News – AngelRide https://www.angelride.org Never Stop Climbing! Fri, 22 Jul 2022 16:29:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.angelride.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-angelride-siteicon-32x32.png News – AngelRide https://www.angelride.org 32 32 Summer camp helps young burn victims forget challenges https://www.angelride.org/2022/07/20/5974/ Wed, 20 Jul 2022 16:09:19 +0000 https://www.angelride.org/?p=5974
CBS Evening News with Norah O’Donnell featured the Arthur C. Luf Children’s Burn Camp on July 20, 2022!
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Union camp allows young burn survivors to be kids https://www.angelride.org/2022/07/14/union-camp-allows-young-burn-survivors-to-be-kids/ Thu, 14 Jul 2022 16:25:13 +0000 https://www.angelride.org/?p=5979 by:

UNION, Conn. (WTNH) – The activities at one special summer camp in Union are undoubtedly fun, and also hold important lessons to teach the kids who participate.

“We’re going on a swing kind of thing,” said teenage camp-goer Erina. “It’s really fun, I went on it last year.”

To kids who have been through so much, these lessons teach them to control their life with confidence. This is the overall goal of the Arthur C. Luf Children’s Burn Camp.

“It’s like a second home,” said Erina.

The burn camp was designed for kids aged eight to 18 who have survived life-altering burn injuries.

“The thing I love about burn camp is the supportive people, the fun activities, it’s just a great area, I love it,” said 11-year-old Limar. Limar is learning archery at the camp, alongside volunteer counselor Christopher Brigham, a New Haven firefighter.

“The time we put in here, the joy we get to see in the kids, their chance to let loose, be a kid, disconnect from the rest of the world, it really gives us a sense of pride,” says Brigham.

“All of our staff are volunteer firefighters or in emergency service that literally can lend their experience to the children who, in turn, turn around and lend their experiences to us,” said Dominic Mantuano, the new executive director of the Connecticut Burns Care Foundation.

He is an opera and Broadway singer, and also a 911 responder. He explained that the camp is 100% free for participants.

“Door to door it is free because the foundation through the year raises money so that these kids can come to camp to just be a kid,” said Mantuano.“Sometimes they might be reluctant but when they join in, you see them smiling and are happy to do it – they’re able to accomplish and challenge themselves,” said camp director, Tom Smith.

“You get to express yourself, have fun, and honestly just be yourself. Everyone around here is so kind, no one bullies you, it’s just an awesome place to be,” said Erina.

Whether the kids are creating art or taking on a waterslide, this safe haven is all about building camaraderie. Campers come back year after year, taking home memories of new friends, new skills, and tons of smiles.

There are plans for this incredible camp to grow and reach even more kids around the world.

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https://www.angelride.org/2022/05/26/5969/ Thu, 26 May 2022 17:41:46 +0000 https://www.angelride.org/?p=5969

by Ann Nyberg | May 26, 2022

UNION, Conn. (WTNH) — In Union, Connecticut, there is a camp for children who have survived life-altering burn injuries.

Dominic Mantuano, executive director of the Connecticut Burns Care Foundation, said it all began when Arthur C. Luf and Dr. Panettieri set out in 1978 to establish the state’s one and only burn center at Bridgeport Hospital.

In 1991, Luf realized there was a need for a place for children ages 8-18 who suffered burns, where they could go and just be a kid. So he started the Arthur C. Luf Children’s Burn Camp. Children from all over the world come to it.

“No child is denied and from door to door, there is no money involved,” Mantuano said. “We pay for every child no matter what…door to door, it’s free.”

It is a one week camp every year.

“All types of kids… at first they don’t understand, they don’t know if they want to go, but as soon as they find out that it’s a fraternity of brothers and sisters coming together to just be kids, to go fishing, ropes course, eating, dancing,” Mantuano said. “They soon learn that they’re all about each other, supporting each other, but then most importantly, after the week is over, they go back to their communities and they lead us.”

The camp can hold up to 169 children, but Mantuano said in the next few years he would like to see a little bit more and run three weeks of camp.

“We can do whatever we need to do for whatever amount of children we have. We’ll make it work,” Mantuano said.

They have an upcoming fundraiser on Saturday, a bike ride at the Essex Firehouse that is going to be three stages. It is all about raising money for the camp so kids can continue to enjoy it.

To find out more about the fundraiser, click here. If you are interested in donating, click here.

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Everyone is a Mom at Camp https://www.angelride.org/2021/05/09/everyone-is-a-mom-at-camp/ Sun, 09 May 2021 14:00:56 +0000 https://www.angelride.org/?p=5507 by Lynn Pandiani

A more personal note to illustrate what a blessing AngelRide is to the families of the campers.

