| Sat, 18 June 2011 | ||
| 12:00 PM | to | 2:00 PM |
| Sun, 19 June 2011 | ||
| 12:00 PM | to | 2:00 PM |
There will be two games on Saturday, June 18 with the first game beginning at noon between the Petoskey Mossbacks and the Walker Tavern Wheels. The second game pitting the Saginaw Old Golds and the Hartwick Pines Swampers will begin thirty minutes after the conclusion of the first game. On Sunday, June 19, the consolation game will take place at noon and the championship match will conclude the day following the first game. All games will be played on the field at the park picnic area.
“The inspiration for holding this tournament was that a friend of the Hartwick Pines Swampers and former Walker Tavern Wheels player, Don ‘Skeeter’ Barnowski, was diagnosed with ALS in 2010,” said Hartwick Pines Swamper manager and park historian Rob Burg. “We felt this would be a fitting tribute to Don and help him spread the word and help find a cure for ALS.”
The form of baseball being played, “vintage base ball”, will be played by the rules of 1860 and features the players fielding the ball without the use of gloves and being able to catch the ball on one bounce. This was baseball as it was played in the early days of the game and how men and boys would play at community picnics and other events.
Besides the baseball games, there will be food, a silent auction, sales of merchandise, and activities. The ALS of Michigan Foundation will have a tent to provide more information. All proceeds of the event will go to help find a cure for ALS. On Saturday evening, a special “Music at the Museum” program will be held at the Logging Museum at 7 p.m., featuring musician and educator Michael Deren presenting his “Past in Person: Lumberjack” program.
Hartwick Pines State Park is located at 4216 Ranger Rd., Grayling, MI 49738. For more information about this event or other programs at the Hartwick Pines Logging Museum, please call (989) 348-2537 or visit www.michigan.gov/loggingmuseum. There is no charge for the vintage base ball tournament, but donations to the ALS of Michigan Foundation are encouraged, and a Recreation Passport is required for vehicles entering the park.
The Recreation Passport has replaced motor vehicle permits for entry into Michigan state parks, recreation areas and state-administered boating access fee sites. This new way to fund Michigan’s outdoor recreation opportunities also helps to preserve state forest campgrounds, trails and historic and cultural sites in state parks, and provides park development grants to local communities.
Michigan residents can purchase the Recreation Passport ($10 for motor vehicles; $5 for motorcycles) by checking “YES” on their license plate renewal forms, or at any state park or recreation area. Nonresident motor vehicles must still display a valid nonresident Recreation Passport ($29 annual; $8 daily) to enter a Michigan state park, recreation area or state-administered boating access fee site; these can be purchased at any state park or recreation area, or through the Michigan e-Store at www.michigan.gov/estore. To learn more about the Recreation Passport, visit www.michigan.gov/recreationpassport or call 517-241-7275.
The Michigan Department of Natural Resources is committed to the conservation, protection, management, use and enjoyment of the state’s natural and cultural resources for current and future generations. For more information, go to www.michigan.gov/dnr.
Contact: Rob Burg (989) 348-2537
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