Category: Sideline Stories

Sideline Stories: Erik Voden, USA Powerlifting Strength in Numbers, Power by Example

Powerlifting is a pretty straightforward sport where the athlete has nine attempts to establish the highest aggregate total possible across three different lifts: the squat, bench press and deadlift. Whoever has the highest total at the end of the meet, per weight class (12 weight classes for men, 11 weight classes for women), is declared the winner.

The state of Maine has a rich history with the sport, producing multiple national and world level competitors, however, Maine took a backseat to the early 2010s renaissance that has, in many ways, defined the landscape of modern strength sport. However, Maine is coming back with a vengeance and two people are leading the charge to make sure Maine has a seat at the table for the second boom currently manifesting.

Together with my close friend, Andrew Graves, we are bringing a national caliber atmosphere to local and state level competition. Growing up in Old Orchard Beach, we have each carved a unique reputation in the sport in many capacities. Andrew, 25, is a 22x state record holder, a regional champion, referee and, over the last year, was voted State Chair for the State of Maine; he is literally the leader of all decisions regarding our chapter of USA Powerlifting, a fully drug-tested federation that has representation across all 50 states. I am 24 years old, a 46x state record holder, a junior national silver medalist, and coach with many of my athletes living and competing in-state.

As a collective, we have also become meet directors, quite prolific ones at that, as we hosted our 4th competition in one year this summer in Saco. Since Andrew has taken over the reigns we have experienced a rapid growth in terms of the state’s presence on the national level. From mid-2021 to now, we have sent 8 lifters to national meets up from the one to two a year sent from 2013-2019.

At the center of all this has been our approach and revamp to local, and later, state-level meets. Typically, powerlifting is very grand at the national level and very lackluster in terms of presentation and equipment at the levels below. Andrew and I have made it our mission to provide lifters in-state, the experience of high level meets, without having to actually attend and qualify for said meets.

Things that were typically not offered at the local level, at least in the state of Maine, are now offered in bunches. It would not be uncommon to have low-grade equipment in the warm-up area, sometimes dangerously so;  we have outfitted our warm-up room with several high-end barbells, calibrated plates, and competition-style racks. Most meets give out medals for winners. We do that, yet also give away cash prizes, apparel, and supplements to our winners, something very uncommon at the local level. We have also enacted baseball and MMA-style walk up music for attempts, something that has taken some trial and error but has been a huge hit with competitors. Lastly, we have invested heavily in our presentation and livestream, with Andrew creating his own DIY stream set-up that has allowed us to reach 2300 viewers across two different competitions, with a full, sport-specific breakdown and commentary on each lifter. When we say we are changing the landscape of strength sport in Maine, we are doing our best to talk the talk and walk the walk!

We welcome all participants of all strength levels and are fully inclusive of all registered lifters. Questions are welcome about our meets, powerlifting as a whole, USA Powerlifting, or how to sign up for your first meet. You’re strongly encouraged to check out our next competition!

YouTube: USAPL Maine

Instagram: usaplmaine

Sideline Stories: John Cassidy, Driver, New England Forest Rally

New England Forest Rally 2017

It’s quiet in the Maine woods and you’re standing on the side of a dirt road.

You’ve been looking for the best vantage point to witness the upcoming spectacle you drove hours to see. You’re surrounded by like-minded fans. They most likely have automotive themed T-shirts on. Now dusty and damp. Subaru, Mitsubishi, Ford, Hyundai, Volkswagen, Audi. All names that have storied histories in the sport of performance Rally.

You hear it long before you see it. The barking, popping and crescendo/decrescendo of mechanical strain. Then it explodes into view at a speed that boggles the mind. A full-on rally car.

It’s likely in some sort of impossible sideways predicament as the crew inside wrestles with the laws of physics and the mental calculations needed to keep themselves out of the scenery and ditches. If you’re in the area of a jump, you might see them launch the car 120 feet or more through the air, only to land and spew gravel as the crew sets up for the next corner. Flames from the tailpipe as unburnt race fuel is ignited by the anti-lag system are not uncommon.

You’re watching a performance rally. And it’s nuts.