Moms want to move heaven and earth to make things better for their children, right? By “moms” I mean the ‘village’ it takes to heal a child.

A little background. Our daughter was injured at 7 years old with 3rd and 4th degree burns over 11% of her body leading to 5 surgeries in the first 6 weeks (plus 2 more years down the road), months of PT, pressure garments, tutors, and missed soccer games.

Our ‘village’ included a child therapist with trauma experience, a PT with burn care experience, and a very empathetic school staff. Our family and community were indispensable. The doctors and nurses at the hospitals and outpatient clinics were remarkable. We did everything possible to enlist the help of the most qualified to aid in her emotional and physical recovery…and we found such amazing people!

However, the experience that had the most significant impact on her recovery and life is The Arthur C. Luf Children’s Burn Camp. Kelsey had not known another child who had burn scars until she went to Burn Camp. She met counselors who were burn survivors, firefighters, nurses, and caring adults. They created this loving you-can-do-it, let’s-just-have-fun experience where she was not defined or limited by her scars, she was not different, she did not have to speak about her accident or how she felt…unless she wanted to. They simply provided a Camp where kids who had been through the same type of trauma could just be kids together. She gained emotional strength from that village because they knew firsthand what she was dealing with. Here we were ready to do anything, hire anyone to help her recover and this Camp was just what she needed.

Kelsey at The Arthur C. Luf Children's Burn Camp

Kelsey was a camper for 11 years. She is now 26 and returns to Camp every summer to be that loving, you-can-do-it, let’s-just-have-fun counselor for the younger campers. In a testimonial she wrote as a teenager, Kelsey shared: “As a kid, Burn Camp was the only place I was free from uncomfortable questions, staring strangers, and crushing insecurities. It is a safe environment necessary for many young burn survivors’ recovery and without a doubt helped me to become the strong, confident woman that I am today.”

We are grateful to the ‘moms’ who helped our daughter. The village of family and friends, emergency and medical professionals of all kinds, counselors, and campers too.

Over the past few years, Burn Camp families like mine have added another compassionate community to their village – AngelRide. Quietly devoting hours to training, volunteering, fundraising, and donating, AngelRiders are truly Camp ‘moms’. You make an immense difference in the lives of young burn survivors. You really do.

A heartfelt thank you,

Lynn Pandiani
AngelRide volunteer
Burn Camp mom

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Shining Light – Sheila https://www.angelride.org/2020/04/22/shining-light-sheila/ Wed, 22 Apr 2020 20:33:31 +0000 https://www.angelride.org/?p=4981 Time to spotlight another of our amazing team leaders! Sheila is a high school special education teacher and Unified Sports coordinator who is rising to the challenge of teaching her students online now that #coronavirus will be keeping them out of school until at least mid-May. She shared some of her experiences with us:

As a special education teacher, it can be especially challenging for students with disabilities who rely on that human interaction to make progress. I find myself not only teaching but also reaching out and connecting for the purpose of making sure my students are okay, letting them know we are all learning together…The parents need as much – if not more – support in the distance learning situation. I reach out daily and let them know how to contact me, in multiple ways…

…This transition has been exhausting from hours of learning technology, and we have all worked night, and weekends, meeting and learning- how to create a Google classroom and make pre-recorded videos and live instruction, for example. But it has also been wonderful because the teachers and administrators have pulled together in an amazing way. I am lucky to have such supportive colleagues. We have ‘breakfast’ meetings everyday with students, we see other’s kids, and pets (!) on screen and we’re virtually visiting each other’s homes. In a strange way, it’s brought me closer to my colleagues. The support is wonderful. But I miss being around them! I miss seeing my students and colleagues everyday and being in our school environment. In the meantime, I look forward to seeing them everyday on screen.

Thank you, Sheila, for all you do to take care of your students & their parents as we all adapt to a different reality!

If you are involved in any aspect of the response to #COVID19 or if you know someone who is, please let us know! Email info@angelride.org. We would love to share more stories. 

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Let’s talk about scars, shall we? https://www.angelride.org/2020/04/22/lets-talk-about-scars-shall-we/ Wed, 22 Apr 2020 20:32:41 +0000 https://www.angelride.org/?p=4952 By Karen Grouten

Let’s talk about scars, shall we? We all have them. We all know what they are. They are the spots on our body or our soul or our emotions that heal over from an injury. But those spots are not quite the same as before. Sometimes we try to hide them. Both the physical ones and the emotional ones. Sometimes we get bullied because of them. Sometimes we try to cover them up and pretend they never happened at all.

