Avenue will get underway at 11:30 a.m. followed by a Family Fun Fair featuring Valdy from 12:30 to 4 p.m. in downtown Sidney. The event will also mark the return of the Slegg Build-A-Boat that sees teams construct a water vessel and attempt to stay afloat while racing to claim victory.

Also returning to Sidney this summer are the Bed Races, a popular fundraiser by the Saanich Peninsula Hospital and Healthcare Foundation.

Scheduled for Aug. 28 from noon to 4 p.m., the event sees squads of four people push a bed piloted by a team member down Beacon Avenue for one full block in the fastest time with two teams competing at a time. The event encourages teams to dress up in costumes. The event awards prizes for fastest team, most funds raised and best team spirit.

Both events are returning for the first time since 2019.


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wolfgang.depner@peninsulanewsreview.com

Saanich Peninsula

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Stampede will roar back in 2022 with full parade, concerts and chuckwagon races

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“Everything you know and expect from the Calgary Stampede will be back.”

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Calgary Stampede is returning in full swing this year with everything that’s been missing the last two years, including a long parade route, more concert venues and the Rangeland Derby Chuckwagon Races.

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For the unveiling of the 2022 Calgary Stampede poster and the start of the 100-day countdown to Stampede on Wednesday at the Nutrien Western Event Centre, the Calgary Stampede opened with pyrotechnics and an Indigenous hoop dancing performance.

“Everything you know and expect from the Calgary Stampede will be back,” announced Steve McDonough, Stampede president and chairman of the board.

McDonough said this summer’s Stampede will look like any other pre-pandemic Stampedes, though he doesn’t expect they’ll reach the same level of attendees as 2019. The Stampede will run from July 8 to 17.

“We’re not unaware that there’s still a pandemic. We’re making a plan for a full Stampede, that brings back live music in Saddledome, chuckwagon racing will be back, we’ve got the relay racing doubling, we’ve got four live stages with bands,” he said.

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“But don’t get me wrong, we are able to pivot if things change. We are planning for a heck of a Stampede.”

Calgary Stampede hosted a scaled-back event last summer and introduced a vaccine or negative test passport system for access to the Nashville North tent, several months before the Alberta government required a similar system for indoor businesses.

Despite the measures in place, more than 100 cases of COVID-19 were directly linked to Calgary Stampede events, Alberta Health Services said in August 2021. But health experts at the time said it is unlikely the province will know the full extent of spread.

Relay racer Kal Jackson and artist Kane Pendry hold the 2022 Calgary Stampede poster after it was unveiled on Wednesday, March 30, 2022. Pendry painted the relay race scene after being inspired watching the event at the 2021 Stampede.Gavin Young/Postmedia
Relay racer Kal Jackson and artist Kane Pendry hold the 2022 Calgary Stampede poster after it was unveiled on Wednesday, March 30, 2022. Pendry painted the relay race scene after being inspired watching the event at the 2021 Stampede.Gavin Young/Postmedia Gavin Young/Postmedia

The Stampede poster shows Kal Jackson, an Indigenous relay race competitor, racing on the back of his late horse Water Runner. The artist, 19-year-old Kane Pendry of Edmonton, said he has put more than 100 hours into the piece and has participated in the youth poster competition for three years.

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“I just really focused on what I wanted to portray and what emotions I wanted to bring out,” said Pendry, who is Méits. He said the project has helped him connect with his roots.

“It was really heartfelt talking to some of the (relay race) riders and that’s when I wanted to do it.”

We are planning for a heck of a Stampede.

Steve McDonough

He interviews the riders after watching the relay racers during last year’s Stampede and took photographs to use as a reference for his painting. It took him four paintings and hundreds of thumbnail sketches.

The winner of the Calgary Stampede Foundation Youth Poster Competition receives a $10,000 Dustin Peers Memorial Scholarship, funded by the Brandon Flock Foundation. Pendry is the fourth Alberta youth to have their artwork selected through the program.

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Jackson said being the subject of the Stampede’s poster was a great honour.

“This is a dream that became a reality for me,” he said. “For the generation to come, I want to be a good example that anything can happen and blessings can be bestowed upon anyone when they work for it.”

He said he was brought to tears when he saw the painting for the first time.

“I can’t be any more proud,” Jackson said.

The relay races have been a part of the Stampede’s evening show since 2017, and will be returning to the event this summer with 10 teams competing in two heats of races each night.

“There’s nothing quite like the warm summer nights of July, with the thunder of the wagons and the electric energy of the relay races. Follow that with the Bell Grandstand and an incredible display of fireworks — and you’re going to have one of the best nights of the year,” said McDonough.

sbabych@postmedia.com
Twitter: @BabychStephanie

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