Just ducky
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Jenny Marder
Four-year-old Johnny Siebel was greatly disappointed when Papa Duck
took off his hat to reveal a human head. He thought that the man, who
led the parade of end loaders filled to brim with thousands of ducks
down the Huntington Beach Pier Saturday, was a real duck.
Thousands of rubber ducks were launched off the pier and into the
ocean Saturday and Sunday and more than $100,000 was raised at the
11th annual Duck-a-thon, to benefit the Huntington Beach Community
Clinic, a medical center that provides care for low-income adults and
children.
“I don’t think that Papa Duck should have taken off the hat,” said
Barbara Keating, Johnny’s aunt. “It’s kind of like finding out that
Santa Claus isn’t Santa Claus.”
Indeed, the Duck-a-thon is a sort of Christmas to many Surf City
children who wait all year to adopt their ducks, name them and then
watch anxiously as they bob to shore with the tide.
Terri Proctor’s son Keeley had a duck in the contest named Quack
Quack.
“He’s really into ducks right now,” Proctor said. Like many, the
Proctors’ reason for attending the Duck-a-thon was twofold: to
compete and to help the clinic.
The Voter’s Choice event kicked off the festivities at 1:30 p.m.
Saturday when ducks sponsored by elected officials set out for the
shoreline. Thousands of ducks took the plunge at the main event at 3
p.m., but lingered for a while in a rip tide before being carried to
shore. For the Corporate Challenge, companies paid $100 to $125 per
duck to have their business logos etched on the ducks surfboard.
“We keep the corporate ducks at $100 so that small business can
participate,” said Pat Davis, organizer of the event. “We’re a town
of small businesses.”
With 2,900 ducks sold, the event was “bigger than ever,” she said.
The winning ducks raced to the shoreline in 30 to 40 minutes. Some,
however, took as long as two hours to complete the journey.
“The last ducks bounced around and had fun,” Davis said. “They
went to Duke’s and had a hamburger.”
The Duck-a-thon, the brainchild of Surf City resident Donna Cross,
has grown steadily over the years, from 12 to 62 volunteers.
“The kids love it, everybody loves it,” said city employee Tim
Turner, who participates every year as a volunteer.
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