The Fayette Citizen-News Page

Wednesday, August 30, 2000

Hard-training walkers nearing big event

Peachtree City group, all affected by breast cancer, ready for Avon Walk

By PAT NEWMAN
pnewman@TheCitizenNews.com

Forget about Kelly, Richard and Rudy — there are plenty of real-life survivors right here in Fayette County.

While TV’s popular castaways schemed and connived to win a million dollars, 25 local women have raised more than $75,000 for the Avon Breast Cancer Crusade. They will join about 3,500 participants, mostly women, at Lake Lanier Sept. 22 to begin their three-day, 60-mile walk to Atlanta.

This is the second year for the Avon Walk in Atlanta, and Audrey Fowler’s second year as a participant. The Peachtree City resident is a breast cancer survivor, wife, teacher and local organizer for the event.

Fowler will participate in the walk’s opening and closing ceremonies, joining in the “Circle of Survivors.” The three-day walk ends in Piedmont Park Sunday, Sept, 24, at around 4 p.m.

Training for the endurance walk has been a weekly event for these women, who have all been touched either directly or indirectly by breast cancer. The group, which ranges in age from 17 to 62, starts promptly at 6:30 a.m. each Saturday and heads toward Huddleston Pond.

By 8 a.m., they’ve made it to the Kedron Village Kroger where they break for a cool drink, a donut or bagel and a some leg stretches. Soon they’re off again, walking in a southerly direction toward Crosstown Road on the opposite side of town. They circle back to their point of origin around 11 a.m.

Why do they do it?

“We’re doing it so our daughters and sons won’t have to face this heart-wrenching disease,” one woman said.

Another added, “All the money we raised last year went for detection and education. This year it will go for research.”

Recipients of these financially significant grants include Emory University Hospital’s Winship Cancer Center and the National Breast Cancer Coalition (NBCC), according to the walking team.

Each participant agrees to raise a minimum of $1,800 for the Avon Breast Cancer Crusade. The local group has already exceeded its fund-raising mark. One thing the group eventually hopes to see developed is a blood test to detect breast cancer which would not only prove to be more effective, but obviously more comfortable than a mammogram.

On the lighter side, Fowler notes that the walk is “a lot of fun. We walk and talk and develop lots of new friendships.

“We have this bond,” she explained. “These are friendships that will last a lifetime.”
Around Peachtree City, the complete group is “very formidable,” the women joked. “People move aside when they see us coming.”

As the weekend approaches for the walk, the women said they would slack off gradually to be in good shape for the event. “We learned last year that this is an endurance event, not a race,” Fowler and her friends agreed.

In training, the women are tackling more hills and learning to adjust their pace. The last big push will be this weekend, when a number of walkers will go for 60 miles around Peachtree City.

No more applications are being accepted for this year’s event, but training will gear up soon for the 2001 Avon three-day. For information, phone 404-257-5553. Volunteers to help along the route are still needed.


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