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Attitude is Everything

Kate Williams of San Francisco is taking on a personal challenge this year at Cycle for Sight, the signature ride benefiting Enchanted Hills Camp. She will be riding 15 miles on a tandem bike, and this ride will be her first significant spin since 1997 when she began losing her vision. Kate, who is a grandmother, said, “I want to prove to myself I can do it. I did the Avon Breast Cancer walk before and I thought I couldn’t do that either. The first year I almost didn’t.” But why wouldn’t you do what you like and what you want to do.

Kate is the program manager for the LightHouse Employment Immersion Program, which helps dozens of blind people find competitive work every year. When asked why she wanted to finally get back on the horse, she said, “it just seemed like the right thing to do. LightHouse always fundraises for various programs, and I want to participate and give back. Plus, there’s a social aspect to it.” Kate advises that, “Attitude is everything, so today, be sure you pick a good one.”

It is with this intrepid attitude that Kate and her Pilot will hit the roads of Napa on Saturday, April 26 to help raise money for Enchanted Hills Camp, a program of the LightHouse for the Blind. For 64 summers, Enchanted Hills Camp has been a place where blind children and adults learn, grow and discover a new sense of self-confidence and poise.

If you’ve decided today to have an attitude of giving, donate to Cycle for Sight and support Kate William’s fundraising campaign. Simply go to our donation page and
select Cycle for Sight as your giving designation. Be sure to put Kate’s name in the “in honor of” field.

Join Team LightHouse today! Register at www.cycle4sight.com and ride with Team LightHouse. For more information, or to sign up as a tandem pilot or stoker, contact Tony Fletcher at afletcher@lighthouse-sf.org or call 415-694-7319.

Ride on!

Profile of Kate Williams

Who Knew That Giving Could Be So Energizing

This will be LightHouse Board member Chris Downey’s third year in a row to participate in Cycle for Sight. Chris tells us why supporting Enchanted Hills Camp in this way is so important to him.

Q: How old are you?
A: I’m a 6 year old blind kid trapped in a 51 year old body.

Q: What city are you from?
A: Piedmont.

Q: Which route will you be taking?
A: All the way – 50 or bust!

Q. What motivated you to ride this year and in the past?
A: The LightHouse was central to my rehabilitation from sight loss and it has remained central ever since. Now I’m in the “give back” phase as I fully appreciate the significance of the programs at the LightHouse and its Enchanted Hills Camp. As a Board Member, I’m absolutely thrilled by the direction and energy of the organization and want to do all that I can to maximize its potential in service of its current and future clients. Beyond that, I want to support its growth as “the place to be” for the Bay Area’s community of blind and visually impaired.

Q: What is your connection to Enchanted Hills Camp?
A: I’ve never been lucky enough to be an EHC Camper but have had numerous opportunities to stay overnight at camp for events as a member of the Board. Consequently, my relationship is primarily as a supporter and cheerleader.

Q: What is your connection to the LightHouse?
A: I started as a client in 2008, became a Board Member in late 2009 and have served as a Vice President since 2012. Closer to the heart, however, I’m truly grateful to the LightHouse for all it has done for me and my family since becoming a part of this incredible family.

Q: Any words of wisdom?
A: 1) If on the road heading down Mt. Veeder on the morning of April 26, watch out for the screaming tandem.
2) If blind and pointing downhill on Mt. Veeder and the sweat gets in your eyes, just close them and refer others to the initial “words of wisdom”.

Q: What is your fundraising goal?
A: My big audacious goal is $3,000. This is a significant reach due to other commitments over the next month but I’ll do my best to push for it.

Can you help Chris “give back”? $3,000 can send 3 blind youth to Enchanted Hills Camp this summer where children learn, grow and discover a new sense of self-confidence and poise.

Be a cheerleader like Chris. Be part of the community of supporters who believe in the significance and impact that camp has had on hundreds of blind youth for 64 summers. It’s simple. Go to our donation page and select Cycle for Sight as your giving designation. Be sure to put Chris’s name in the “in honor of” field.

You too can ride! Join Team LightHouse by registering at www.cycle4sight.com and ride with Team LightHouse on Saturday April 26. For more information, or to sign up as a tandem pilot or stoker, contact Tony Fletcher at afletcher@lighthouse-sf.org.

Ride on!

