Showing posts with label Cabot Trail Relay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cabot Trail Relay. Show all posts

Monday, May 28, 2012

Cabot Trail Relay Race 2012

 


Leg #3 Start

Leg #3 Finish

More than just a race.....

Sunshine and some of my sunny teammates

Some of the competition

Sunset on North Mountain

Daybreak mist on the Margaree River
It was cloud and 17 degrees. The Cabot Trail Relay in Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. 

The 3rd Leg on Little River, Skir Dhu to Wreck Cove General Store. I finished in 58:03 and came in 8th out of 70 runners. In first few minutes I stop to retie the shoe lace.

Team PEI came in tied 38th out of 70 teams with two penalties and two DNF's. 

Results
 
Congratulations Captain Kim 
for completing all 17 Legs of The Cabot Trail Relay Race!


Michael was in the thick of things with his video camera rolling....

here's his "sights and sounds from the 2012 Cabot Trail Relay race"





Mike Richard's Atlantic Chip Timing Photos


Maine-iacs win second consecutive Cabot Trail Relay

Maine-iacs-cabot relay - Adam Goode of the Maine-iacs relay team hit the finish line first at the Cabot Trail Relay race, Sunday. Goode recorded a course record for the No. 17 leg, and his team also won the overall title for the second year in a row. Chris Shannon - Cape Breton Post

Published on May 27, 2012
Chris Shannon

BADDECK — Twenty-eight-year-old Adam Goode tore to the finish line at the Cabot Trail Relay on Sunday to secure the Maine-iacs a second consecutive victory in the gruelling 298-kilometre, 17-stage relay race.

He strode in for a time of one hour, six minutes and 51 seconds in the final leg. His team, the Maine-iacs, won the overall title in a time of 16 hours, 39 minutes and 32 seconds.

“It was the first time I’ve ever run (the final leg), but I do like attention,” Goode said with a laugh with the cheering crowd behind him.

“(The final leg of the course) usually goes down swamp road, but the bridge was out, so we went the other way. It was cool, yeah, it was awesome.”

The 25th edition of the Cabot Trail Relay began Saturday morning at the Gaelic College in St. Anns, and wound its way through the Cape Breton Highlands until it reached Baddeck mid-morning on Sunday.

Five teams from Maine competed in this year’s race, along with five from New Brunswick, one from Newfoundland, 11 from Ontario, three from Prince Edward Island, three from Quebec, one from Alberta and the remaining 41 hailing from Nova Scotia.

Goode, who has raced in the relay seven times, had a reminder to some of the new racers from Maine to be on their best behaviour.

“Everybody here is so friendly. Maine’s a friendly place but anybody who’s new I kinda tell them, like, when you come up here you better be nice to everybody because if you’re not looking directly at their eyes, and being really nice, they’re gonna think you’re weird.”

Marie Elliot, 38, of Burlington, Ont., representing her team of Bruce Trail Mix was the first woman to cross the finish line.

In her fifth Cabot Trail Relay, she said running the final leg is by far the toughest because the team’s support vehicles aren’t allowed to follow the runners on the gravel roads.

“Seventeen is claimed to be the glory leg but it’s only the glory leg for the last 800 metres. Otherwise it’s really tough. You’re all by yourself,” Elliot said.

“But the weather today makes it all the easier.”

Prior to the runners hitting the finish line, a group of four children waited, seated at the curb, with a sign that read, “Go Dad Go.”

Makayla, Casey, Percy, and Grace were patient waiting for their father, Danny King, to close out the race for his team, the Cumberland Crusaders.

The siblings, from Oxford, were proud of the sign they made for their dad.

“Mom helped us out with most of the writing,” Makayla King said.

Alicia King said this was her husband’s first Cabot Trail Relay race. She was able to communicate with him briefly through cellphone text messages.

“Just slightly through texts to say that he completed and he was resting, getting ready to do the next one.”

King finished the final leg of the race in a time of 1:28:36.
This year’s race included 70 registered teams with more than 1,000 participants. The first event in 1988 featured only six teams.

Each team can have as many as 17 runners, with each assigned to one of the legs of the event.
Some teams have runners run multiple legs instead. Legs vary from 12 to 20 kilometres in length.
Leg No. 9 is regarded by many as the most difficult because it requires runners to climb North Mountain.

cshannon@cbpost.com




 Runner dies during annual Cabot Trail Relay Race
Stephen Dunn is seen at the Cabot Trail Relay Race early Sunday.

CTV Atlantic
Date: Monday May. 28, 2012 5:52 PM ET
Nova Scotia's running community is grieving the death of a runner at the annual Cabot Trail Relay Race on the weekend.

Stephen Dunn, 58, of Halifax collapsed on Highway 105 near Baddeck, just 500 metres from the finish line, during Sunday's race.

Baddeck RCMP received the 911 call around 10:30 a.m.

Dunn was rushed to the Victoria County Memorial Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

He was an experienced runner who had taken part in the relay for nearly two decades. He also ran with the Salt Marsh Trail Running Club, based in Cole Harbour, N.S.

His family released this statement today:

"Steve was a wonderful and dedicated husband, son, brother, father and friend. His love for life and positive energy was contagious to all who knew him."

Police say they don't suspect foul play in his death, although a cause of death has not been released.

A total of 70 teams and nearly 1,200 people took part in the 25th annual relay, which covers 276 kilometres around the Cabot Trail and lasts for two days.

Funeral arrangements are not yet complete.


Runner dies after Cabot Trail Relay

Cape Breton Post - ‎18 hours ago‎
BADDECK — A 58-year-old Halifax man collapsed during the 17th and final leg of the Cabot Trail Relay and later died at hospital Sunday. Sgt. Birgdit Leger of the RCMP said the Baddeck detachment received a 911 call at 10:30 am after the runner ...

Monday, May 30, 2011

Cabot Trail Relay Race 2011 - My Top 10 Finish for TEAM PEI




My Leg, Leg #2:


It was cloud and foggy and 12 degrees. The Cabot Trail Relay at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. The second leg course on North River Bridge, Tarbot, Tarbotvale, Indian Brook and ending at Clucking Hen Cafe.

I wore a Anne of Green Gables hat for every my leg so did all members of Team PEI.

I finished in 1:14:16 and came in 8th out of 70 runners.

The Maine-Iacs won the relay and Team PEI came in 33rd out of 70 teams with a late runner and no penalties.


Alex & Erin Poirier (Lov4Gambia)
After Erin's Leg #1 run and before Alex's Leg #2 run.

Along Leg #2

Along Leg #2

The photo above of Alex approaching the finish line
is by On-Site Images


Finish Line!


TEAM PEI :
 33. 24:24:30 TEAM PEI                           (01:26:09)
================================================ Team# Leg
1 00:59:57 Mike Gaudet 56 11
2 01:05:17 Kimberley Bailey 56 3
3 01:06:23 Coralee MacPhee 56 7
4 01:14:16 Alex Bain 56 2
5 01:14:34 Dustin Gavin 56 10
6 01:15:39 Edna Miller 56 8
7 01:20:31 George Mutch 56 12
8 01:20:54 Kent Mill 56 1
9 01:27:33 Nicole Allen 56 16
10 01:31:12 Kim Bailey 56 13
11 01:33:17 Sara Deveau 56 6
12 01:36:44 Rhonda MacPhee 56 15 Late
13 01:36:46 Ken Taylor 56 4
14 01:38:18 Alan Peters 56 5
15 01:40:14 Darla MacPhee 56 17
16 01:43:52 Joanne McLaughlin 56 9
17 01:59:03 Kimberley Bailey 56 14

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

My Running Highlights of 2010



My Running Highlights of 2010

Top 5 running highlights of 2010

#5.
Leg 15 at Cabot Trail Relay

Cabot Trail Relay Race
Related Posts


#4.
2010 18-29 Male Championship Points

PEI RoadRunners Championship Points Totals
2010 Males Points Totals ~ 2010 Female Points Totals


#3.
Sub 2 hours barrier at Harvest Festival 25km Run

Monday, May 31, 2010

The Cabot Trail Relay Race 2010



The Cabot Trail Relay at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia.

It was cloud and 3 degrees on leg 15.
The leg at Margaree Forks started at 5:36 and ended at Lakes Cafe near Finlayson. I finished in 1:13:33 and came in 18th out of 69 runners.

Team PEI finishes 36th out of 69 teams in 24:20:21 with a late runner at leg 7 and no penalties.

Dennis Fairalls Grey Hair an alumni of University Of Windsor won the relay and Red Island Road Hogs came in 3rd overall. The Maine Road Hags was top female team 7th overall.

I have a good time and so did my parents who came too.

