The Peninsula Gateway, Gig Harbor, WA -

Welcome | Logout | My Account
Welcome Guest | Log In | Register
x

The Peninsula Gateway

Serving Gig Harbor and the Key Peninsula

Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH

tool name

close
tool goes here

Treadmill challenge to raise money for kids in need

Want to help less fortunate children in Pierce County this holiday season and get in a good workout? Then perhaps Gig Harbor’s Anytime Fitness’ second annual 12-Hour Forgotten Children’s Fundraiser is for you. The event is set to take place from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., on Wednesday, Dec. 12, at Anytime Fitness, located at 5275 Olympic Drive NW.

Top Photo

Club manager Anya Edgley-Turpin is the driving force behind a Dec. 12 fundraiser to be held at the Gig Harbor Anytime Fitness. The event will benefit the Forgotten Children's Fund of Pierce County.
LEE GILES III/Staff photographer   
Club manager Anya Edgley-Turpin is the driving force behind a Dec. 12 fundraiser to be held at the Gig Harbor Anytime Fitness. The event will benefit the Forgotten Children's Fund of Pierce County.
Published: 11/29/12 2:35 pm | Updated: 11/29/12 3:06 pm
0 comments

Want to help less fortunate children in Pierce County this holiday season and get in a good workout? Then perhaps Gig Harbor’s Anytime Fitness’ second annual 12-Hour Forgotten Children’s Fundraiser is for you.  The event is set to take place from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., on Wednesday, Dec. 12, at Anytime Fitness, located at 5275 Olympic Drive NW.

“You don’t have to be a member,” said club manager Anya Edgley-Turpin. “It’ll be an open house.”

In addition, Anytime Fitness will be hosting a toy donation drive and will be awarding prizes and serving refreshments throughout the day.

Here’s how the fundraiser works: Club members and guests will  have the chance to participate in the 12-hour treadmill challenge, during which time staff members from Anytime Fitness will run for 12 consecutive hours on treadmills to raise funds.

“All three treadmills will be going nonstop for 12 hours,” Edgley-Turpin said of staff members who will be taking turns on the running machines, explaining that for a flat $25 pledge, people can have as much time as they want on a treadmill up to 12 hours.

Participants can run at their own pace or challenge themselves by running against Anytime Fitness staffers, Edgley-Turpin said.

During last year’s fundraiser, Edgley-Turpin ran the full 12 hours.

“I’m a long-distance runner and I’ve ran 12-hour races,” she said.

Running for 12 straight hours on a treadmill is not as boring as it might seem, according to Edgley-Turpin.

“It was actually really, really fun, It’s not monotonous with lots of other people around,” she said. “They can’t go anywhere. They’re trapped on a treadmill.”

She’s taking it easy this time.

“This year, I’ll be doing four hours,” she said, explaining that she’s pregnant.

Running indoors on a treadmill has many advantages, she said, including preventing the more aerobically fit from losing the endurance-challenged during an outdoor run.

Other advantages, she pointed out, include not having to worry about the possibility of inclement weather, the availability of food and drink at the club and having restrooms nearby.

Edgley-Turpin anticipates about 40 people will turn out take part in the treadmill challenge.

For those interested, Anytime Fitness is accepting donations in the form of unwrapped toys, clothing, accessories and money. All donations go straight to the Forgotten Children’s Fund of Pierce County, an all volunteer organization that works to raise money to purchase, wrap and deliver gifts to children in need and their families.

If you would like to make a donation of some kind in support of the 12-Hour Forgotten Children’s Fundraiser, contact Edgley-Turpin by phone at 253-509-2747, or via email at gigharborwa@anytimefitness.com.

Last year’s effort brought in a large amount of toys and $1,500 in cash.


Reporter Brett Davis can be reached at 253-358-4151 or by email at brett.davis@gateline.com. Follow him on Twitter @gateway_brett.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION | Register here

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service. If you have any questions, including why your comment may not be showing immediately after you submit it, be sure to visit the commenting FAQ.

CONTESTS

Similar stories

  • Orthopedic Guild begins to rebuild ruined thrift shop

    Members of the Peninsula Orthopedic Guild gathered Wednesday to watch the demolition of their thrift shop on Kimball Drive. It was a celebratory occasion – the shop was badly damaged in a fire on July 3, and the demolition marks the beginning of new chapter in the store’s long history.

  • Orthopedic guild begins to rebuild ruined thrift shop

    Members of the Peninsula Orthopedic Guild gathered Wednesday to watch the demolition of their thrift shop on Kimball Drive.

  • Cinde’s Best Trees proves giving is better than receiving

    Cinde Gardner-Gillespie of Cinde's Best Trees loves the Christmas tree-selling business. She gets to work with her family and makes customers happy by providing the traditional decorative conifer that can be found in most homes this time of year.

  • Girl Scouts: Cookie sales boost fundraising, business skills

    The professional football season may have come to an end for Pacific Northwest fans, but the Girl Scout cookie season is just kicking off.

  • Food bank sees donations, need rise during holidays

    Ask Jan Coen what the arrival of the holiday season means, and she’ll tell you: “A lot of work.” Coen is the president of Gig Harbor/Peninsula FISH Food Bank, a nonprofit, volunteer-run organization. As the weather gets colder and the holidays approach, FISH ratchets up its charitable work, spurring one of the busiest donation periods of the year. People are more inclined to donate to FISH during the holidays than at other times of the year, Coen said, both as a result of specific holiday programs and due to the spirit of the season.