Sometime in the mid to late 1990’s, I was watching the now defunct Speedvision channel.  I had stumbled across a broadcast of the Maine Forest Rally and fellow Mainer Carl Merrill would go on to win the event.

From the comfort of my couch, I made the decision that I wanted to do whatever it was these seemingly half-bubble-off-center folks were doing. Oddly, the fact that I had never been involved in any type of motorsport didn’t dampen my unfounded enthusiasm.

What they were doing was rally racing, a motorsport discipline that involves driving as fast as you can down a closed section of public/private road. These sections are known as Special Stages. In between the Special Stages are Transits, where rally cars go either to another Special Stage or to the Service Area to fix what they just broke. Events usually span 2-3 days and can cover over 200 miles of combined Special Stages and Transits. Did I mention that we do this in all seasons and weather conditions?!

The New England Forest Rally (once known as the Maine Forest Rally) has been based around the Bethel/Rumford area since it began.  It now includes some brief forays into New Hampshire.

A team consists of a Driver (that’s me) and a Co-Driver (my son) who reads a description of the Special Stage that we write in advance. This allows us to go faster, knowing in advance (hopefully) what’s over the next crest in the road or around the next corner. There is also a service crew, consisting of anywhere from two-to-several members. They are the muscle behind the sport. Fixing and cobbling what we’ve broken so that we can get back out and finish the event.

Rally is a unique motorsport discipline in that we never race the same corner twice, leading to the phrase, “a thousand turns once.” Managing a car at speed down a dirt road at the highest speed you’re capable of is a rush that is unequalled. To do it successfully requires experience, wisdom, mechanical sympathy and trust between the Driver and the Co-Driver. Processing tactile information from the car, visual information out the front and auditory information from the co-driver over the intercom efficiently is key to faster stage times.

Last Ditch Racing has been fortunate enough to have raced coast-to-coast in both the US and Canada, the Corona Rally Mexico WRC (World Rally Championship) event and the inaugural Targa Newfoundland event. With Camden native Dave Getchell in the Co-Driver seat, we secured Eastern Regional Open Class Championships in 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2011. We have competed in the Mt. Washington Climb to the Clouds event on three occasions, the oldest motorsport event in the United States.

I arrived at the start line of the 1999 Maine Forest Rally and had no idea what I didn’t know about the sport. In fact, we never made it to the start of the first special stage before the car broke down. I certainly had no idea I’d be racing over two decades later! Although the frequency of events has decreased, we still haven’t figured out how to stop. With a sport as unique as Rally, you don’t want to stop!

We hope that folks will join us at the New England Forest Rally next month. Please come by and introduce yourself and see our storied Subaru STi rally car, named T-4!  Cheers!

 

 

Sawyer Boulette: Unified Champion Club and Special Olympics

“Let me win. But if I cannot win, let me be brave in the attempt.” –Special Olympics Motto

That quote seems to adhere to everything in life. Whether it’s sports, work, or relationships we all are discovering new strengths, abilities, skills, and successes in life by being “brave in the attempt.”

Sports have always played an integral role in my life. Starting at a young age and as a collegiate basketball player, I found myself loving the challenges of the failures and triumphs that sports bring. Like many athletes, sports gave me an outlet to grow and evolve during my childhood and teenage years; they instilled purpose, accomplishment, and self-esteem.

Competitions gave me a sense of pride and belonging; I loved representing the schools and valued the camaraderie of being on the team. My goal was to be better because I knew others were equally passionate. Winning seemed to be the ultimate focus for the players, coaches, and fans.

Little did I know that the power of sport and the life lessons learned along the way would continue to follow me into my adult years and change my life. I was introduced to Special Olympics Maine and unified sports for the first time in 2013. I knew the mission and vision of the organization was to provide opportunities for people with intellectual disabilities through sports but soon learned it was much more than that. Unified sports pairs people with and without intellectual disabilities to play and compete to create a climate of inclusion and acceptance.

I fondly remember attending a high school Special Olympics unified basketball game and couldn’t believe what I was seeing. A Special Olympics athlete missed a shot and his opponent rebounded and allowed him to shoot again; that basket was followed by a hug and a high five. This was a common theme throughout the game. Even though these athletes are fierce competitors, they also understood the joy that comes with allowing their opponent to succeed. The game was more than just winning; it was about being brave in the attempt.