Kim Bailey was my team captain run two legs and Doug MacEachern run three legs. Also on Team PEI was Sara Deveau, Joanne Mclaughlin, Karen Creighton, Gary Simmonds, Ron Profit, Johanna Profit, Rebecca Pike, George Mutch, Dustin Gavin, Kent Mills and Maria Profit.

Congratulations and thanks to Team PEI, all teams, race organizers and volunteers. It was a great weekend.

This Saturday I run at Cornwall Classic.

Photos:

You can see photos by Online Images here: http://www.on-siteimages.com/cabottrailrelay2010.htm

Results:

Team PEI Results

  • Leg #1 - 45(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Sara Deveau - 1:32:36
  • Leg #2 - 47(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Joanne McLaughlin - 1:38:27
  • Leg #3 - 47(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Karen Creighan - 1:20:50
  • Leg #4 - 48(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Kimberley Bailey - 1:47:01
  • Leg #5 - 29(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Doug MacEachern - 1:31:59
  • Leg #6 - 7(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Gary Simmons - 1:14:32
  • Leg #7 - 60(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Ron Profit - 1:29:24 LATE
  • Leg #8 - 39(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Johanna Profit - 1:07:54
  • Leg #9 - 31(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Rebecca Pike - 1:27:02
  • Leg #10 - 50(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Doug MacEachern - 1:28:13
  • Leg #11 - 33(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 George Mutch - 1:10:39
  • Leg #12 - 6(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Dustin Gavin - 1:05:25
  • Leg #13 - 37(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Kent Mill - 1:29:55
  • Leg #14 - 39(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Maria Profit - 1:44:11
  • Leg #15 - 18(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Alex Bain - 1:13:33
  • Leg #16 - 36(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Doug MacEachern - 1:18:15
  • Leg #17 - 61(Place) TEAM PEI - 6 Kimberley Bailey - 1:40:25
  • Cabot Trail Relay Total time: 24:20:21

Team PEI's Captain Kim Bailey at the "Glory Leg" #17 Finish Line

http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/index.cfm?sid=341402&sc=99

Last updated at 12:43 AM on 28/05/10
Road-ready Hogs
P.E.I. runners to compete in challenging Cabot Trail Relay

Co-captain Chris Matters, left, Paul Baglole and Sandy  Stewart, members of the Red Island Road Hogs, run to prepare for the  Cabot Trail Relay on Saturday and Sunday in Cape Breton. The relay,  started in 1988, is 298 kilometres long and is broken up into 17 legs.  (Submitted photo)

Co-captain Chris Matters, left, Paul Baglole and Sandy Stewart, members of the Red Island Road Hogs, run to prepare for the Cabot Trail Relay on Saturday and Sunday in Cape Breton. The relay, started in 1988, is 298 kilometres long and is broken up into 17 legs. (Submitted photo)

CHARLES REID
The Guardian


There’s a certain advantage to running an early leg in the 2010 Cabot Trail Relay Saturday and Sunday in Beddeck, N.S.
Daylight.
The 17-leg, 298-kilometre relay starts Saturday at 7 a.m. It ends Sunday around 9:45 a.m.
“(At least) I’ll be able to see where I’m going,” said Paul Baglole, who’s running the second leg.
The league covers almost 18 kilometres over the rugged Cape Breton landscape.
Baglole is one of 16 members of the Red Island Road Hogs.
Chris Matters, co-captain, and runner Francis Fagan dreamed up the squad to compete, and win, the race.
Matters recruited Rob MacKenzie, who finished sixth at last year’s P.E.I. Marathon, and Stanley Chaisson, the current Marathon champion, for the group.
Both dropped out because of injury, but MacKenzie stayed on as co-captain.
“The group of runners we have right now have been training hard all spring and are really pumped about this race,” said Matters.
The Road Hogs are one of three Island squads — Team P.E.I. and Terminal Velocity are the others — registered to face runners from across Canada and the United States.
The 22-year-old event started in six teams in 1988 and now draws about 60 teams and 1,000 runners each year.
The Dennis Fairfalls Grey Hair, a group of University of Windsor alumni, are the defending champions with a time of 16:59:48.
Overnight runners can use headlamps (with the approval of the RCMP), reflective vests and light sticks.
Legs are 12 to 20 kilometres long and vary in difficulty from steep mountains in the Cape Breton Highlands National Park to the rolling Margaree Valley.
Baglole’s section is rated as medium difficulty (3.5 out of 5).
He’s been running for about 15 years, but it’s his first Cape Breton Relay.
He finished third at the Clarke’s Toyota five-mile run in Summerside and 11th at the Bunny Hop 10-kiloemtre event last month in Charlottetown.
“Oh yeah, I always get nervous (before a race). It’s going to be exciting and I expect to be fine,” said Baglole. “It’s a unique event. Most (of us) have been training just for this.”
The Dennis Fairfalls Grey Hair, a group of University of Windsor alumni, is the defending champion with a time of 16:59:48.
“There are some really fast runners from Maine and Ontario that compete, but we stand a good chance of being right up there in the top two or three,” said MacKenzie.
Follow the Red Island Road Hogs on its facebook page.
(www.cabottrailrelay.com)
*****
The Red Island Road Hogs:
Paul Baglole, Steven Baglole, John Bil, Scott Clark, David Gallant, Tony Landry, Billy MacDonald, Mike MacKinnon, David MacMillan, Chris Matters, Shawn McCardle, Connor McGuire, Keaghan Rilling, Tyler Sellar, Kris Taylor and Sandy Stewart.