Chris standing next to one of his tandem pilots

Dream Big and Ride in This Year’s Cycle for Sight

Profile of Sergio

24-year-old Sergio Lopez, from Fremont, California, is riding in this year’s Cycle for Sight – a fundraising bicycle ride benefiting Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind. This is the second time he has ridden, and with each mile he pedals (25 miles this year), he will be raising money for a worthy cause.

“I am always looking for ways to challenge myself and had never been on a tandem bike before participating with Cycle for Sight.” says Sergio. “Not only does this ride present an opportunity for me to try new things and challenge myself but it’s a great feeling to work for such a good cause. The money I raise contributes towards one of the places which have made an impact on my life.”

A second year student at Ohlone College who is getting ready to transfer to SFSU, Sergio has been volunteering and working at Enchanted Hills Camp since 2010. Last summer, he worked as the assistant camp director. When asked to share a few words of wisdom, he said, “When you dream, dream as big as you can. Regardless of any circumstances, any dream can be achieved with enough motivation and determination. Try new things and make the best out of life.”

If you are ready to dream big, try new things and make the best out of life, consider riding in this year’s Cycle for Sight on Saturday April 26, 2014. Riders have the chance to ride 15, 25 or 50 miles down the majestic roads of Napa, alongside 2,000 other cyclists raising money for a worthy cause.

Join Team LightHouse today! Register at www.cycle4sight.com For more information, or to sign up as a tandem pilot or stoker, contact Tony Fletcher at afletcher@lighthouse-sf.org.

If you can’t ride but wish to support a rider, donate to Sergio Lopez’s fundraising campaign. Simply go to our donation page and select Cycle for Sight as your giving designation. Be sure to put Sergio’s name in the “in honor of” field.

Ride on!

Meet a Blind Rider in This Year’s Cycle for Sight

Jack and his pilot on a tandem

Jack Veliquette, 17, from Windsor, California, is taking on the challenge of Cycle for Sight for the second year in a row. He’s upping his game and instead of riding 25 miles like he did last year, he’ll be riding 50 – tackling the slopes of Mt. Veeder.

This high school sophomore has been a camper at Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind since he was seven years old. Last summer, he gave back to the camp that he loves by becoming a counselor in training (CIT). He intends to be a CIT again this year.

When asked what motivated him to ride and raise money for Enchanted Hills Camp, Jack said, “Tony asked my mom if I’d be interested. I said ‘I’ll give it a shot.'”

Support Jack Veliquette in this year’s Cycle for Sight by donating to his campaign. Simply go to our donation page and select Cycle for Sight as your giving designation. Be sure to put Jack’s name in the “in honor of” field.

Join Team LightHouse this year on Saturday April 26! Register at www.cycle4sight.com. For more information contact Tony Fletcher at afletcher@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7319.

Ride on!

Have you used a SoloHealth Kiosk?

Disability Rights Advocates (DRA) is interested in hearing from regular customers of Safeway, CVS, Wal-Mart and Sam’s Club stores who have attempted to use or who are interested in using SoloHealth self-service health kiosks. SoloHealth Stations are interactive, self-service touchscreen kiosks that provide free medical screening services, such as blood pressure measurements, weight and body mass index measurements and vision screenings. SoloHealth Stations also provide information about the Affordable Care Act, available health insurance options and referrals to neighborhood doctors.

SoloHealth’s website features a tool that enables users to locate nearby SoloHealth Stations. You can find SoloHealth Stations at hundreds of locations throughout California. The web address is: https://solohealth.com.

DRA wants to learn more about the problems that blind and low vision Californians are experiencing independently using the SoloHealth Stations. To share your experiences, please contact Layla Oghabian at loghabian@dralegal.org or call 510-665-8644.

Enchanted Hills Retreat- A Mycologist’s Dream

While some people like bird watching, and others might have a botanists’ love for wildflowers, there is another way to explore the natural environment at Enchanted Hills – mushroom hunting.

It’s been a dry season on Mt. Veeder just as it has been all over Northern California. Mushrooms like rain, so the drought conditions have not been favorable for the fungophile. But with the few drenching Spring storms, there is enough moisture for some mushrooms to have begun sprouting. Here are five common mushrooms that you might find under the Redwood duff or oak leaf fall in the woods of Enchanted Hills.

Puff Balls – are white and look like a round or elongated marshmallow. When they are young they’ve got spikes, but as they mature the spikes break off, leaving fawn spots. They are found under Douglass Fir and hardwoods on Mt. Veeder.