I was asked to join the Special Olympics Maine board of directors in 2015 and in 2018 was selected to attend the Special Olympics World games in Abu Dhabi, the largest sporting and humanitarian event in the World. While there I had the privilege of participating as a partner in Unified sports for the first time. At times, I couldn’t tell the difference between an athlete and a partner. It was the perfect example of true inclusion and the power of sport bringing people of all abilities, ethnicities, and gender together.

On the 13-hour flight home from the games, a strong realization came over me. When biases are dropped and inclusion is the norm, life’s joys can be shared much more deeply. The joy that comes from others’ acceptance and success changed my life and gave me purpose. I wanted others to experience what I had witnessed in Abu Dhabi. While realizing that many high schools throughout Maine already had unified sports, my dream was to expand upon that program.

In 2019, Ken Walsh, CEO of the Alfond Youth & Community Center, made me an offer that I could not refuse; “Start your program at the AYCC” he said. Maybe it would be possible! The first step was to get the blessing of Tim Shriver, the Chairman of the Board for Special Olympics National. With that behind us, it was necessary to fund the program. Without a pause, the Maine Masonic Charitable Foundation offered to fund the program for two years. I was on Cloud Nine. The Unified Champion Club for adults 18 and older was created at the Alfond Youth & Community Center.

In partnership with Special Olympics Maine, the ongoing program acts as an extension of Unified School Sports. It provides them an opportunity to be included in activities, sports, community events and continue to make lifelong friendships after graduation. This first of its kind program has soared to 140 participants and offers over 25 various recreational sports and activities.

In just two and half short years, our community has been fortunate to witness the powerful impact inclusion has on the individuals involved. Not only has the experience enhanced the quality of life for those who are intellectually challenged but it has opened the hearts and minds of the volunteers. Once we learn to accept those with challenges and have removed preconceived notions we discover that people with intellectual disabilities are brilliant teachers of that something bigger we’re all looking for. We now have a club that creates a new way of seeing individuals who once might have been thought of as “powerless”.

Our club has witnessed athletes fulfill dreams and open doors to unimaginable opportunities that just two years ago would not have been thought possible. Some have started attending college, gotten jobs, been named “Youth of the Year,” while others have simply participated on a team for the very first time and made new friends. Those originally looked at as “disabled” are now viewed as “gifted.” Blair Sharp, one of our athletes, recently through his efforts with the sports talk radio program the Big Jab raised over $10,000 for Special Olympics Maine by jumping into the ocean on New Year’s Day.

So where do we go from here you might ask. Well, I have wonderful news. The Maine Masonic Charitable Foundation Trustees have seen the success of the Unified Champion Club and recognize the importance of its effort to build better lives for people of all abilities and to foster a community of inclusion. They have agreed to provide additional funding over the next two years to assist with the expansion beyond the Greater Waterville area and into other YMCAs around the State. It’s an exciting time for people of all abilities!

Sideline Stories: Dan O’Gorman, Northmen and Irish National Box Lacrosse

Originally from New York, I moved to Maine to attend college at the University of New England where I played lacrosse all 4 years. When I finished, I was looking for ways to continue playing the game I love.

I picked up box lacrosse for the first time in 2014, when I traveled to Ireland to work on getting my dual citizenship and trying out for the national team. Though I learned a lot, I did not make the final roster for the world games. Since then, I have continued to play lacrosse in all forms and try to take in as much as possible. The last four years I have been playing in a nationwide box lacrosse league. Unfortunately, the last two years I have been dealing with an ankle break suffered two summers ago, followed by surgery eight months later. I was not back to 100% until this past fall. In October, I attended a tryout in New Jersey for Ireland’s box lacrosse team; I was informed I made the final roster a couple months ago! I will spend time in Hanover, Germany this summer to compete in the European Lacrosse Championships. This is thrilling as fifteen to twenty countries will battle for gold!

This opportunity also means even more to me because Ireland is where my father’s parents were born. Both grandparents came to America when they were young to build a better life for themselves and their future generations. I was never fortunate enough to meet them, as they passed before I was born, but I feel like in a way, being able to represent this country is a way I can connect to them spiritually!

As far as the difference between field and box there are actually a ton. In field lacrosse, you have three attackmen, three midfielders, three defense and one goalie. The midfielders can play offense and defense so if your team has the ball you have six players in your offensive end (3 attack, 3 middies) and if your team does not have the ball you have six players playing defense (3 middies and 3 defensemen). Certain players on the field are allowed to have poles up to 6 ft long that play
defense in the field game. Another big difference is the goalies and goals in the games. In field, the goals are 6ft tall by 6ft wide. Goalies have a chest/torso protector, a helmet with a throat guard, and gloves. In box lacrosse, goalies are absolutely covered in head to toe with gear and they are also standing in a goal that is 4ft by 4ft 9 inches. Since the goals are so much smaller and the goalies take up so much more space, it is more important to be an accurate shooter when playing box as opposed to a fast shooter!

There are other differences as well as many similarities. Both have face-offs to start periods/quarters as well as face-offs after a goal is scored.

In box lacrosse, you play in a hockey rink with either a turf or hard, athletic surface. All players have the same length short stick. And there is a 30 second shot clock. Box Lacrosse is five on five with a goalie and all players play all over or at least have the ability to do so.

Because Box Lacrosse is played in such a tight space, stick skills end up needing to be even more accurate than when playing in the field where you can spread out. You will find that even the best field players in the world that play professional, play box.

This is something I will continue to train for and I am beyond excited to meet countless athletes from all over the world. It is going to be an experience of a lifetime. It is pretty neat to add onto the fact that a guy from Maine will be taking the international stage.

I have come to learn that this state takes a ton of pride in each other and people from “here.”

 

 

Sideline Stories: Stacey Dow & the FEEDME 5K! Maine State Credit Unions’ Campaign to End Hunger

Maine State Credit Unions’ FEEDME5K to End Hunger in Maine, is more than just a 5K walk.  This event was established, in an attempt to bring awareness to food insecurity in the State of Maine.  The FEEDME5K brings out like-minded folks who wish to make a difference in their communities.  The hunger issue in Maine is sad and very real.  Hunger is not just about the poor homeless folks you see on the streets.  Food insecurity is EVERYWHERE.  It is all around us. It is in our neighborhoods, in our schools, our workplaces, etc.  Food insecurity does not discriminate and is invisible to many of us. 

I am passionate about the FEEDME5K and MSCU’s Campaign to End Hunger, for many reasons.  The main reason is my belief that NO ONE deserves to go hungry.  EVERYONE deserves the basic necessity of food, to sustain life. 

I am very blessed to work for an organization like MSCU, which sees the importance of helping the people in the community around them.  MSCU views the Ending Hunger work, such as the FEEDME5K, as equally as our day-to-day operations.  Honestly, the work we do to raise awareness and money for Ending Hunger is some of the most important work we do!    

An event like the FEEDME5K is a huge part of our efforts to raise money for ending hunger in Maine.  It is our largest fundraiser of the year.  One of the best parts is the fact that most of the hunger organizations we contribute to participate in this event.  They not only participate, but they challenge each other and typically end up raising $20K-$30K themselves!  The hunger organizations actually inspire the employees of MSCU to want to help even more. 

Participating in FEEDME5K, not only brings in money for the various hunger organizations, it brings HOPE. In difficult times, sometimes all we have is hope, to help sustain us, to never give up.  The people that choose to collect pledges or sponsor the FEEDME5K are also providing hope.  Even people, who stop in at the event and can’t afford to donate, are providing hope.  They are showing support and love and understanding and empathy for our neighbors in need, a gesture of simple human kindness. 

To me, the word hope means many things.  The obvious hope we provide is FOOD.  We are giving people H.O.P.E., or Helping Other People Eat.  However, HOPE means so much more, depending on who you are.

Hope is given to children in school, who may have their last meal of the day at lunch.  The afterschool meal programs and backpack programs bring these children HOPE; knowing they won’t go to bed hungry gives them hope.  It also brings them hope for the future, that their growing bodies and minds will be adequately nourished for the best chance for proper learning and proper behavior.

Hope is given to elderly housebound folks, our parents, grandparents, or neighbors who may have limited funds to pay for bills, heat, and medication.  The anticipation of a delivery from a meal on wheels program gives them HOPE.  A visit provides not only food for their bodies, but much-needed human contact to nourish their spirit and sometimes lonely hearts. 

