th ei fp .c a Th e IF P -H al to n H ill s | T hu rs da y, Ju ne 14 ,2 01 8 | 28 14097 Ninth Line Georgetown Anna & Gary Drummond info@fallbrooktrail.com www.fallbrooktrail.com • Trail Rides - 7 days aweek • Summer Camps - Ages 4 and up • Birthday Parties • Private Events & BBQs Fallbrook Trail Ranch 905-873-6588 OPEN HOUSEJune 24th, 2018FREE BBQ • HAYRIDESMINI GOLFTo advertise your SUMMER REGISTRATION OffERINGS please call Kelli 905-234-1018 or email kkosonic@theifp.ca Full Day Summer CampS - July 16-20, July 30-Aug 3, Aug 20-24. 8:30am-4:30pm. Breakfast, lunch and snacks provided. Kids do all the cooking! Activities every afternoon at GoodLife Fitness, Pottery painting included in the camp one morning per week. Ages 6-11. $230 per week. part Day Summer CampS - all summer long, signup for as many or as few sessions as you like. Part day camps are 3 hours long. Ages 6-11. See full schedule at www.pccookingschool.ca $20 per class. Register for any of our camps at www.pCCookingSChool.Ca or in-store at customer service For information on camps pCCookingSChool.georgetown@loblaw.Ca DAY CAMP THAT FEELS LIKE OVERNIGHT CAMP TRUSTED BY FAMILIES SINCE 2002 $225/WEEK STARTING AT BUS INCLUDED PAYMENT PLAN AVAILABLE SERVING CAMPERS AGES 5 TO 14 ON A 30 ACRE PRIVATE FACILITY. BUS SERVICE AND EXTENDED HOURS AVAILABLE. ACTIVITIES INCLUDE: SWIMMING, CANOEING, CRAFTS, TALENT SHOWS, ARCHERY, SCIENCE, GAMES, NATURE, LEADERSHIP, SPORTS, PUPPETS, DAY TRIPS, OVERNIGHT STAYS, CAMPFIRE, THEME DAYS AND MORE! 1.800.690.7085 REGISTRATION@KIDSINC.CA WWW.KIDSINC.CA Sign up now for Summer When Christ the King student Lauren Harrison and her classmates first be- gan planning the school's Relay for Life event this spring, they had an ambi- tious goal in mind: to raise $80,000 for the Canadian Cancer Society. But when the Halton Catholic District School Board announced a charity ban that included Relay for Life, Harrison took the planning into her own hands and accepted the fact that without the help of her school's administra- tion, they may not raise $80,000 after all. And she was right. They didn't raise $80,000. In- stead, with the help of her peers, the student-run event garnered a total of $85,931.21, 627 participants and eight sponsors. The relay, planned by 24 students in grades 11 and 12, may have been a chal- lenge at first, but soon be- came a lesson in how much these young adults could accomplish if they set their minds to it. "At the beginning when we first started, I thought there was no way we could get 80 (thousand) on our own because it wasn't ad- vertised in the school at all," CTK student Laura Jean Bonifacio said. "We couldn't do announce- ments and not everybody knew about it. But it shows that if you keep pushing and everybody works hard, we can do anything." Student Victoria Scioli added that, having partici- pated in the relay each year for her entire high school career, it would have felt wrong to end the year with- out it. "It's such a good habit that our community was used to getting into and when we found out we couldn't have it, we couldn't just not do it. That was not an option," she said. "The Canadian Can- cer Society has helped so many people and there are so many people in our school community that have been affected by can- cer." Even though the school was no longer involved in the planning of the event, the students were able to secure the field at CTK as the venue and everything began falling into place. Student Nick Krsikapa said he was impressed by the public's response to their event, which he says people found to be quite similar to the CTK Relays of prior years. "I feel like we were able to keep a traditional CTK Relay. I think that is a real- ly big part for us," he add- ed. The relay took place on June 2 from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. and included a host of en- gaging activities, some cre- ated by the students them- selves, including a late- night game of human foos- ball. "What I'm most proud of with this event is that it was a youth-run event for youth and it stayed that way from the beginning until the night of relay," Harrison said. "That really, really, re- ally, makes me proud be- cause it shows how much youth care about such an important cause." For more information about Canadian Cancer So- ciety's Relay for Life events, visit http:// www.cancer.ca. Not pic- tured in photo: Alex Duke, Ben Sabourin, Caroline Holicka, Nichole Sanchez, Kristen Arnold, Natalia Stasiak, Rachel Carson, Julia Joseph, Julia Whitta- ker. COMMUNITY CTK students raise over $85K for cancer with Relay for Life VERONICA APPIA vappia@metroland.com (Left to right) Nick Krsikapa, Olivia Santaluce, Olivia Crowe, Laura Jean Bonifacio, Angela Wallace, Stephanie Cachia, Chloe Knauft, Victoria Scioli, Katelin Dewmyn, Brynn Brieda, Sophia Maiorano, Lauren Harrison, Callum Fraser, Alex DiVincenzo, Zach Baker. The cheque, written the day of the event, grew in size as the day went on, with over $85K earned in total. Veronica Appia/Metroland