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ONLINE DONATIONS

You can donate any amount. By default, the donation form shows increments of $50 for the "Buy A Mile" promotion, but there is a field to specify a different amount.

All online donations will go directly to the Lung Cancer Research facilities of Princess Margaret Hospital Foundation.

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BUY A MILE

Buy a mile and dedicate it to a loved one. Maybe you want to buy a mile for yourself. Or maybe your business would like to have their own mile. Buy as many miles as you want! They’re only $50 each.

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CASH/CHEQUE DONATIONS

All cash/cheque donation will go directly to the DCA Cancer Research at the University of Alberta. Make Cheques payable to "The University of Alberta".Put a memo on the cheque indicating "SeeTheEnd Campaign for DCA Research (Allocation # 02119)".Mail directly to:

Holli Bjerland, Sr. Development Officer

University of Alberta, Department of Medicine

2F1.26 Walter C Mackenzie Health Sciences Centre

Edmonton, AB

CANADA

T5G 2R7

Alternatively, you can hold onto your cash and cheques until I come through your city and hand them to me personally. Tax receipts for cash/cheque donations will be sent to you directly from the University of Alberta.

Why Princess Margaret Hospital? PMH is where my friend, Adam, has requested donation be made.

Why the University of Alberta? The research that is taking place there is incredible. But there is a lack of funding and can use all the help they can get. Take a look at the research that is going on right now.

 

 

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Friend’s cancer diagnosis led to cross-country inline skate

Kingston native Richard Ralph left St. John’s, N.L. May 4 and hopes to be in Vancouver in September. He’s aiming to raise $300,000, Tony Lofaro reports.

 

Tony Lofaro, The Ottawa Citizen

Published: Thursday, June 14, 2007

Richard Ralph has not reached the halfway point of inline skating across Canada and already he’s been moved by the generosity of Canadians to his campaign to raise money for cancer research.

The Kingston native said he was on the road heading toward Halifax when a vehicle stopped and a woman got out and donated a few dollars to his campaign. The vehicle pulled away and then about 25 metres in the distance stopped again and the woman’s eight-year-old daughter got out of the car.

“This little girl stood there and waited for me and as I skated up to her, she held her hand out and dropped 91 cents into my hand,” said Mr. Ralph, 27, who made a brief stop yesterday on Parliament Hill.

“It was absolutely priceless to have a young child be so aware of what I’m doing and the need for help. It was the most memorable donation.”

Mr. Ralph started his campaign of inline skating across Canada on May 4 in St. John’s, N.L. He hopes to finish the journey in Vancouver — where he now lives — sometime in September.

He aims to raise $300,000 for cancer research, with the funds going to the Princess Margaret Hospital Foundation and the University of Alberta in Edmonton.

He said he began his Skate for Hope campaign to raise awareness after one of his friends, Adam Reid, a non-smoker, was diagnosed with throat and lung cancer. He said the news hit him hard and he felt he wanted to do something to help.

“It was very shocking and it very easily could have been me because we have led similar lifestyles,” said Mr. Ralph, also a non-smoker.

He proposed the trip to his family and friends and his parents, Brian and Bev, retired schoolteachers, decided to join him, along with the family dog, Winnie, a 16-year-old mixed beagle.

The family is travelling in a motor home — which is a year older than the younger Mr. Ralph and was donated to the family by a trucking company.

He said he averages about 90 kilometres per day.

“I’m tired at the end of the day, but I’m not running a race so I’m not out pushing as hard as I can,” said Mr. Ralph who has several back-up inline skates if he needs them.

The halfway-point of the trek will be Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., which he expects to reach in a few weeks, he said.

“I’m happy with whatever I accomplish. Obviously, I want to see the end of cancer and $300,000 won’t cure cancer by any means. It’s just a contribution that I’m happy to make and knowing that I’ve touched so many people,” said Mr. Ralph.

 

Local man’s quest rolls on; Cross-country trek to benefit cancer research

 

Jordan Press
Local News - Monday, June 18, 2007 @ 00:00

 

Brian Ralph stood with a smile while he watched his son, Richard, speak with people in front of City Hall this weekend. Richard, 27, hadn’t yet taken off his in-line skates and didn’t have the look of someone who had been on those wheels for some 3,000 kilometres, all in an effort to raise money for cancer research.

 

This weekend, Richard and Brian Ralph came home to Kingston, one stop on a cross-country journey.

 

“We’re very proud,” said Brian, who, along with his wife, Bev, has followed Richard in a 1978 motorhome. “When people come up to him and talk to him, about the things he’s doing - [Richard is] going to make a difference.”

 

Richard Ralph began his cross-country trek in May and expects to complete the 10,000-kilometre journey by September.

 

He has dubbed the journey the Skate of Hope to raise money for cancer research at the Princess Margaret Hospital in Toronto and at the University of Alberta in Edmonton.

 

His motivation for rolling across the country? The one person who can’t be on the trip with him, but is driving him every stride of the way.

 

When Richard Ralph found out his good friend, Adam Reid, had been diagnosed with throat and lung cancer, he was shocked. Reid wasn’t a smoker and was physically fit.

 

Pondering what he could do, Richard Ralph proposed the idea of going across the country on his Rollerblades as a way to raise money. He passed the idea on to his parents, who said he should make sure to have transportation with him and not lose his job.

 

His company gave him a sabbatical and Richard Ralph found a 1978 motorhome. His parents, both retired elementary teachers from Kingston, decided to join him to help Reid and others.

 

Surgery removed the tumour in Reid’s throat, but the cancerous cells in his lungs haven’t been as easy to destroy. Reid has gotten better, but not well enough to join the Ralphs on this trip.

 

When the tour rolls through Toronto this week, Richard Ralph will make a stop at his friend’s home. The next time the two will likely meet is on the West Coast, where Richard Ralph is scheduled to finish his cross-country trek.

 

Richard Ralph said his friend’s battle gives him the drive each morning to strap on the blades and roll along.

 

“That’s a huge motivation for me because I don’t have cancer,” he said. “I can [do this]. There’s a lot of people that can’t.”

 

So far, he’s had to deal with a snowstorm and a broken wheel on his journey.

 

Both incidents took place in Newfoundland, where he started his trip last month.

 

Shortly after leaving St. John’s on Day 1, he radioed his father to say he wanted to change a wheel.

 

Just as he finished his message, a wheel broke off and sent him to the pavement. He broke two wheels, bent a rail on his blades and got some scrapes.

 

On his last day in the province, he had to skate through a snowstorm, but Richard Ralph said that as bad as it was, he wouldn’t trade the experience for anything.

 

After going to McMaster University in Hamilton, Richard Ralph went out west to join a website hosting company. That was three years ago.

 

“But Kingston’s home,” Richard Ralph said.

 

“It feels like a milestone to get here.”

 

He hopes his stay in town will also get him closer to his fundraising milestone - his goal is $300,000. Today, Boston Pizza will donate 10 per cent of its sales between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. He’ll also be visiting schools to talk about what he’s doing.

 

For details, visit www.seetheend.com.

 

jpress@thewhig.com

 

 

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Progress Map
This will show you a map with my completed route to date. The map will be updated as frequently as possible. Thanks to Rob Werner for making this happen.

 

Estimated Dates
This is an estimate of the dates of arrivals in the various cities across Canada. Not every city is listed, so you’re welcome to ask me if/when I will be in your area.

 

(This is only a screen shot)

 

 

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(The following photos courtesy of Kyler Storm Photography)

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Travelling from Toronto to St. John’s: