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Our Community: Pooch party aids low-income families

Dress up your four-legged best friend to meet new friends at the Victoria Pet Food Bank鈥檚 annual Dog Party at Clover Point on Monday.

Dress up your four-legged best friend to meet new friends at the Victoria Pet Food Bank鈥檚 annual Dog Party at Clover Point on Monday.

The event is an opportunity for dog lovers to socialize, to raise awareness, and to raise funds to help street and low-income pet families in our community.

Volunteers of the organization 鈥 children who grew up helping to tame feral kittens and sorting returnables 鈥 will be on hand to organize games for participants.

There will be treats for both humans and pooches, with coffee donated by Serious Coffee on Broad Street.

The event is free to attend, with donations gratefully accepted. It runs 11 a.m. to 3听p.m., Feb. 13 at Clover Point.

For more information, call 778-352-2999, go to safars.org or Boneless Project on Facebook.

Count birds from your听own backyard

Register to take part in the 20th annual Great Backyard Bird Count from wherever you are 鈥 in a backyard, park, nature centre, hiking trail, school ground, balcony or beach, Feb. 17 to 20.

Bird lovers need to count for only 15 minutes on one (or more) days and enter their tally online. The data contribute to a snapshot of bird distribution and help scientists see changes that have taken place over the past 20听years.

For more information, go to gbbc.birdcount.org.

Victoria Health Co-op maps the future

Discover the services the Victoria Health Co-op provides for members and the wider community at its annual general meeting, Feb. 25 at Fairfield United Church.

The co-operative serves more than 5,000 patients through its Co-op Health Centre, 547 Menzies St., a building owned by the James Bay Community Project.

Along with tabling the annual report, the meeting will lay out the group鈥檚 vision in five areas: The organization in the bigger picture, services for members, community outreach, Co-Op Health Centre and achieving financial stability.

The event is free to attend. It runs 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Feb. 25 at Fairfield United Church, 1303听Fairfield St. (at Moss).

For more information, go to victoriahealthcooperative.com or Facebook.

ALS walk needs a听new听co-ordinator

The 16th Annual Walk for ALS Victoria is in jeopardy of cancellation because the organization needs to fill the position of walk co-ordinator.

The event typically raises nearly $1 million toward patient services and research for people affected by ALS in the community. The loss of the walk will be detrimental to countless families across the region hoping to see a future without this debilitating disease.

Support and training will be provided by the ALS Society of sa国际传媒 to the person or people willing to take on the role.

To save the Victoria walk, the deadline to find a volunteer to lead the event is set for Feb. 28.

If interested, contact the ALS Society of sa国际传媒 to discuss commitment, timeline and training. The society has a large, dedicated group of volunteers willing to support and mentor the incoming walk co-ordinator.

The Walk for ALS Victoria is scheduled to take place Sept. 17.

Interested parties should contact Iman Ghahremani, manager, Volunteer and Resource Development, ALS Society of sa国际传媒 at [email protected], phone: 604-278-2257 ext. 229; cell: 778-999-7278; toll free: 1-800-708-3228. For more information, go to alsbc.ca or Facebook.

Thrifty Foods helps听Easter听Seals

Thrifty Foods presented a $23,003 cheque to Easter Seals British Columbia/Yukon on Friday.

The grocery chain donated 50听cents from the sale of every 700-ml container of Thrifty Kitchens Soup in January. Customers were also able to contribute to the cause by donating their three-cent reusable bag refund or making a cash donation at the till.

The donation is part of Thrifty Foods鈥 year-long 40th-birthday celebrations.

For more information, go to eastersealscamps.ca or sobeys.com.

Victorian among scholarship winners

Sarah Berod of Victoria was one of 85 students across sa国际传媒 chosen to receive post-secondary scholarships, valued at $5,000 each, from the Horatio Alger Association of sa国际传媒.

The scholarships are awarded to high school students in financial need who have overcome significant adversity while demonstrating strength of character, strong academics and a commitment to pursuing higher education, as well as a desire to contribute to society.

鈥淓ach year, our association looks for the hardest-working, most-deserving Canadian students to award our post-secondary scholarships,鈥 said Prem Watsa, president of the association. 鈥淥ur 85 scholarship recipients for 2017 make us proud, and we are honoured to help them as they strive to overcome adversity.鈥

Funds can be used for post-secondary vocational or university studies. The association has awarded almost $2 million in scholarships to 387 recipients since 2012.

For more information, go to horatioalger.ca.

Tasty treats for听a听good听cause

Send your love 鈥 and give back to the community at the same time 鈥 with HeartGrams.

Each HeartGram consists of a cute, witty card from BooToYou Designs and a deluxe chocolate from Chocolate Tofino wrapped and delivered by HeartPress PR.

HeartGrams is a grownup version of a nostalgic pastime with the same whimsy as the I choo-choo-choose you cards. There are 13 card designs to choose from, ranging from the very sweet to the racy and hilarious.