Golden Chanterelles – Rather than thin gills, these culinary prizes have rib like folds under the cap that stretch down the stem. Found under living oak trees, it takes a sharp eye to locate their pumpkin hue amongst the litter of leaves.

Witches Hats – as you would expect, witches hats are conical and a bright yellow-orange color. They live under the Redwoods in pairs or small groups.

Oyster Mushrooms – These white to tan fan shaped mushroom grow out of fallen dead oak logs (or sometimes dead oaks that are still standing). They usually sprout in groups on a log. They can be quite large, up to a foot wide, and they have a mild almondy scent.

King Bolete – Boletes are large mushrooms with spongy undersides full of pores instead of gills. They are large, terrestrial mushrooms that grow under conifers and hardwoods. Look for them in the deep woods of Enchanted Hills.

Need a dose of fresh air and the challenge of a mushroom hunt? Reserve Enchanted Hills for your yoga retreat, family reunion, church group, conference, wedding or other gathering of thirty or more. All proceeds from Enchanted Hills Retreat support our camp for the blind and visually impaired. For more information please call (415) 694-7310 or visit www.enchantedhillsretreat.com.

mushroom- golden chanterelle

Judith Hendrickx – Change can be Transforming and Beautiful

Judith Hendrickx was born in San Francisco, raised in Los Angeles and then returned to the Bay Area for higher education. Starting from her early years, due to hereditary eye condition, she lost all her vision in one eye and most of her sight in the other.

Adjusting the way she accessed study materials Judith went on to attain a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and a Masters in Rehabilitation Counseling and for many years she has provided counseling and therapy to individuals and groups. Judith is proud of her accomplishments, particularly because of the techniques she has learned to work with her low vision. “Though at the time my sight loss seemed devastating, I’ve learned that change can be transforming and beautiful. Instead of feeling depressed I made up my mind I was going to do something really major with my life.”

Judith had established a relationship with the LightHouse earlier when her artwork was exhibited at the Insights Exhibition. With the referral of her Department of Rehabilitation Counselor Haruyo Nishimura, she attended our July 2011 Employment Immersion classes where she fine-tuned her resume, cover letters and networking skills to advance her job search.

When she didn’t find employment locally, she broadened her search to include out of state opportunities. During that time she networked with fellow Employment Immersion graduate Michael Petersen who had secured a job as a counselor for Pennsylvania’s Department of Rehabilitation. Here’s where networking paid off. Michael shared info about job openings and encouraged her to apply.

What followed was a whirlwind. Judith said, “I did a series of phone interviews with them and they offered me a position almost immediately. I had two weeks to move, to make it all happen, but I had the courage to do this because I wanted to work and be self-sufficient so badly. It was a huge and scary step for me to go to Pennsylvania, but I gained a lot of experience out of it and that led me to where I am now.”

She encourages blind and low vision jobseekers to take the eight-week LightHouse class. She said, “You can’t underestimate how positive it is to step into this community of diverse blind classmates – you hear their stories and are able to share yours. [Program leader] Kate Williams is wonderful; she has a great voice and personality and was so supportive of me even when I was 3000 miles away in Pennsylvania.”

Kate told us, “Judith has determination spelled with a capital “D”. I think Judith learned to appreciate the benefits of networking when she participated in the program, and I think it served her well. She made connections easily, her classmates supported her and she them – this is a wonderful benefit of the program.”

In 2012 Judith moved back to California in order to take care of her ailing mother. As soon as she was in a position to do so she used the skills and ongoing support from our Employment Immersion program to resume the job search. This time she found employment much closer to home. Judith is currently a counselor at the Salvation Army Adult Rehabilitation Center (ARC) in Lytton Springs, California, a residential treatment center for men recovering from drug and alcohol abuse. She loves her job and truly values her clients, rejoicing when the 12-step program she facilitates makes a difference in their lives.

As her clients learn alternative ways to move through life’s challenges, Judith’s own history allows her to empathize further and makes her a valuable role model. We congratulate her on her successes at ARC!

Our next Employment Immersion session begins Tuesday, May 16, 2014 and will take place at the LightHouse’s office at the Ed Roberts Campus in Berkeley. For more information, call Kate Williams at 415-694-7324 or email her at kwilliams@lighthouse-sf.org.

