Next: Thursday, September 25, 2025
Runs until Friday, October 3, 2025 (See all dates)
Cops for Cancer Tour de Rock 2024 is September 20th-October 3rd.
More Information (CKCC The Raven 100.7 is not responsible for external websites)
Once again, law enforcement & emergency services personnel will cycle 14 days & 1200 km across Vancouver Island raising money for childhood cancer research & support services at the Canadian Cancer Society. Donations are used to fund life-saving pediatric cancer research & caring support programs like Camp Goodtimes. Watch for riders coming through your area & cheer them on.
From our area, Courtenay deputy sheriff Graham Fuller, Colleen Holbrook, with BC Highway Patrol & Courtenay firefighter, Naseem Habibi are taking part this year.
Schedule is below:
WEEK 1
Sept 20 - Port Alice
Sept 21 - Port Hardy, Port McNeill
Sept 22 - Woss, Sayward
Sept 23 - Campbell River
Sept 24 - Courtenay, Comox
Sept 25 - Cumberland, Union Bay, Qualicum Beach, Parksville
Sept 26 - Port Alberni
WEEK 2
Sept 27 – Ucluelet
Sept 28 - Tofino, Nanaimo
Sept 29 - Nanaimo, Ladysmith
Sept 30 - Chemainus, Lake Cowichan, Duncan
Oct 1 - Shawnigan Lake, Mill Bay, Westshore, Sooke
Oct 2 - Oak Bay, Victoria, Sidney
Oct 3 - Esquimalt, Saanich, Victoria
To donate or for more information, visit Cops for Cancer Tour de Rock 2025.
The event runs from 12:00 AM to 12:00 AM on the following dates.
Select a date to add this event to your calendar app.
Cops for Cancer Tour de Rock 2024 is September 20th-October 3rd.
September 11 to December 3, the Courtenay and District Museum is pleased to present the travelling exhibition BATS: Out of the Darkness from the Kelowna Museums...
at Courtenay And District Museum And Palaeontology CentreThe community is welcome to attend a weekly support group for those supporting people with mental health and addictions.
at Mental Health Recovery Partners
The word "éy7á7juuthem" means “Language of our People” and is the ancestral tongue of the Homalco, Tla’amin, Klahoose and K’ómoks First Nations, with dialectic differences in each community.
It is pronounced "eye-ya-jooth-hem."