Then somewhere along the way, we learn to embrace them. To realize they are part of us. To let them remind us of the growth and change that has taken place within us because of that injury, that has yes, healed over, but not left us unchanged. We stop allowing them to define us. We accept them, and we accept ourselves.

See this beautiful young woman? This is Tammy.  Tammy is gorgeous, smart and funny. Today [June 1 AngelRide 2019] before riding, Tammy told us how she was burned in a gas stove explosion in which she lost her father. She was burned over 67% of her body. Her brother was burned over 50% of his body. She recovered. But she wasn’t the same. She attended this camp, and could wear a bikini in the lake, and be just like the other kids. There were no stares. There were no questions. There was only acceptance. Today she rode with us. Her first Angel Ride. Up until today, the most she had ridden was 25 miles. Her scars, like the rest of us, will never leave her. But they do not define her. Today, I thank her for giving me perspective.

Maybe my own scars are just a little more accepted and a little less hidden and covered up because of Tammy. “♥♥♥

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Shining Light – Carole https://www.angelride.org/2020/04/22/shining-light-carole/ Wed, 22 Apr 2020 20:30:56 +0000 https://www.angelride.org/?p=4979 We would love to shine a spotlight on another of AngelRide’s team leaders, who has also been involved with the Connecticut Burns Care Foundation, Inc. for many years. Carole, who recently retired from her position as a medical technologist, has volunteered to share her experience with the Coronavirus response.

As a medical technologist in a public hospital laboratory for many years, I helped maintain the computer database that makes the connection between specimen collection to lab testing and results – ultimately delivering those results electronically to doctors and their patients in an accurate and timely fashion. With the very sudden appearance of COVID-19 and a large increase in the volume of testing, I felt it was important to step back in and help! I have been working with the lab at my hospital to create a method in our database to process and post results to providers. It’s a process that is changing daily, as new testing facilities are needed and new tests are developed. I’m proud to be contributing in even a small way to help get us through this!

Thank you, Carole, for all that you do and for sharing your story! Please #StaySafe as you continue your important work.

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Shining Light – Angel https://www.angelride.org/2020/04/22/shining-light-angel/ Wed, 22 Apr 2020 20:25:27 +0000 https://www.angelride.org/?p=4971 We are shining a spotlight on those in our community involved in the Coronavirus response, and who better to start with than the inspiration behind AngelRide herself- Angel! Angel is a survivor of childhood cancer, and her strength in her journey helped mold the mission of the ride – to ensure that children struggling with illness or trauma don’t miss out on the chance to be a kid.

Today, Angel is still involved in AngelRide as one of the team leaders who helps throughout the year to plan the ride. She is also an RN at a cancer center, and shared her experience with us:

 “I help manage and infuse many people’s cancer treatments. We are not on the front lines, but this is not an office that can be shut down. Our patients need their treatments. We have been doing everything we can to have ‘business as usual’ while keeping our patients and staff safe, including screening calls, no visitors, and wearing a mask all day. Our patients are so vulnerable, as they are all immunocompromised, and they look to us for calm advice and reassurance. I have to keep myself safe so I can keep them safe.

Thank you, Angel, for all that you do and for sharing your story! Please stay safe as you continue your important work.

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Essex Savings Bank Announces 2020 Community Investment Program and Annual Balloting Results https://www.angelride.org/2020/04/02/essex-savings-bank-announces-2020-community-investment-program-and-annual-balloting-results/ Thu, 02 Apr 2020 17:47:27 +0000 https://www.angelride.org/?p=4815

March 31, 2020 – Essex, Connecticut – Essex Savings Bank is pleased to announce that, through its Community Investment Program (CIP), the Bank will be giving out $369,267 to support local non-profits and civic groups in 2020. The added monies available were in direct response to the successes of 2019, the Bank’s most profitable year on record. Gregory R. Shook, President & CEO stated, “It gives me great pleasure in light of the pandemic we are all now facing, to be able to provide needed funding to support these vital organizations in our community.”

The Bank’s CIP provides funding through numerous channels; customers allocate 30% of funds by voting for three of their favorite participating causes, charities or organizations on an annual ballot. The remaining 70% of funding is distributed by the Bank’s Directors, Senior Officers, Branch Managers and the Bank’s wholly owned subsidiary Essex Financial Services, Inc. Through its CIP, the Bank has donated nearly $5 million dollars to over 200 local nonprofit organizations. In addition to these donations, many of the Bank’s employees offer their time and expertise to nonprofit organizations in both official board and volunteer capacities.
Essex Savings Bank is delighted to also share the results of its annual customer ballot initiative to which 72 organizations participated this past February. The Shoreline Soup Kitchen & Food Pantries, which has received the greatest number of votes every year they have participated, was again awarded the largest number of votes translating into the largest monetary award, nearly $10,000. The remaining 71 organizations, whose missions range from servicing low income individuals, to youth and senior services and from emergency services to animal welfare and the arts received a combined total of $101,106.

