|
About the PAF
How To Reach Us:
Prostate Awareness Foundation
Ken Malik - Executive Director
2166 12th Ave
San Francisco, CA 94116
415-675-5661
kamalik@sbcglobal.net
Board of Directors:
Robert Gumpertz, California
Tom Hyde, Florida
Ralph Lake, Texas
Doug Menelly. New York
Brad Neal, Texas
Jan Zlotnick, California
Advisory Board
Friends & Benefactors
Mission of the PAF
Activities
Support Group Meeting
Cancer Climb For
Prostate Awareness Yosemite High Country August 3 - 8, 2008
Cancer Climb For
Prostate Awareness
Mt Kilimanjaro,
Tanzania, Africa
September 18-23, 2008
Cancer Climb for Prostate Awareness, Mont Blanc,
France/Italy/Switzerland, September 2007
Cancer Climb for Prostate Awareness, Mt. Elbert, Colorado, USA, August 2006
Cancer Climb for Prostate Awareness, El Misti, Peru, August 2005
Yosemite Prostate Cancer Climb, Hike & Gathering, Sept. 2004
Mt Kilimanjaro Prostate Cancer Climb 2003
Communication
Monthly Bulletin
Prostate Self Help Newsletter - Winter '06
Prostate Self Help Newsletter - Summer '05
Prostate Self Help Newsletter - Fall '04
Prostate Self Help Newsletter - Spring '04
Press Releases
Maca Trial
High-Frequency Ultrasound
Clinical Information
"Health Benefits of Vitamin D for Prostate Cancer & Other Diseases"
William B. Grant, PhD
"Nutrition and Prostate Cancer" - Natalie Ledesma, MS, RD
UCSF Medical Center
"Risk Modifying Factors For Prostate & Other Cancers - Diet, Lifestyle & Sunshine"
William B. Grant, PhD
Chronic Disease Management of Early Stage Prostate Cancer - Ronald Wheeler, MD
Prospective Study on Benefits
Patient Data
Press Release
Early Stage Prostate Cancer - Do We Have A Problem With Over-Dectection, Overtreatment Or Both?
Peter R. Carroll, MD
Dept of Urology
School of Medicine
UCSF
PSA Era in the United States is Over Thomas Stamey, MD
Information
Health Prostate & Ovary Formula Anecdotal Trial
Recap
Maca Trial Results
Keys to Prostate Health
Effective Aggressive Watchful Waiting Protocol
Questionnaire
Artemisinin Administration
Diagnosis FAQ
How to talk with your doctor
Helpful Links
Kilimanjaro Climb Website
Life Extention Foundation
Men Fighting Cancer Together
Prostate Health Center
Prostate Cancer Research Institute (PCRI)
Prostate Cancer Overview
Prostate Institute of America
Watchful Waiting
|
|
|
Cancer Climb for Prostate Awareness
Mt Elbert & Mt Massive
Cancer Climb For Prostate Awareness
August 2006
UPDATE
This year’s climb was
another great success. All of our climbing team was able to summit Mt
Elbert, at 14, 433 the highest mountain in the Colorado Rockies. The
expedition also raised over $20,000 in contributions, which will help
sustain the foundation and its work for another year. A big cheer for all
the climbers and a rousing thank you to all of you who supported our efforts
with your generous contributions.
This
year’s climbing team was made up of nine members from all over the United
States. Ralph Lake and Brad Neal from Texas, David and Fay Brown from New
Mexico, Ron MacConnell from New York, Bill and Sally Gauditz from Colorado,
Sonia Sabir from Toronto and Ken Malik from San Francisco.
The five climbers who
live in the "Flatlands" spent
the first four days acclimatizing to the high altitude in the Flat Top range
of Colorado at 10,000’. The hiking was great with not a soul in site and
it was a great way to build team spirit while eating prostate healthy meals
in the wild.
We
then met the rest of the climbers in Leadville, Colorado the highest city in
the continental United States. From there we tackled Mt Elbert and then two
days later Mt Massive.
We started climbing Mt
Elbert around 7am on Tuesday the 15th of August for a long trek
of eleven miles round trip with a vertical gain of 4850’. This was a
strenuous climb but on a pretty defined trail. We were all particularly
proud of our "senior climbers" David and Faye Brown who reached
the summit with the other seven expedition members. David and Faye are both
veteran climbers in the Rockies, having climbed all of the fifty plus
Fourteener’s when they were younger. They are both in their late
seventies. They were a great inspiration to all of us and a testament to the
fact that you’re never too old to set a goal and over come obstacles if
you have the proper focus.
We
celebrated on the summit, honoring others with prostate cancer and logging
in our exploits. We left a Cancer Climb pin as a memento at the top and then
we made our way back down the mountain and the end of a long eleven-hour day
of climbing. That evening we enjoyed a great meal together while reviewing
the day’s exploits, and comparing notes of our adventure.
After a day off to recover
and replenish supplies we headed for the trail head of Mt Massive, the
second highest peak in Colorado. It was a particularly challenging
thirteen-hour day of climbing. Our ascent of Mt Massive in many ways was
more difficult than the challenge of Mt Elbert. Our ascent was a total of
4,000’ vertical feet. The trail was shorter than Mt Elbert but much
steeper. After a seven-hour climb we reached the top. After a moving
ceremony on the summit where we honored prostate cancer veterans all over,
we made a long and challenging descent back to the trailhead and a
well-deserved dinner and comfortable bed.
A
footnote to our expedition took place in a Leadville, Colorado bookstore the
very next day. While standing on line, we got to talk to a guy who had
climbed Mt Elbert the day after us. We told him about our ascent and our
mission to educate and inspire men and their families all over with a
positive message of hope. He then told us that he had found the Cancer Climb
pin we had left at the summit of Mt Elbert. He said he took it with him and
his plan to send it to a close friend of his in Washington who had recently
been diagnosed with prostate cancer. His goal was to inspire his friend with
hope. We all felt that this was a fitting end to this year’s Cancer Climb
for Prostate Awareness. Mission accomplished!
|