Hope is brought to some of our homeless people.  HOPE comes in the form of knowing they will be able to step into a soup kitchen and get out of the cold for a warm meal on a frigid day.  This small glimmer of HOPE could be just what they needed to keep them going for another day. 

MSCU’s FEEDME5K, is a short walk, with a huge impact.  Participants in this event will be surrounded by smiling faces, warm hearts, laughter, and vibes of gratitude.  MSCU’s FEEDME5K is a true example of the credit union philosophy of, ‘people helping people.’

Sign up for the 2022 FEEDME5K

For more information visit MSCU’s website

 

Sideline Stories: Bob Dunfey, Race Director, Gorham Savings Bank Maine Marathon, Half Marathon & Relay

At the age of 39, I began running for fitness inspired after discovering I had gained almost 25 pounds without even noticing it. My usual fitness activities of cycling and rowing formerly kept my weight at a steady 173.  Stepping on the scale in anticipation of a meeting with my term life insurance associate who always asked, are you in good health and how much do you weigh?” I was looking at 195! I was stunned.

The very next day I began running, though just a few days before the meeting, in an attempt to dump the pounds as quickly as possible. At the meeting, I shared my weight with my agent and my jumpstart into running to try to shed the pounds. A marathoner, he responded, Run the Boston Marathon as a bandit, (an unofficial runner), a 26.2 mile race just 3 weeks away. I told him I had no interest in running a marathon and, if I did, I knew I’d need to train for at least 4 months. His response was, “Just run to finish.”

When I shared this idea with my sister, Eileen, a very accomplished marathoner already registered for the Boston Marathon, she reacted with excitement and, she too encouraged me to run as a bandit. Crossing that historic finish line running a 4:27, I was extremely sore though inspired to enter the Sugarloaf Marathon the following month.

My time improved by 30 minutes! Hitting my stride, within a few years I was regularly winning awards and finishing marathons under 3 hours, a time which only 2% of marathoners can claim.

My passion for marathons inspired me to become involved in a Maine Track Club event, the Gorham Savings Bank Maine Marathon, Half Marathon & Relay held in Portland every October. I find great reward volunteering as the Race Director for an event supporting various nonprofit organizations. 2021 beneficiaries were Shawnee Peak Adaptive Ski Program, Port Resources, Pihcintu Girls Chorus, Spurwink, Team Long Run, Teens to Trails, and Wayside Food Programs. $460,000 was raised for over 50 charities in 2021. This race gives back and encourages others to cross that finish line! Beginning this year, I will also be a volunteer race director of Portland Trails to Ales 5 Miler in June. 

I never imagined one day I would say I have run 31 consecutive Boston Marathons. Number 32 is coming up this April! 

Sideline Stories – Becki Tucker – “Can-Am 250, For the Love of the Race”

I became obsessed with the mushing lifestyle 26 years ago.  What started out as a hobby turned into my very own crazy, beautiful life – a life that grounds me and at the same time sets my soul on fire!! 

Every athlete in every sport has focus, determination, and drive. Sled racers have all of that, plus another special team bond that is unlike any other. The bond I’ve formed with my team is raw, real, true, and full of so much love and pride it’s priceless.   

This is why I love the Can-Am 250. This race puts my athletes, who are also my kids, together to face anything and everything that is thrown at us. We are the most powerful and positive team you could ever imagine. It’s not about winning, it’s about conquering the challenge together as one team!  

The Can-Am is a 250-mile dog sled race with no assistance and no help from the outside.  It’s just you and your team, driven by your wit and your team’s instincts, and the dogs’ power and energy. A race where I need to think ahead and plan for anything and everything, even the unexpected or unknown. What will we need while we’re out there, dog food, an extra jacket, duct tape in case something breaks? Predicting what’s to come and packing supplies correctly is part of the challenge of dog sled racing.

