Walking toward Alzheimer’s end

Blog

HomeHome / Blog / Walking toward Alzheimer’s end

Oct 14, 2023

Walking toward Alzheimer’s end

This walker is all smiles and is ready lead the way onto the trail with rain

This walker is all smiles and is ready lead the way onto the trail with rain boots on.

Ryan Kelly

The Promise Garden flowers on display at Riverside Park Saturday. Walkers in the 2022 Walk to End Alzheimer's chose a flower to represent the reason they were participating. On a cool rainy morning, the bright flowers colors popped against the overcast sky.

Ryan Kelly

Participants walked through cheerleaders on their way to begin the 2022 Walk to End Alzheimer's.

Ryan Kelly

Each group carrying a particular colored flower was asked to raise them high so as to identify why they were participating.

Ryan Kelly

For reasons not readily made clear llamas were on site for the walk on Saturday.

Ryan Kelly

Kate holds up the white flower from the Promise Garden signifying the first survivor of the disease as grandmother Hope Trumpie (center) beams.

Ryan Kelly

Over the weekend Mount Airy joined in with more than 600 communities nationwide in the 2022 Walk to End Alzheimer's. The Walk is the world's largest event to raise awareness and funds for care, support and research surrounding Alzheimer's.

Being properly motivated, it was going to take more than a little rain to stop the crowd Saturday at Riverside Park from doing what they could – one step at a time – in the fight against Alzheimer's and dementia.

The Walk to End Alzheimer's brought out walkers of all ages who assembled on a busy morning in Mount Airy with the Moonshiner's Reunion happening just a few blocks west from the park, on Independence Boulevard.

Some participants brought the family along with strollers to take the trek along the Ararat River segment of the greenway. To make it a true family affair there were more than a few damp dogs along for the walk, but to a dog almost any walk is a good one.

Smiles on humans, canines, and even a llama or two were found as the walkers assembled, chatted, and waited for instructions to begin.

After the crowd had waved and displayed their colored flowers signifying why or for whom they were participating in the day's walk, it was time to hit the Granite Greenway. Participants departed from the field where they had been assembled walking down through an assembly of cheerleaders with colorful pom poms who offered encouragement.

Signs along the path urged participants to take photos and share them across social media using the #Walk2EndAlz designation so the photos from Mount Airy could be added to galleries from other such events across the country.

No matter where the walk took place, the recurring message was that there is power found in the colorful flowers being held by participants. All walkers were asked to select a Promise Garden flower and to choose the color that best corresponded to their connection to the disease.

More than just a spot of color on an overcast Saturday morning, the color of the flower was meant to be a key in discerning the reason a walker was there to support the effort.

"The Alzheimer's Association Walk to End Alzheimer's is full of flowers, each carried by someone committed to ending this disease. Because like flowers, our participants don't stop when something is in their way. They keep raising funds and awareness for a breakthrough in the fight against Alzheimer's and all other dementia," the association said.

Those who displayed purple flowers were showing they were walking for those who have lost a someone to the disease. The blue flowers represented someone living with Alzheimer's, or another dementia.

Many yellow flowers were seen representing someone who is supporting or caring for a person living with Alzheimer's. Orange was used as the catchall for those who support the cause and the Alzheimer's Association's vision "of a world without Alzheimer's and all other dementia."

To much cheering one young woman named Kate held up a single white flower which was the symbol for the first survivor of Alzheimer's. Kate is the granddaughter of Hope Trumpie who has had her mother, sister, and a friend battle both Alzheimer's and Lewy Body disease, another form of dementia that also needs public attention and research dollars brought to bear.

The color flower or the motivations for walking aside, the statistics on Alzheimer's speak volumes to its impact. The Alzheimer's Association reports there are more than six million Americans living with the disease and 55 million globally. By 2050 that number in the United States is projected to approach 13 million.

Alzheimer's kills more annually than breast cancer and prostate cancer combined and the association states one in three Americans dies with Alzheimer's or another form of dementia.

In 2022 the organization said the cost of Alzheimer's on the United States will be $321 billion a year but that number is expected to skyrocket to $1 trillion a year by 2050 as Baby Boomers continue to age.

Funds raised through the Walk to End Alzheimer's predominantly go back into care, support, research, awareness, and advocacy efforts. The association states 79% of funds will go back into the fight against the disease with 17% supporting further fundraising efforts and just 4% going to the administration of the group.

The association is investing more than $300 million in projects spanning 45 countries to fund research initiatives that will help grow the understanding of the disease and advocate for those living with Alzheimer's or dementia.

There are more walks to comed with Greensboro, Hickory, Charlotte, Asheville, Raleigh, as well as Salem and Danville, Virginia, all having Alzheimer's walks in October.

One participant's motivation to walk may get some other feet moving in future too. Jennifer Johnson said, "I want to help find a cure, so no one ever forgets themselves or their loved ones."