http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/index.cfm?sid=341920&sc=99

Road Hogs tame trail
Island team finishes third overall in gruelling Cape Breton relay race


Kris Taylor, left, of the Red Island Road Hogs is  shown running in his leg during the Cabot Trail Relay in Nova Scotia  last weekend. Taylor placed third in his leg. (Submitted photo)

Kris Taylor, left, of the Red Island Road Hogs is shown running in his leg during the Cabot Trail Relay in Nova Scotia last weekend. Taylor placed third in his leg. (Submitted photo)

The Guardian

The Red Island Road Hogs had lofty goals for the Cabot Trail Relay last weekend in Cape Breton and the 16-member running team didn’t disappoint.

The Road Hogs finished third overall in the 17-leg, 276-kilometre event with a time of 18 hours 10 minutes and six seconds.
Seventy teams and 1,100 runners entered the annual event in Baddeck, N.S., and the Road Hogs became the highest placing Island squad in its 22-year history.
Of the other Island entries, Team P.E.I. placed 36th and Terminal Velocity finished 49th with times of 24:20:21 and 25:10:49, respectively.
The top Road Hog runner was Summerside native Connor McGuire, who won Leg 12 in a time of 54:29.
Team P.E.I.’s Dustin Gavin finished sixth in Leg 12 with a time of 1:05:25 while teammate Gary Simmons finished seventh in Leg 6 (1:14:32).
Terminal Velocity’s Jeff Boswell placed eighth in Leg 6 (1:14:41).
Dennis Fairall’s Grey Hair Runners of Windsor, Ont,, repeated as champions with a new course record of 16:16:45 while Maine’s Mainiacs finished second in a time of 16:47:01.
“The competition was amazing this year and our team of Island runners was competitive on all legs,” said Rob MacKenzie, Road Hogs’ co-captain. “All of the runners finished in the top 10 of their legs, with eight legs having a top-three finish and an outright win by McGuire.
“In fact, Connor just missed the course record and ran his leg so fast that they weren’t quite ready for him at the finish line.”
Legs are 12 to 20 kilometres long and vary in difficulty, from steep mountains in the Cape Breton Highlands National Park to the rolling Margaree Valley.
Other top-10 leg finishers on the Road Hogs were Kris Taylor (Leg 1, third, 1:02:44), Paul Baglole (Leg 2, seventh, 1:11:53), Chris Matters (Leg 3, sixth, 54:34), Mike MacKinnon (Leg 4, second, 1:14:49), Scott Clark (Leg 5, second, 1:05:32), David Gallant (Leg 6, fourth, 1:10:34), Mike MacKinnon (Leg 7, third, 49:36), Sandy Stewart (Leg 8, third, 49:14), Keaghan Rilliny (Leg 9, 10th, 1:17:15), Billy MacDonald (Leg 10, third, 1:03:42), David MacMillan (Leg 11, fifth, 54:45), Tyler Sellar (Leg 13, third, 1:03:09), Shawn McCardle (Leg 14, seventh, 1:22:06), Tony Landry (Leg 15, fifth, 1:01:21), John Bil (Leg 16, ninth, 1:02:12) and Steven Baglole (Leg 17, fifth, 1:12:11).



Ontario entry defends Cabot Trail Relay title in record fashion

Greg MacVicar
Published on May 30th, 2010

BADDECK — The Dennis Fairalls Grey Hair successfully defended their win in last year’s Cabot Trail Relay by smashing the course record in this year’s version of the 276-kilometre road race, Sunday.

