The Halloween Yacht Club in
Stamford hosted the 10th annual Hooks for Heroes Fishing Tournament to raise
money for a military hospital Saturday.
Sergio
Cano has not missed a Hooks for Heroes event since its inception 10 years ago.
He served in Iraq and was in Afghanistan when a day in June 2011 changed his
life forever.
"My recon team got
ambushed, entire team got hit, I took two RPGs, and got shot in the left arm,
tourniquet myself, and gave my entire team morphine, and called in air support,”
Cano says.
He
spent three years recovering and rehabilitating at Walter Reed National
Military Hospital.
"I tried to salvage my leg for about a year and a half, and it didn't
work out so I went the amputation route,” he says.
Since then, Cano says he has
a fresh perspective of positivity. However, he says the high suicide rates
amongst veterans is why the fundraiser at the Halloween Yacht Club is so
important.
“This event alone will
probably save lives, you may not see the person or meet them, but you are getting
them out of the house to meet others, and other veterans too,” Cano
says.
President of Hooks for
Heroes Pat Buzzeo says that’s what the event aims to do.
“A lot of veterans help
veterans, and it was a responsibility that I feel that us older veterans had to
support our younger veterans coming back, Afghanistan, Iraq,” he says.
The event was a
friendly competition for the biggest catch, but it was about much more than
just fishing.
“We wanted to always keep them busy and
doing things,” Buzzeo says. “And fishing is a way of making them relax, getting
them together. It also helps with PTSD.”
All of
the money raised at the tournament will go toward Operation Gift Cards, which
has raised more than $1 million for the hospital since it was started 14 years
ago.
For more information about
Hooks for Heroes,
click
here.