Essex Savings Bank is a FDIC insured, state chartered, mutual savings bank established in 1851. The Bank serves the Connecticut River Valley and shoreline with six offices in Essex (2), Chester, Madison, Old Lyme and Old Saybrook providing a full complement of personal and business banking. Financial, estate, insurance and retirement planning are offered throughout the state by the Bank’s Trust Department and wholly-owned subsidiary, Essex Financial Services, Inc., Member FINRA, SIPC.

RESULTS OF ESSEX SAVINGS BANK CUSTOMER BALLOTING COMMUNITY INVESTMENT PROGRAM 2020

OrganizationTotal2020 Amount
The Shoreline Soup Kitchens & Pantries, Inc. 589 $9,678 
Forgotten Felines, Inc. 322 $5,291 
Valley Shore Animal Welfare League 298 $4,897 
Estuary Council of Seniors, Inc. - Meals on Wheels 242 $3,976 
High Hopes Therapeutic Riding, Inc. 221 $3,631 
Bikes for Kids, Inc. 209 $3,434 
Pet Connections, Inc. 181 $2,974 
Tait’s Every Animal Matters (TEAM) 178 $2,925 
A Little Compassion Inc. / The Nest Coffee House 162 $2,662 
Camp Hazen YMCA 162 $2,662 
Essex Fire Engine Company No. 1 157 $2,580 
Lyme Ambulance Association, Inc. 133 $2,185 
Deep River Fire Department, Inc. 132 $2,169 
Valley Shore YMCA 129 $2,120 
Visiting Nurses of the Lower Valley, Inc. (VNLV) 129 $2,120 
The Chester Hose Company Incorporated 127 $2,087 
Ivoryton Playhouse Foundation, Inc. 117 $1,922 
The Essex Library Association, Inc. 114 $1,873 
Old Lyme Fire Department, Inc. 113 $1,857 
Essex Ambulance Association, Inc. 112 $1,840 
Connecticut Cancer Foundation, Inc. 109 $1,791 
Ivoryton Library Association 104 $1,709 
Lyme Fire Company 103 $1,692 
Chester Historical Society 101 $1,660 
Madison Ambulance Association, Inc. 99 $1,627 
The Katherine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center, Inc. 90 $1,479 
Pandemonium Rainforest Project, Inc. 85 $1,397 
Old Saybrook Land Trust, Inc. 84 $1,380 
Friends In Service Here (F.I.S.H.) 81 $1,331 
Lyme Land Conservation Trust, Inc. 80 $1,315 
Literacy Volunteers Valley Shore, CT, Inc. 70 $1,150 
SARAH, Inc. 70 $1,150 
Brian House of Chester 68 $1,117 
Old Lyme-Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library Association 68 $1,117 
Old Lyme Visiting Nurse Association, Inc. 67 $1,101 
Friends of the Essex Library 64 $1,052 
Pettipaug Junior Sailing Academy, Inc. 64 $1,052 
Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau 63 $1,035 
Vista Life Innovations, Inc. 62 $1,019 
Old Lyme Land Trust, Inc. 59 $969 
Old Saybrook Historical Society 59 $969 
Westbrook Project Graduation, Inc. 57 $937 
Tri-Town Youth Services Bureau, Inc. 56 $920 
Common Good Gardens, Inc. 55 $904 
Lyme Public Hall & Local History Archives, Inc. 55 $904 
Region 4 Education Foundation 55 $904 
Chester Land Trust 53 $871 
Deep River Historical Society, Inc. 53 $871 
Westbrook Youth and Family Services, Inc. 53 $871 
Essex Historical Society, Inc. 51 $838 
Friends of the Chester Public Library, Inc. 51 $838 
Friends of the Deep River Public Library, Inc. 51 $838 
Community Music School 50 $822 
Lyme Art Association, Inc. 46 $756 
Deep River Elementary School PTO, Inc 43 $707 
Deep River Land Trust, Inc. 42 $690 
Essex Elementary School Foundation, Inc. 41 $674 
Cappella Cantorum, Inc. 39 $641 
Con Brio Choral Society, Inc. 37 $608 
Hope Partnership, Inc. 37 $608 
Sister Cities Essex Haiti, Inc. 37 $608 
Angel Charities, Inc. 34 $559 
Essex Community Fund, Inc. 34 $559 
The Woman’s Exchange of Old Lyme, Inc. 34 $559 
Act II Thrift Shop, Inc. 33 $542 
Essex Winter Series 32 $526 
Ivoryton Village Alliance 31 $509 
Lymes’ Elderly Housing, Inc. (Lymewood) 27 $444 
Ruth Ann Heller Music Foundation, Inc. 24 $394 
Brazilian and American Youth Cultural Exchange (BRAYCE) 23 $378 
MusicNow Foundation, Inc 17 $279 
Musical Masterworks, Inc. 14 $230 
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As someone privileged to tour the camp while in session – there’s a wonderful sort of magic happening there. https://www.angelride.org/2020/03/05/as-someone-privileged-to-tour-the-camp-while-in-session-theres-a-wonderful-sort-of-magic-happening-there/ Thu, 05 Mar 2020 17:28:55 +0000 https://www.angelride.org/?p=4664 . . . Why I ride
By Dana Bean