I’m the planner because I’m the brains of the operation, right? Not all the time!! I have been the weak link more than once. At the start of a race a few years ago I stepped on the runners, took off from the starting line, and 50 miles on the trail I had a revelation. It became clear that I need to trust the dogs more than I do myself and need to listen to them and give them complete control to run the show. That was the same year we came into Portage (the first checkpoint ) and I thought, “no way, we’re done, this is too hard!” Then I walked outside only to see everyone happy, tails wagging as they jumped up, ready to go and with some serious power. This is why the Can-Am 250 is the ultimate TEAM sport in my book. We know each other inside and out. We know some of us are gonna have an off day but the team rallies together and everything works out! 

The memories we make at the Can-Am aren’t just on the trail. I appreciate the energy, kindness, and wonderful community that puts this race together.  So wonderful that after 14 years of coming here every year for the race I decided in 2020 it was time to call Fort Kent HOME. So the team (Outlaw Ridge) and I left NH and I purchased my home in Fort Kent. It’s incredible to be home and we’re looking forward to the Can-Am 250 even more this year!!

Maybe we will see you at the Can-AM sometime. For more information on Outlaw Ridge feel free to follow us on Facebook. Happy trails!

-Becki

www.outlawridgesleddogs.com

Follow us:

https://m.facebook.com/Outlaw-Ridge-102796796555976/

Sideline Stories: Patrick Guerette & the Maine Pond Hockey Classic

Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. It has the power to unite people in a way that little else does. It speaks to youth in a language they understand. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair.” ~ Nelson Mandela

If you’ve gotten an email from me, you’ve seen this quote; I keep it in my email signature as a constant reminder as to how valuable sport is. Especially in a world and time when there is divisiveness at every turn. We need sport in our lives. It is a tie that binds us. Look in the stands at any sporting event and you will see hundreds or thousands of people who have conflicting worldviews sharing laughs, cheers, and sometimes tears, without a mention of their differences.

Everyone needs sport, which is why I love directing the Maine Pond Hockey Classic.

There is something magical about skating on a frozen pond or lake. Crisp winter air, the smell of smoke from a nearby warming fire, sounds of skates gliding across the ice, and sticks tapping, it’s hockey in the purest form. 

The sights, smells, and sounds of pond hockey are invigorating.

Traditional pond hockey is unique – keeping score is generally optional, goals are made from everything from benches to boots, and even the best skater can be stymied by a rogue crack in the ice. Combined with snow, rain, wind and whatever else Mother Nature can dish out – it’s hockey, but a long way from playing in a rink. There is something special about players coming together to play a game with few rules, no officials, battling the elements, and the score being kept is how much fun is being had, with an occasional bragging right on the line. 

This is the type of experience that brings people together.

At the Maine Pond Hockey Classic, we provide a little bit of formality, but just enough to keep everyone organized. We have 6” high boards – high enough to keep the puck from sailing away from the game, and some general rules – for safety and for those that are a little more competitive.  We use wooden box goals and have a scorekeeper to keep track of goals and let us know if anyone is getting out of hand.  While we don’t have a penalty box, I’ve given plenty of “adult time-outs” through the years.  We have several competitive divisions, but our fastest growing one is our Just for Fun Division… because [almost] everyone has to go to work on Monday. The simple fact is, there is almost no correlation between skill & enjoyment, making it almost the exact opposite of golf.  During most of the games I observe, the worst players on the ice are having just as much fun, if not more fun, than the best players on the ice.

The gameplay is just the beginning.

Between games, players huddle with spectators in the beer garden and around fit pits, laughing and telling stories about the glory days or that miracle shot that went in from the length of the rink during the last game. Even opponents that just got off the ice from a hard-fought game are now sharing a drink and finding common ties that bind them. Year after year I walk away from “pond hockey weekend” humbled by stories shared by players about how they have reconnected with friends and family, far and near, to participate in our tournament. Players that have stepped away from hockey only to be pulled back by the magic of the pond.

It’s hard to explain, I cannot fully encapsulate in words the experience that Maine Pond Hockey Classic provides but I do know that in a world where so many things divide us, this is an event and a game that unites.

Patrick Guerette is the Chief Operating Officer at the Alfond Youth and Community Center located in Waterville, Maine and tournament director for the Maine Pond Hockey Classic.  Proceeds from the Maine Pond Hockey Classic support the Boys & Girls Club and YMCA of Greater Waterville at the Alfond Youth & Community Center.