People can choose to give a truffle sampler, a chocolate bar or a box of chocolates.

The initiative is an easy way to give back on Valentine鈥檚 Day, with $1 from every HeartGram donated to a cause of the purchaser鈥檚 choice.

HeartGrams will be delivered to a few select blocks of downtown businesses or can be picked up at select locations within Greater Victoria: Metrics Chartered Accounting Professionals, the Watershed, Picot, Max Furniture, Coastal Offices.

For more information, go to heartpress-pr10.mybigcommerce.com/about/.

Seniors program offers听training session

Seniors Serving Seniors is looking for people to sign up for a March training session to prepare them for volunteering with the Return to Health Program, March 9 and 10.

The Return to Health program provides companionship and support for independent seniors returning home after a hospital stay.

Topics at the two-day training session include: Effective communication skills, nutrition, the effects of disease on normal aging, navigating the health-care system and how to connect with community programs.

Volunteers visit clients and offer assistance to help them connect to services and regain self-confidence. The goal of the program is to assist the client in re-socializing and making new friends at seniors鈥 social programs in the area.

The program, funded by the United Way of Greater Victoria and Island Health, is followed by monthly support meetings throughout the year.

Occasionally, lasting friendships develop between volunteer and client.

Please call Jane at 250-382-4331 for more information. For more information, go to seniorsservingseniors.bc.ca.

It鈥檚 nomination time for听SS Beaver Medal

The Maritime Museum of British Columbia is inviting nominations for the SS Beaver Medal, an annual award that recognizes outstanding achievements in sa国际传媒鈥檚 marine sector.

Nominations are encouraged for individuals who have made noteworthy contributions to sa国际传媒听marine interests, including but not limited to: science, technology, business, applications of maritime skills, nautical heritage, and culture and academic offerings.

An award is also made to recognize a noteworthy organization, vessel or technological project.

鈥淲e have been encouraged by the growing diversity of nominations as the award becomes more widely known,鈥 said Jan Drent, a member of the medal steering committee.

Past winners include entrepreneurs, naval architects, publishers, authors, historians, a hydrographer, innovators in technology, a marine artist and a museum curator.

The gold-plated medal is struck from copper salvaged from the paddlewheel steamship SS Beaver, which pioneered commercial navigation on the sa国际传媒 coast as a floating trading post, hydrographic survey ship and towboat on the northwest coast for 53 years. It sank near Vancouver in 1888.

Potential recipients will be selected by an awards committee with members from the Chamber of Shipping of sa国际传媒, the Prince Rupert Port Authority, sa国际传媒 Ferries, a former coast guard captain, a marine historian, a marine writer and a past-president of the Maritime Museum.

Nominations close on May 20. For more information, go to mmbc.bc.ca/about/s-s-beaver-medal/.

Longtime James Bay volunteer retires

The board of the James Bay Market Society has announced the retirement of Pat McGuire, a contributor to the market and the member of the society for more than 20 years.

McGuire was one of the original James Bay Market Society community members and helped establish the market initially at South Park School. Thanks to her organizational skills and her deep commitment to the community, the market has grown to become a vibrant community hub.

Another project, Seedy Saturday, has grown to become the premier seed and garden show in Victoria, attended by more than 2,200 people each time it is put on.

In McGuire鈥檚 honour, the society has planted three apple trees at Todd Park, a stone鈥檚 throw from her home.

For more information, go to jamesbaymarket.com.

Mouthwatering food aids听Our Place

Tickets are going fast for the Hungry Hearts, a savoury culinary soir茅e that also feeds the coffers of Our Place Society, Wednesday at the Inn at Laurel Point.

Six of Victoria鈥檚 top chefs engage in a friendly cook-off for the coveted title of Hungry Hearts Champion by creating exquisite small bites. The chefs include: Castro Boateng of Castro Boateng Catering, Mike Dunlop of Vista 18, Takashi Ito of the Inn at Laurel Point, Tyler Paquette of Fishhook and Nicholas Waters of Toque Catering.

Ticket holders determine the winner by voting for their favourite culinary creation.

As a bonus this year, attendees can sample a mouthwatering and edible Chocolate Show put on by the Quebec-based Chocolat Favoris. People will be entertained with live music and get to bid at high-end auctions between bites.

This is the fourth year of the event, which has raised more than $380,000 in the past three years in support of Victoria鈥檚 most vulnerable citizens.

Tickets are $125 鈥 with 100 per cent of proceeds benefiting Our Place. The event runs 5 to 8 p.m. Feb. 15 at the Inn at Laurel Point, 680 Montreal St. Reserve tickets at 250-413-3161 ext. 228 or email [email protected].

The hotel is offering a Ride-the-Elevator Home rate for Hungry Hearts guests who would rather not drive 鈥 $99 for a standard room or $149 for an Erickson Wing studio suite. Please call 250-386-8721 to reserve.

For more information, go to ourplacesociety.com/ hungry-hearts.