Tag Archive for: #RCAPS

Kerr Lake Country Club

TownTalk: Ladies Invitational at KLCC Coming September 6

Whether you’re a scratch golfer or if you’ve never swung a club, an upcoming charity tournament at Kerr Lake Country Club will fit you like a glove – in this case, a golfer’s glove.

Men, however, need not register – the Sept. 6 Mulligan Island is a women’s invitational.

Proceeds for the fundraiser will benefit Ruin Creek Animal Protection Society, and organizers are expecting a fun morning of golf to support a worthy cause.

A formidable foursome – Vance County Tourism’s Pam Hester, RCAPS representatives Michele Wood and Tracey Tsoumbos and Kerr Lake Country Club Manager Jan DeMarco – provided details about the tournament on Tuesday’s TownTalk.

DeMarco said the club has seen an increase recently in women enjoying the golf course, and a ladies’ league formed. “That gave us the idea that we really should have a women’s invitational,” she said.

Hester suggested that organizers connect with a local charity, and that’s when RCAPS joined the mix. There’s a division for serious golfers, she said, but there’s also a division for beginners, who may be hard-pressed to tell an eagle from a birdie.

Registration and breakfast begin at 8 a.m. and the 2-woman scramble will have a shotgun start at 10 a.m. The $75 registration includes lunch, a tee gift and lots of prizes along the way.

There are still opportunities for sponsorships, which range from $2,000 all the way to $100.

Players can buy a Mulligan Package for $20. These packages, as well as the hole sponsorships, go directly to animal protection.

Wood has worked with RCAPS since 2014, when the need was urgent to get unwanted animals out of the shelter and into foster and rescue organizations so they could be adopted.

She estimates that RCAPS has saved nearly 19,000 animals. In July alone, 170 animals were transported from the shelter.

“The impact we’ve been able to make in Vance County is huge,” Wood said.

In recent years, RCAPS has shifted its focus from transport to spay and neuter programs and education as a way to reduce the unwanted pet population and decrease intake at the shelter.

Tsoumbos, who joined RCAPS in November as executive director, said the current spay/neuter voucher program is for any pet owner – regardless of income level – to get a $20 voucher to present to participating local veterinarians when they have their pet spayed or neutered.

Education is a key component to reducing the number of dogs and cats that end up in the shelter. RCAPS has put the finishing touches on a new program designed to educate the community about ways to help.

RCAPS also has monthly yard sales at their office at 165 U.S. Hwy. 158 across from Petco. The next one is this Saturday, Aug. 16 and then again on Sept. 13 and Oct. 18. There are spots available for individuals to sign up to participate.

Then make plans to attend Pet Palooza – Holiday Bazaar edition – on Saturday, Nov. 1 at the former Boyd dealership at the intersection of Ruin Creek Road and U.S. Hwy. 158.

Visit https://www.kerrlakecountryclub.com/ or call 252.492.1895 to learn more or to register for the women’s invitational golf tournament.

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RCAPS Annual ‘Pet Palooza’ Saturday, May 3

Bring the whole family out to Ruin Creek Animal Protection Society’s Spring Fling Pet Palooza on Saturday, May 3 for a day of food trucks, crafts, games, photo booths and more!

The event will take place at the former Boyd dealership, 284 US 158 bypass from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Vendors are still being accepted, so please call 252.572.2219 or email info@rcaps.org to get registered.

Children can create crafts for Mother’s Day, and there will be raffles for great prizes available, too.

And it should come as no surprise that pets are welcome to attend with their people!

TownTalk: RCAPS And Cruise In Continues To Support Animals In Need

Ask Brandon Boyd about his favorite things to talk about, and chances are good that two of them are cars and Ruin Creek Animal Protection Society – not necessarily in that order.

And it’s exactly those two things that will take center stage at this Saturday’s Ruin Creek Cruise-In event at the former Charles Boyd car dealership on U.S. Hwy 158 bypass.

The Cruise-In is being sponsored this year by the Vance County Tourism Authority and Boyd told John C. Rose on Town Talk Tuesday that he’s looking forward to a safe, fun family event – complete with food, live music, and – of course – classic and collector vehicles from near and far. Collectors may begin registering their classic cars and finding their parking spot at 1 p.m.; the event is from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.

It’s a way to say “thank you” to all those who help to work tirelessly to fulfill the RCAPS mission of reducing the number of unwanted pets in Vance County.

In the past six years, through a close collaboration with RCAPS, the local shelter has almost cut in half the number of pets that end up at the animal shelter – from more than 3,000 to between 1,700 or 1,800.

“It feels great,” Boyd said of the achievement. “But as we all talk about, there’s still work to be done.” Animal services staff, under the direction of Chief Frankie Nobles, and dedicated shelter and RCAPS volunteers spend untold hours finding rescues who can hopefully find foster homes or adoptive homes for the animals, mostly dogs, Boyd said.

And the animals who do come into the shelter are spayed and neutered before they take that Friday evening “Freedom Ride” to what everyone hopes is a loving home.

Over the last month or 45 days, though, Boyd said the shelter has been “packed full.” Rescue and adoption partners are working around the clock to place the animals in homes and get them out of the shelter.

Boyd said plans are underway to convert the former animal shelter on Vance Academy Road into a low-cost spay and neuter clinic for the community. Although there is not a hard and fast timeline for completion right now, he said that they’re pricing medical equipment now and recruiting veterinary staff to come in to perform the procedures.

“It is in the works and is going to happen,” he said, adding that the clinic will be a tremendous asset for the community to gain the upper hand in the battle to further reduce the demand on the animal shelter and its resources.

“This takes everybody,” Boyd said. He’s proud of the presence RCAPS has in the community – and beyond = and of the efforts to raise awareness of reducing the unwanted pet population. Thanks to social media, RCAPS has received donations from all 50 states in the U.S. and from 13 foreign countries.

RCAPS is not only working to change the lives of animals, but it also is promoting the power of positivity in the community, he said. “That’s the mission and the movement,” he said. “And that’s what we want Saturday to be about. – we’re doing our part to make this a better place.”

 

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