2012 Issue 5 - Wild Pink Yonder
Transcription
2012 Issue 5 - Wild Pink Yonder
The Pony Express The 2012 Alberta Tour: Aug 10 – Sept 1 Cypress Hills to Whitemud Equine Learning Centre, Edmonton Painting the west pink ... one town at a time. June 2012 Volume 2, Issue 5 Alberta Mounted Shooters Compete for Two Days at Trail’s End Horses running flat out. Steely eyed riders with 6-shooters blazing. Blam! Blam! Blam! This year, we’re proud to add the Alberta Mounted Shooters to the entertainment at Trail’s End. This won’t be some little “demonstration”. Oh, no! This will be a full-blown shooters’ competition! There will be competitors from all over the province and they are stoked! This will be exciting entertainment to watch! How Pink Towns are Judged In the very beginning, Rusty and I decided that we should not be the ones who judge the towns we visit. Our reasoning is that we develop really nice relationships with some of the towns, and lesser relationships with some others. If we were judges, it stands to reason that we’d be biased, and we really don’t want that. We want everyone to know that this is a fair and square competition. The categories a town are judged on are: So, before we head out on tour, we conscript three Longriders to judge the towns. They are the ones who the towns must impress. They get taken on tours and are given photos and albums and anything else a town wants them to see to show their pinkification efforts. 5. How much community spirit is there? If you could have seen our 2011 Pinkification Judges in action, you’d be impressed. Every evening before going to bed, they’d meet off in a corner by themselves and hammer out the numbers for the town they just visited. 1. How much pink is there around the town? 2. How much effort did the decorating take? 3. How much creativity was involved? 4. How much effort did the volunteer committee put in? 6. How were the horse accommodations? 7. How much effort went into creature comfort for the riders? Each category is worth 5 points for a possible total of 35. Judges can use decimals (ie 5.2). Page 2 of 3 Prize Saddles Look Great! As we told you before, Welsh’s Saddlery & Western Wear has signed on as one of our sponsors. The Rider of the Wild Pink Yonder who raises the most money overall will take home this beautiful saddle. There will be a draw for a similar one, but of darker leather. Each package value: $2,000+ Those Amazing Riders of the Wild Pink Yonder We knew Peggy Steffen enjoyed her time as a Longrider in 2011, but we had no idea how much. And we had no idea of her generosity. It seems Peggy enjoyed those evenings when we sat around a campfire the best ... and she especially enjoyed those occasions when we sang because someone had thought to throw their guitar in the back of their truck. better home for this particular guitar! Thank you so very much, Peggy Steffen. Now ... who’s going to play it? So Peggy went to work over the winter. She searched high and low and finally found a gift that she wanted to give to Wild Pink Yonder. Isn’t it beautiful? I cannot imagine a Horses All Magazine Likes Us! Horses All magazine says that there are ten great charity trail rides that a person might want to attend in Alberta this year. “Bring your own horse, raise some money, have some fun” is what they had to say. They also said that Wild Pink Yonder was one of those great rides. We are pleased as punch to be ranked up there with rides put on by organizations much bigger than ours! Page 3 of 3 Looking for Ideas to Raise Pledges? Over the last few years, we’ve seen a number of innovative fundraising ideas, and we thought it might be timely to share them now. Box 97 Lamont, Alberta T0B 2R0 Canada Phone: (780) 363-0003 Fax: (780) 363-0004 E-Mail: Jane@WildPinkYonder.com 1. Tell a company that if they’ll sponsor you (for $500?), you’ll wear their ball cap or T-shirt with logos. 2. Purchase a roll of pink fabric ribbon from a fabric store and sell 24” lengths of it that people can sign or put a message on with the understanding that you will tie that piece of ribbon into your horse’s mane or tail for the duration of your ride. 3. Do a hamburger/hot dog sale in front of your local Peavey Mart or other store. (Usually these businesses have a barbe-cue that you can borrow. Then you get another store to donate a box of burger patties and buns. 4. Offer to put a company’s logo on the side of your truck and/or trailer. (A magnet logo or a stock-on that peels off easily.) On the trail to a cure. 5. Offer to put a company’s logo on a pink banner that you drape across your horse’s butt for parades. (We parade down main street in many towns we visit.) 6. For a minimum donation of $400, you can get a company’s brochure or sales catalogue into the welcome bag for every person who rides the Wild Pink Yonder trail this year. (WPY retains the right of refusal, in case it conflicts with one of our major sponsors.) 7. Organize a Pink-a-Palooza. This could be a ride at a local trail or a competition at a local arena. Folks pay to come along and possibly win pink prizes that we will provide for you. 8. Contact Cindy Houghton (cmh011060@hotmail.com) and have her put on a horse first-aid course at your place. Advertise it all over your neighbourhood, on Kijiji and on the Wild Pink Yonder Facebook page. Once her costs are covered, the rest of the money is yours to fund your ride. 9. Have a garage sale. 10. Find a busy intersection (with a traffic light) and have a team of your friends help you wash car windows as people drive through. (This can be VERY lucrative. Just ask the Town of Sundre!) 11. Talk to your local gas station and ask if you can set up a bottle collection bin there. 12. Do a door-to-door bottle drive of your own. 13. Have a bake sale at work. 14. Have a car wash at your local gas station. 15. Rent a cotton candy machine and sell cotton candy at local events. 16. Have personalized fortune cookies made and sell them. They’re cheaper than you think! (www.fortunecookiescanada.com) About Our Organization… Wild Pink Yonder Charitable Society is a not-for-profit organization that raises money for breast cancer research. In Alberta we fund Alberta Cancer Foundation (ACF). Pinkest Little Town in the West is a contest that is hosted by Wild Pink Yonder. The winning town is the one that raises the most money (per capita) for Wild Pink Yonder and that, quite literally, turns itself the pinkest. Our winner receives a free music concert plus bragging rights in the form of two 7’6” x 3’6” highway signs that proclaim that town to be the Pinkest Little Town that year. In the fall of 2011 Wild Pink Yonder launched a second ride and contest -- in Manitoba. Funds raised there was used for breast cancer research as directed by Cancer Care Manitoba. The ride there will recommence in 2013, as it has become necessary to reinvent ourselves there.
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