Bidding frenzy smashes charity batch record

R380 000 raised for this year's Dusi Canoe Marathon charity batch.

THE hype ahead of this week’s Dusi Canoe Marathon reached fever pitch last week as eager paddlers, bidding for a spot in the race’s Charity Batch, set a new record for money raised for the race’s three charities.

As the hammer went down on the last email bid at exactly 6pm last Thursday, the 60 successful bidders had raised R381 712.61, exceeding the previous record of R368 020 set in 2012.

With the Dusi being dedicated to its founder and inaugural winner, Dr Ian Player, who passed away late last year, the Charity Batch, which sets off in a privileged early start time, will be known as the Dr Ian Player Memorial Charity Batch.

Player’s Magqubu Ntombela Memorial Foundation, named after his lifelong guide and mentor, is one of three charities that will share the proceeds from the auctioned batch, along with the Dusi Umngeni Conservation Trust (DUCT) and the Dusi Valley Paddlers Fund.

As the bidding deadline drew closer paddlers desperate to secure an early morning start in the Charity Batch had to start raising their own bids as the amount needed to make the cut-off of 60 craft started to balloon.

Repeating their generous feat of last year, the kudos for the biggest bid went to Durban North residents, Charles Webber, of CMH Motor Holdings and surfski aficionado, Billy Harker, who together chipped in R21 000 for their place in the batch.
Amongst the Charity Batch bidders was current world marathon champion, Hank McGregor, who will be paddling with his wife, Pippa.

The Magqubu Ntombela Memorial Foundation is committed to encouraging the youth of today to embrace nature and protect their heritage, to support conservation and community-based projects and conserve the Earth and its biodiversity.

The Dusi Umngeni Conservation Trust (DUCT) was set up by a group of concerned paddlers anxious to address the ecological threats to the two river valleys that the race runs through, and has become a full time environmental trouble shooter and problem solver responsible for considerable cleanup and reparation of the river’s eco-systems.

The Dusi Valley Paddlers Fund channels money raised, through Dusi entry fee levies and charity batch bids, into projects identified by the chiefs in the valleys that the race moves through, having significant value to the local residents, and the visibility to showcase the contributions of the paddlers.

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