“They came here to break the record,” said race chairman Dave Parkinson. “They crushed the record. To beat it by 38 minutes . . . quite impressive.”

The winning time for the group of University of Windsor alumni was 16 hours, 16 minutes and 45 seconds. The previous course record was 16:54:16, set by the Aquafina Rocky Road Runners in 2004.

The race’s 276 kilometres is broken up into 17 stages. More than 1,000 participants from 70 teams ran around the clock, starting in St. Anns on Saturday morning and finishing in Baddeck on Sunday morning.

The Dennis Fairalls Grey Hair included Doug Vincent, Rich Tremaine, Alex MacLeod, Phil Dalton, Andrew Coates, Drew MacAulay, Trevor Pye, Rami Bardeesy, Josh Kramer, James Gosselin, Mark Kiteley and Svein Piene. Tremaine, Coates, MacAulay, Bardeesy and Gosselin ran two legs each.

The Maine-iacs of Maine were the runners-up for the second year in a row, though they also broke the previous record with a time of 16:47:01. The Maine-iacs won the Cabot Trail Relay in the four years previous to 2009.

The third-place team was the Red Island Road Hogs of Prince Edward Island in 18:10:06.

The top Cape Breton team — the Cape Breton Road Runners — placed fourth overall with a time of 18:53:58. The local team included Dean Abbass, Todd Crowdis, Devin Abbass, Lauchie McKinnon, James Forsey, Lee McCarron, Chris Milburn, Terry Morris, Ken MacKinnon, Donnie MacIntyre, Brent Addison, Eric Power, Jullian MacLean, Allan MacKenzie, Evan Bezanson and Jake Florian. McCarron ran two legs.

“The race went fantastically,” said Parkinson, adding, other than a stiff headwind for the first seven legs, the weather was ideal. “We were blessed once again with some phenomenal weather which just made it all the better. The teams seemed to thoroughly have a good time as they usually do and it was just as good as they’ve been in the past.”

(Click article to enlarge & read)


http://thechronicleherald.ca/NovaScotia/1185060.html
Wife, friends complete one-man relay
They ran some miles in his shoes after solo Cabot Trail runner fell ill on quest


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Amy Gough ran the last leg of the Cabot Trail Relay for her husband Mark Campbell, who had to call off his attempt to run the entire 298-kilometre race himself when he fell ill after completing nearly 190 kilometres. Other members of his support team and a film crew documenting his odyssey also pitched in. Gough and Campbell are pictured in 2007.(File)


Mark Campbell had been running for 27 hours when he crested MacKenzie Mountain in Inverness County and felt a chill pass through his body.

It was 4 a.m. and Campbell began to feel sick in his guts. He tried to eat, but it didn’t help. Then he went to the washroom and saw blood.

He had run nearly 190 kilometres and tackled three mountains. But his body was telling him he had to stop.

A doctor told him the same thing at the hospital in Cheticamp 45 minutes later.

That was that. His bid to conquer the Cabot Trail ended. He had hoped to run the entire 298 kilometres, usually divided between 17 runners, during the annual relay race. And he had hoped to raise funds for a camp for chronically ill children.

Then, Campbell’s support team and the film crew following him stepped in.

Chris Allen, whose leg is supported by metal plates and seven pins, volunteered to keep running for Campbell. The rest of the team would as well.

Allen had never trained to run, said Campbell’s friend.

"He ran 42 kilometres (the equivalent of a marathon)," Todd McDonald said, choking up.

"As this went on, word spread throughout the Cabot Trail Relay that this was happening. All the participants would pull over and say ‘We want to run with you, we want to run for Mark.’ It would start as one runner trying to do 10 kilometres and it would grow to two, and four, and six. All these runners that had already done their (own) relay leg drove ahead to find us and join us, and run beside us."

Three years ago, Campbell ran the 298-kilometre relay through the Cape Breton Highlands with two other partners. Last year, he did it with one other person.

This year, he wanted to complete it on his own. He hoped to raise money for the Brigadoon Children’s Camp Society, as it works toward opening a camp in Aylesford, Kings County, for chronically ill children.

And mentally, Campbell could have finished the race, the filmmaker following him said. But the Dartmouth man’s body would not allow him.

"That’s hitting the wall and it’s painful and it hurts," Tarek Abouamin said.

"But it’s far, far from a failure. I think this story is even more enriched now because something wonderful happened. All of these individuals bonded together in a feat and refused to quit."