AngelRide is a wonderful vortex.  It draws you in.

It draws you in, not because of the quality of the cycling experience itself, though in many years of riding, I’ve never been in an organized cycling event that is more enjoyable, in terms of the ride itself, or the support and professionalism with which it is executed..

It draws you in, not because of the enthusiasm, overwhelming kindness and willingness to help of all of the volunteers, though I’ve never seen their equal.

It draws you in, not because of the joy and familial atmosphere of the riders, nor from their easy going inclusiveness of all riders regardless of their skill or experience, though AngelRiders display this in overwhelming abundance.

It draws you in because AngelRide isn’t about any of those things.  It has never been. Those things are all true, because the people who started AngelRide and who carry on it’s mission are All About the Kids.  

AngelRide has existed for 17 years to help kids to BE kids.  Not victims. Not patients.

The money we raise as AngelRiders goes to help kids.  We do that by supporting The Arthur C. Luf Children’s Burn Camp.  The camp itself is detailed in articles, websites and information available through links elsewhere on this site, by people far more qualified than I to explain it.  Please take the time to read and watch all you can.  

Let me tell you as someone privileged to tour the camp while in session – there’s a wonderful sort of magic happening there. AngelRide has seen, through 17 years experience supporting camps for kids suffering life threatening conditions, and now with burned children – that an incredible sort of healing and growth takes place among kids when they are afforded a chance to BE kids in a safe place, surrounded by other kids, counselors, and staff who know firsthand through their own experience what a child who is so affected feels.  

The camp is run by volunteers.  They take personal vacation from their careers to be there for the kids, and some have done it for many, many years.  Many of the camp counselors were once campers themselves. They are a tight knit, close group. We are privileged to be able to help them in their mission.

AngelRide is helping to provide the camp with assistance to grow it’s programs.  To provide for more kids, to improve or expand. To make it more available to help more kids.  Speaking for myself, the benefit I gain from knowing that my efforts in fundraising are contributing to such a cause and to the happiness, healing, and growth that go on there is tremendous, and hard to describe.

At last year’s AngelRide –  at camp on the night before the ride, some of the “old hands” were all talking and joking before bed.  A long-time AngelRider (who is also the father of a camper, now a grown woman) said it so well that I wish I’d had a recorder, so that I weren’t forced now to paraphrase.  He said, in effect that the ride – the actual “pedaling down the road” ride itself – is in no way what AngelRide is about. That well organized, well orchestrated, wonderful event is the reward that we as riders are given by a truly remarkable group of organizers and volunteers for the work we as riders must do to raise money to support the camp and its mission, because it really IS ALL ABOUT THE KIDS.   That’s what the training, fundraising, volunteer preparation and logistics are all about – supporting the efforts to help the kids.  

And it is. 

As riders, we are in the confusing position of being cheered (CHEERED!!!) and thanked – profusely, sometimes (to me) embarrassingly so – by people (volunteers, parents of campers, and campers themselves), who have by far the more difficult job – either in terms of the herculean effort to put on the ride, or the even bigger task of being the child, parent, sibling or friend of the child/family –  affected by burns. Heck, the riders just have to ask some friends and family for a little dough to help a really great cause – that’s not so hard, really. We get to ride our bikes which is no work at all (I did not say it isn’t hard, just not work)

That is the vortex, the thing that pulls us into this swirling ride that is so challenging, so smile (and happy tear) inducing,  and ultimately, so very rewarding, that many of us have been coming back year after year to see our old friends and make new ones as we share with them the joy of helping to bring this experience to kids.

Grab your paddle, slip into the flow.  The water is fine!

Dana Bean

12th year AngelRider.

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