Green Bay, WI, August 14, 2024 — Local nonprofit Challenge the Outdoors (CTO) announced a grand opening celebration to commemorate its new recreational facility at Peter’s Pond in Angelica, Wis, near the village of Pulaski.
The event will take place on Sunday, August 18, from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. CDT at Peter’s Pond, N2647 Cherry Dr., Pulaski (near highways 29 and 160). Attendees can enjoy a pig roast, refreshments, facility tours and pond fishing. A brief program will take place at 3:00 p.m. This event is open to the public; the media is welcome to cover the event.
CTO provides outdoor/recreational programming for disabled sportsmen and sportswomen. CTO’s new home and clubhouse are set on 13 acres. The new clubhouse and Peter’s Pond are completely wheelchair accessible. Site features include:
● 2,500-square-foot clubhouse, with a kitchen, restrooms, an office, a large community-gathering space for local organizations and a covered patio
● Three-acre stocked pond with five accessible fishing piers for events
● Additional acreage with planned archery range and walking paths
Prior to the project, CTO had been operating administratively out of office space provided by Home Instead® in Green Bay, a local senior-care franchise owned by Steve and Kristi Nooyen, who also own 14 other Home Instead franchises throughout Wisconsin, Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama. Steve served as a long-time volunteer and past board member of CTO.
The Nooyens announced in 2020 that they would build a permanent home for CTO. They purchased and donated 13 acres of land in Angelica — approximately 25 miles from Green Bay — plus all building and land development costs. The total cost of the project was about $1.5 million.
Steve said about the new facility, “This project has been a long time in the making. CTO has done so much to create quality outdoor experiences for people with disabilities over the years, despite not having a permanent home — now it does, along with a fully accessible pond and plenty of land for additional improvements.”
Steve and Kristi are also founders of Wheelchair Whitetails, a program that provides hunting opportunities in northern Wisconsin for people with disabilities.