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LightHouse Hosts Boisterous Braille Challenge

Last month young budding braillists from all over Northern California converged at the LightHouse for the most important braille competition to be held all year.

Twenty K through 12 kids, with their families there to cheer them on, put their braille skills to test in a variety of competencies including; Reading and Comprehension, Speed and Accuracy Proofreading, Spelling, and Chart and Graph Reading.

The Braille Challenge is a two-part contest for K-12 youth who read and write braille. It is a unique academic competition designed to encourage and reward students for emphasizing their braille reading and writing skills. In addition to the competition, the event included an “Amazing Race: LightHouse Version” a hands-on tech workshop and resource fair, as well as a self-defense demonstration and workshop for the children by 1-Touch Self Defense. Overall, it was a fun-filled day promoting the importance and value of Braille literacy.

LightHouse would like to thank the following for their very generous collaboration and support:

Braille Institute of America, California School for the Blind, Vista Center for the Blind & Visually Impaired, Junior Blind of America, Humanware, Seedlings, California Council of the Blind (San Francisco and Silicon Valley Chapters), Beulah Reamer Legacy, National Braille Press, McKenzie by Sew-On, Subway, Stephen Gray, Richard Warner from 1-Touch Self Defense, our wonderfully dedicated volunteers, Keynote Speaker Hoby Wedler, all of the TVIs who taught, supported, and encouraged the contestants, and of course, our amazing Braille Challenge contestants.

Congratulations to our Braille Challenge 2014 Top 3 Finishers in Each Division!

Apprentice
3rd- Josephine Fatuesi
2nd- Theresa Liu
1st- Luke Phillip Pilar

Freshman
3rd- Mario Chitwood
2nd- Monserath Espinola
1st-Patricia Figueroa

Sophomore
3rd- Kaitlyn Austin
2nd- Nikhil Dadlani
1st- Ethan Fung

Junior Varsity
2nd- Alexia Arriola
1st- Sean McGee

Varsity
2nd- Connor Wong
1st- Santiago Hernandez

 

First Place Winner in the Varsity Division, Santiago Hernandez smiles while holding his trophy

Theresa Liu

New Talking Clock Also Tells Temperature

Now available at Adaptations, the affordable Sleek Talking Clock measures 5 inches by 3 inches by 1 inch, with a 4 inch jumbo large print LCD display, an alarm and a 12 or 24 hour format. Unlike other clocks of this type it lets you know the temperature in either Celsius or Fahrenheit. The time is spoken in a crisp clear voice. You can purchase this very handy device for $10.00.

Sale – 2014 Large Print Wall Calendar
If you haven’t picked up a 2014 Large Print Wall Calendar, now is your chance! The 2014 Large Print Wall calendars are on sale during the month of April for only $7.00, while supplies last.

Only the LightHouse stocks these hard-to-find products in our hands-on store. Call us at (888) 400-8933 for questions about these and other products. Adaptations is open at LightHouse San Francisco Headquarters Monday through Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Sleek Talking Clock

Last Chance to Sign Up for Cycle for Sight 2014

Our spring ride is a signature event with more than 2,000 riders providing the single biggest support for Enchanted Hills Camp. Come join the largest and most fun group of tandem riders in Northern California to have some fun while doing good…Sign up at www.cycle4sight.com as a cyclist for Team LightHouse and enjoy the beauty of Napa and the challenge of a 15, 25 or 50 mile route with 2,000 other cyclists. After the ride partake in wine tasting from Napa Valley wineries, beer tasting from local microbreweries and local cuisine from Napa Valley restaurants, all while grooving to the sounds of “Pride and Joy”.

When: Saturday, April 26, 2014. The first ride starts at 8:00 a.m.
Where: Starts at Justin Siena High School, 4026 Maher Street, Napa

Pilots and Blind Stokers Wanted for our April 26 Rally
Are you interested in piloting a tandem bike for a blind stoker? Or are you a blind stoker in need of a pilot? Contact Tony Fletcher via email at afletcher@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7319 to join Team LightHouse today.

Proceeds support Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind. Raise pledges for every mile you ride through the Cycle for Sight website. To meet Sergio Lopez, Jack Veliquette and other members of Team LightHouse go to www.lbvi.staging.wpengine.com.com/donate/cycleforsight.

Thank you to our wonderful Cycle for Sight 2014 sponsors!

Cotati Food Service
R.V. Kuhns & Associates, Inc.
Earthclean Building Maintenance