Tag Archives: Marathon Walk

Take your marks for Marathon Walk

Walk is September 21 this year

OK folks, here’s the skinny on Walking with Jane and the Marathon Walk September 21, 2014. We will have a team again this year to raise money for the Walking with Jane Dybowski Fund for Neuroendocrine and Carcinoid Tumors at DFCI. There has been some talk of us combining forces with both Caring for Carcinoid and one or two other groups and I am thinking about a change in the team name to Carcinoid Walking United–or something along those lines–if that happens.

If you have ideas for fundraisers…

DFCI expects the site to launch for the

2014 walk the first week in February. I have some paperwork I have to do between now and the end of the month to earmark the money we raise for the Jane Dybowski Fund and the primary researchers–Jen Chan and Matt Kulke–whose work the money supports. I’m holding off on that while I wait to hear from the other teams.

Time to start thinking and training

As far as I know, the distances and starting points will be the same as last year. If you want to walk in with me from Hopkinton, you may want to start training soon. I know I will start as soon as I kick this bug I have been fighting since I got back from Seattle.

We will have a team again this year to raise money…

If you have ideas for fundraisers you want to set up, let me know and I will do my best to be there to help out. If you have thoughts on goals for this year–whether in terms of number of walkers or total raised, let me know. My plan is to set up the team page the day the site goes live.

Runs and walks between now and then

Between now and then, I also plan to do a number of other walks as training exercises. These will include the Fairhaven, MA MS Walk (three miles) in early April, The Walk for Hunger in Boston (20 miles), and the Tripp Scholarship 5K run or walk, in May, the Fall River Relay for Life in June, the Run, Walk or Crawl 5K in July or August, as well as some other players to be named later. If you’d like to join us for any of those, we’d be glad to see you. I will set up team pages for the MS Walk and the Walk for Hunger shortly if people are interested in being a team for either of those events.

Ripple and spread

It’s time to start talking to people who told us they wanted to walk last year but couldn’t. Help this ripple and spread by sharing it far and wide.

–Harry Proudfoot
Walking with Jane

 

Closing the books on Marathon Walk 2013

Lots of good news from Walk effort

I am in the process of closing the books on the 2013 Marathon Walk season. I sent off the last check this morning.

I want to thank each of you for your individual efforts this year.

First, the good news. When the dust finally settles we will have three Pacesetters on our team. I made the list for the third straight year–and my second at

Four Stars. Elizabeth MacNeil is a Two Star Pacesetter for the second year in a row. And Beth Manchester-Howell will squeak onto the One Star list in her first year.

Walk standings positive

It looks like I will personally finish in the top 25.

Top 25 next year, anyone?

As a team, it looks like we will finish around 61st overall–which is not bad at all considering we only had eight of us on the team–and only five of us actually were able to make it onto the course for the event. Beth and I walked in from Hopkinton, Elizabeth and Justin started at the 13.1 mile mark, and Ron Hollander walked in from Brookline at least twice.

Walk totals

Our team total of $21,869–with the check I mailed this morning–is up about $3,192 from last year.

We will do better next year.

That we did not reach our goals–either in terms of members or money–largely had to do with circumstances beyond the control of any of us. Between the economy, deaths, and serious illnesses–not to mention my ongoing emotional state (who knew year three would prove nearly as difficult as year two?)–we had a deck that was badly stacked against us. We will do better next year.

The Walk ahead

Indeed, we have already recruited 2-3 new people for next year who have already started raising money. And I have had conversations with a number of other people who say they will be joining us next year.

…we will finish around 61st overall…

Top 25 next year, anyone?

A word of thanks

But most of all, I want to thank each of you for your individual efforts this year. Every one of you made a positive difference in the fight against NET cancer. We have not won the war, but we have begun to win some battles. From my perspective, things look considerably better than they did on that cold December night in 2010.

…we will have three Pacesetters on our team.

Pax et lux,
Harry

PS–Fundraising officially ends October 31, so there is still time to collect–or make–donations.

The NET Cancer Walker is working on a social media-thon for November 10. You can help make it real--and it won't cost you a dime--just some time.
The NET Cancer Walker is working on a social media-thon for November 10. You can help make it real–and it won’t cost you a dime–just some time. Contact us at walkingwithjane@gmail.com for details. Walk on.

Is it time to strike out on our own?

I am inching closer tonight to setting up our own team for the Marathon Walk this year. I wish I could say for certain whether my logic is merely justifying my own ego or whether this is something that really does make sense to do at this stage. Part of me thinks waiting another year to go out on our own is the smart thing to do. But part of me thinks marching under our own banner will open more opportunities to raise money for NET research than marching with someone else will.

For example, creating our own T-shirts would create the possibility of selling space on them to both local and national companies. Caring for Carcinoid has sold the space on their shirts to a number of major national corporations. Honestly, I am not sure they have the space or the inclination to sell space to Greater Fall River businesses. If we had our own shirts then we could, perhaps, create a new stream of revenue to help fund research and education about NET. And one of my goals from the start was to find ways to bring new money into the fight–not simply redistribute the money that was already coming through the door.

Walking with Jane has begun to develop a reputation locally that could take us into places neither Dana-Farber nor Caring for Carcinoid could reach. In addition, when we do our first mailing, people will be more likely to donate to the local charity than one they may not have heard of. While eventually, we want to be national in the scope of our efforts, right now our roots are here, and in both the short- and long-term, we will need to draw our sustenance from this area. We can do that in ways the other two groups doing the Walk for this disease cannot.

My other major concern was whether or not we could field a team that was bigger than a single person. Last night I posted an event on Facebook to see if there were anyone else out there who would be willing to participate. As I write this, seven people have volunteered. Another two expressed interest earlier. Whether all of them will follow through on that offer remains to be seen, but the initial returns are satisfying and encouraging.

The question then becomes how much do we sell space on the T-shirts for. Is a logo worth $250? $500? $1000? Is a name in 24 point type worth $50? 100? $200? And how do we pitch this to the businesses?

And do we offer the shirts as an inducement not only to walk but to donate to the cause? How big a donation earns someone a Walking with Jane Marathon Walk Team T-shirt–remembering that the more T-shirts we distribute, the more valuable that real estate on the back of the shirt becomes?

If you have thoughts on any of this, please make a comment or drop us a line at walkingwithjane@gmail.com.