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Fourth annual Rotary Easter Egg Hunt is a success
By Liz Dadson

Feature

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todd

Todd Farrell (C) of the Kincardine Rotary Club, tries to avoid the mad scramble for Easter eggs, as  children, ages seven to 10, join in the Easter Egg Hunt in Victoria Park Saturday morning

eggs

Children, ages four to six, dash through the roped-off area looking for Easter eggs

easter

The youngest children, ages one to three, hunt for Easter eggs in Victoria Park

It was a cloudy, cool, windy morning but the rain held off for the fourth annual Easter Egg Hunt, organized by the Kincardine Rotary Club, Saturday morning in Victoria Park.

Radio personality Lynda Cooper of myFM, announced the categories and the children were off, scooping up Easter eggs which had been spread across the straw-laden field by Rotarians.

The hunt began with children, ages one to three, then ages four to six, and finally, ages seven to 10.

Raffle tickets were also being sold at the event, with proceeds going to the Bruce Children Are Special Foundation.

ashley

Ashley Mayer (L), 6, of Kincardine, and her cousin, Kaelin Dewar, 7, of Kitchener, goof around by putting their Easter baskets on their heads

elizabeth

Elizabeth Casciano, 8, of Kincardine has the perfect head gear for taking part in the Easter Egg Hunt Saturday morning in Victoria Park

abby

Abby Philipson, 16 months, of Kincardine, decides she has gathered enough candy and sits down to enjoy it

william

William Robertson, eight months, of Kincardine, is as cute as the Easter Bunny himself


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Sunday, April 24, 2011