Campbell set off from the Gaelic College of Celtic Arts and Crafts in St. Anns, Victoria County, about 12 hours before the other runners taking part in the 23rd annual relay race began Saturday morning. Although his support team initially planned only to keep him hydrated and fed, they began running alongside him when a pack of coyotes started calling out to the moon.

Campbell conquered Smokey, North and MacKenzie mountains, and although he had to stop earlier than he would have liked, he still crossed the finish line in Baddeck.

His wife, Amy, took on the final leg of the relay. Together, they ran the last 500 metres.

"He was ordered to go to bed and get some rest," McDonald said of his friend.

"So he was driven ahead and they did the finish together. It was definitely one of the top few moments of my life to watch that. Mark was in tears, Amy was in tears."

Other runners who bridged the gap included a woman training for a five-kilometre run. She had never managed the distance before but finished it in the middle of the night for Campbell.

"By the end, we were running for Mark and for Brigadoon, but we were (really) running for each other," McDonald said.

"People were bleeding from their toenails and everywhere else, but we kept running for each other, so I think that’s what I will remember."

Campbell collected more than $6,000 for Brigadoon this weekend from other runners and those who heard about his run.

He said that he plans to come back and do the entire trail again. Although some suggested he should simply pick up where he left off, Campbell said that would not work out for him.

"It would be like stopping at the 15th hole and the coming back later to finish a round of golf. If there’s interest, I’ll come back again — and it’ll be from start to finish."

( lfraser@herald.ca)

Monday, May 3, 2010

Mark Campbell - Conquering the Cabot Trail - 280km Solo Run for Brigadoon

Conquering the Cabot Trail - 280km Solo Run for Brigadoon

Mark Campbell will be attempting to run non-stop 280km of the Cabot Trail

in approx 36hrs, starting 9pm Fri May 28th

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Conquering-the-Cabot-Trail-280km-solo-in-support-of-Brigadoon/118110434874621?v=info

With a laundry list of endurance accomplishments under his belt, beginning may 28th Mark Campbell will attempt to run the 280km loop of the Cabot Trail, solo, in one non-stop push.

"I am very fortunate to be able challenge myself and participate in activities that I enjoy, and support the efforts of the Brigadoon organization to create an environment for kids to also have that opportunity."

By attempting this run Mark hopes to raise awareness and funds for Brigadoon Village, and help make this valuable facility a reality.

Show your support for Mark & Brigadoon
Donate Here

This is Mark when we met him at The Cabot Trail Relay in 2008 when he was part of a 2 man running team. Good Luck Mark, we'll see you at the Cabot Trail Relay at the end of the month.

About Brigadoon
http://www.brigadoonvillage.org/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=17
Who?

We are the Brigadoon Children’s Camp Society. We are a non-profit organization that is going to build and manage Brigadoon - a year-round facility for residential camps for children and youth living with a chronic illness.

What?
Brigadoon will be a recreation facility in Nova Scotia’s Annapolis Valley providing space for existing special camp programs, helping address currently unmet needs, and providing learning opportunities for students and health care providers who work with remarkable young people.

Why?
The transformational effect of a camping experience is life altering. For children and youth with a chronic illness or condition, opportunities for self-discovery can be limited by definitions of disease, treatments, conditions, and stereotypes. Brigadoon is committed to creating a place where you’re allowed to be just a kid. Not a patient, a chart full of symptoms, or a ‘good little soldier.’

Various charities across the Maritime Provinces offer a summer camp experience to young people living with chronic illnesses. The unmet needs of those children living with chronic illness who are not offered a similar summer camp experience far outweighs currently addressed populations. Current special programs rent space. The facilities and programming for these young people are unique – often requiring medical teams, equipment and specific protocols. Increasing registration within these programs, demand for new programs to address the unmet need, as well as declining suitable and available space within the Maritimes has created a great challenge - and an opportunity.


Building Brigadoon


How?
With the capacity to serve existing special programs in the region, as well as assist in addressing the unserved need, Brigadoon Village will create great economies of scale and bring together dedicated expertise and focus within one organization. The pillars of Brigadoon are:

  • Experience (camping/day programming)
  • Learning (co-operative education, internships, practicum programming)
  • Research (Brigadoon is designed to support research activities surrounding psychosocial and social-behavioral elements of chronic conditions within the pediatric and young adult populations.)

When?
With the help of a volunteer Capital Campaign Cabinet and through the generosity of individuals, corporations, and community organizations, Brigadoon aims to start construction in 2010 and host its first camp in the summer of 2011.