She’s the PFI Winner Already: Hope’s High Hopes for Athletes and Animals at Potcakeman Triathlon
Michelle Hope has swum, cycled and run her way through 10 triathlons but the 5’8’ mother of two will make history when she enters the Potcakeman Triathlon – she’ll be the first competitor in the popular event ever to compete in athletic gear provided by the official trade association dedicated to pet wellness, the Pet Food Institute (PFI).
Hope, a civil, structural and environmental engineer, won the right to have the triathlon outfit designed especially for her by winning the PFI’s Facebook contest answering the question. “Tell us why nutrition is important for pets.” She also had to demonstrate a passion for pets.
“If I didn’t have a stream of bad luck, I’d have no luck at all, so I’m really excited about this because I already feel like a winner,” says Hope. “I’m really grateful to the Pet Food Institute. I think what PFI is doing is very important for the pets of the Bahamas”
Hope isn’t joking about the streak of bad luck. Always strong academically, she began athletic training as a way to overcome tragedy.
“My mom died and my husband left in the same year. I had watched my mother’s strength as she battled cancer and her courage inspired me,” she said. “She kept reaching deeper and I realized we can all do that. Sometimes you have to push yourself to find that strength, but we all have it and when you need it, you find it.
Even Hope’s relationships with dogs hasn’t been exactly the kind of stuff happy memories are made of.
“I have had many lovely dogs but when I was young, we had a dog that beat up on my brother and another that was stabbed to death,” she said. “I did try getting a dog not too long ago, a rescue dog, but it had distemper and died.”
Still, she says, we look after six family and friends dogs regularly and hope to get another dog soon but for now she and her children consider their cat an important part of the family.
Now with luck being more of a lady a month before the event that will be held at Jaws Beach September 24, Hope won’t be lonely. Her daughter, Lily, 8 and her son, Luke, 6, will be participating in the puppy triathlon, their first.
They will join dozens of other triathletes all reaching for that internal burst of energy and stamina to pull them through each of the legs. Olympic division participants will swim 1500 meters (.93 miles), cycle 42 kilometers (26 miles) and finish with a 10k run. Sprint division participants will do half the distances in each leg.
Proceeds from the Potcakeman Triathlon sponsored in part by PFI go toward spaying and neutering by BAARK, the Bahamas Alliance for Animal Rights and Kindness. Since its founding seven years ago, the all-volunteer organization has spayed or neutered more than 5,200 dogs and cats in its efforts to reduce the homeless animal population and end the suffering of animals in The Bahamas. Using internationally accepted statistics that one female dog can produce up to 67,000 puppies in six years, BAARK estimates it has prevented as many as one million unwanted animal births.
“We are pleased to support BAARK in The Bahamas and its efforts to reduce the homeless animal population,” said Nat Daniels, Executive Director of PFI, a non-profit organisation that promotes initiatives to advance pet nutrition and the quality of pet care and wellness. The Washington, D.C.-based association that falls under the Department of Agriculture supports education in the U.S., Mexico and four regional countries — The Bahamas, Trinidad & Tobago, Turks and Caicos, and Jamaica. For more information, follow PFI on Facebook @petfoodinstitutecaribbean.
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