Meredith Strang Burgess: CEO/Survivor/Sugarloafer

How Sugarloaf and Skiing Saved My Life—plus, join us for the 22nd Annual Sugarloaf Charity Summit!

2023 is my 24th year of surviving breast cancer—and skiing literally saved my life. I welcomed 2000 in at Sugarloaf, as always, but I was minus 100% of all my female parts, thanks to my cancer surgery a month earlier and had my medi-port installed. I began my chemo in early January, and then went to work on our annual Sugarloaf fundraiser in late January—which that year was in the form of a Vertical Challenge.

I had been having some heart flutters, yet when the experts checked it out they said it was just a reaction to the chemo. So, the day of the Vertical Challenge arrived, and I was determined to ski as many laps as possible. I ended up with a group of young guys and I made it may goal to keep up. Every now and then my heart was really racing…. but I pushed through. I got 12 laps and the guys got 13. We all went in the lodge to record our laps…took off our coats and helmets…and it was then the guys saw I had no hair! They were all worried, but it felt good to still be able to ski and just be there. I continued to have the crazy heart flutters and my adrenalin was still pumping.

The next Monday, I went in for my chemo treatment, but my medi-port wasn’t working. Following many questions and tests, I went in the next day to put in a new medi-port. Before surgery, they x-rayed me to see what happened to my original medi-port. That was at 9am. I was awakened about 6pm with lots of hushed voices telling me to say calm and just breathe…then I heard the room burst into applause.

Guess what? The tube to my original medi-port had broken off several weeks earlier! The heart flutters I had experienced were the tube on a free flow through my veins, but it had been stuck in my heart. At any time, it all could have collapsed, and I would not be here today. But thanks to my day at Sugarloaf, the exertion and the adrenalin had pushed that tube entirely through my heart that day, thus saving my life. (Of course, they had to go in and fish the tube back out through my heart and out my leg.) Thank you, Sugarloaf!

Now here’s how YOU can thank Sugarloaf—and help raise a mountain of money to fight cancer. The 23rd Annual Sugarloaf Charity Summit is on Saturday, January 28, 2023.

There so many ways for YOU to support this amazing annual event benefitting the Dempsey Center, Maine Cancer Foundation and Martha B. Webber Breast Center. Please visit Sugarloaf Charity Summit or scroll below to learn more about how to participate in the online auction, Summit, virtual or in person. Hope to see you there!

  • Sugarloaf Charity Summit Online Auction

Timing: Open now thru 9pm January 28th, 2023

The Sugarloaf Charity Summit annual auction is now open for bidding online!  There are many amazing items on which to bid from now until January 28, 2023, with more being added each week.  Register as a bidder at: https://sugarloafcharitysummit.org/online-auction today to join in on the bidding action.

  • Sugarloaf Charity Challenge

Timing: Open now through January 28th, 2023

Help us towards our goal of covering 2,000,000 feet on Saturday, January 28! Be it vertical feet or distance logged on the snowshoe or Nordic trails, let’s come together to tackle these two goals.

We invite you to start a team or to contribute to the collective goal on your own! You can then choose to participate in the on-hill Sugarloaf events OR log your miles from ANYWHERE, as long as it occurs on Saturday, January 28, 2023. Check out our website for more details and register today at: https://sugarloafcharitysummit.org/Challenge.

  • Virtual Charity Summit Celebration

Timing: January 28 | 5:30pm-7pm

Join us for a celebratory virtual evening featuring cameos from some of your favorite Sugarloafers. It’s a tribute to our community of survivors, an entertaining live auction and the highly anticipated raffle pull – all from the comfort of your own home! This event is free for all to attend, so please plan to join us by clicking through the link on our website at: https://sugarloafcharitysummit.org/virtual-celebration.

No matter how you participate, please know how incredibly thankful our three Maine-based beneficiaries are for your help: Maine Cancer Foundation, the Dempsey Center, and the Martha B. Webber Breast Care Center. Help us raise a mountain of money to help fight cancer in Maine!

For more information about the Sugarloaf Charity Summit and ways you can get involved, please visit SugarloafCharitySummit.org or reach out to Sadie Spivak at s.spivak@sugarloaf.com.