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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Dementia Spotlight Foundation
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TZID:UTC
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TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
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DTSTART:20230101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241220T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241220T153000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240823T153756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240823T153757Z
UID:10001121-1734701400-1734708600@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection Café (Memory Cafe) - Roswell
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our Connection Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation and Senior Service of North Fulton  \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners \nWhen: First & Third Friday Of The Month \nTime: 1:30-3:30 PM \nWhere: Roswell Senior Center \n1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA 30076 \nFor More Info or to Sponsor A Cafe\, Contact Alyss Amster: 678-332-1711 or alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-cafe-memory-cafe-3-2-2/2024-12-20/
LOCATION:Roswell Senior Center\, 1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA\, 30076\, United States
CATEGORIES:Connection Café
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/2.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241226T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241226T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20230601T185459Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260416T101809Z
UID:10000275-1735207200-1735212600@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Dementia Caregiver’s Support Group (Roswell\, GA)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Roswell\, GA\nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nMeetings will be held every 4th Thursday of the month at Roswell United Methodist Church\, located at \n814 Mimosa Blvd\, Roswell\, GA 30075. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nAlyss Amster will be the facilitator and CaraVita Home Care will be providing care at RUMC\, at no cost\, for care receivers during the in-person meeting. \nFor more information or to RSVP\, please contact Toni Fagan at tfagan@rumc.com or call 770-261-1767. \n\nHow Bettingguideau Explains V8 Supercars Betting Odds to Australian Fans\nV8 Supercars\, now officially known as the Supercars Championship\, represents one of Australia’s most passionately followed motorsport competitions. Since the series formally adopted its current structure in the early 2000s\, it has grown into a betting market that attracts significant wagering activity across the country\, particularly during marquee events like the Bathurst 1000\, the Adelaide 500\, and the Darwin Triple Crown. For Australian punters looking to engage with this market intelligently\, understanding how odds are structured\, what they reflect\, and how they shift across a race weekend is essential. Platforms like Bettingguideau have emerged as resources that attempt to demystify these mechanics for everyday fans who want to move beyond simply backing their favourite driver and start making more informed decisions based on actual race data\, team performance patterns\, and market dynamics. The Supercars betting landscape is more nuanced than many newcomers assume\, and that nuance begins with understanding the odds themselves. \nHow Supercars Betting Odds Are Structured and What They Actually Mean\nAustralian bookmakers typically present Supercars odds in decimal format\, which is the standard across most domestic sports betting markets. A driver listed at $6.00 implies a 16.67% probability of winning according to the bookmaker’s model — calculated simply by dividing 1 by the decimal odds. However\, the actual probability assigned by the bookmaker is always slightly lower than what the odds suggest\, because the overround (or vigorish) is built into every market. In a typical Supercars race market\, the combined implied probability of all listed drivers will often sit somewhere between 108% and 115%\, depending on the number of competitors and how competitive the field is perceived to be. That gap above 100% represents the bookmaker’s theoretical margin. \nUnderstanding this structure matters because it helps punters identify where value might exist. If a driver is listed at $4.50 but a careful analysis of qualifying times\, tyre strategy\, and historical performance at a specific circuit suggests the true probability of a win is closer to 30% rather than the implied 22.2%\, there is a positive expected value case for that bet. Bettingguideau approaches odds explanation from this angle — not simply telling readers who is likely to win\, but helping them understand how to assess whether the price on offer reflects genuine probability or market sentiment driven by public popularity. \nSupercars markets also differ from many other sports in that the odds are heavily influenced by car specification regulations. The series operates under a control chassis framework (the Car of the Future platform introduced in 2013) and tightly regulated engine specifications\, which means the performance gap between manufacturers — currently Ford and Chevrolet — is managed by technical parity rules. When one manufacturer appears to gain an advantage through an upgrade cycle or a specific circuit characteristic\, bookmakers adjust their pricing to reflect this. In 2023\, for example\, the introduction of the Gen3 regulations brought both Ford Mustang and Chevrolet Camaro machinery into the field\, and the early weeks of the season saw significant odds movement as the market recalibrated around which teams had adapted most effectively to the new platform. \nRace format also shapes the betting markets in ways that are specific to Supercars. Unlike Formula 1\, where a single race on Sunday determines the weekend result\, Supercars often runs multiple races across a single event\, with separate markets available for each. At a Townsville 400 or a Winton SuperSprint\, there may be two or three races over the weekend\, each carrying its own market. Points are accumulated across these races\, and team strategy — including tyre allocation\, pit stop timing\, and safety car management — plays a different role in each. Punters who understand these format nuances can find edges that casual bettors miss entirely. \nReading Market Movements and Understanding Bookmaker Pricing Logic\nOne of the most instructive aspects of Supercars betting is watching how odds move from the time markets open (often days before a race weekend) through to the moment the lights go out. Early markets are largely driven by season-long form\, team resources\, and the bookmaker’s own modelling. As the weekend progresses and qualifying results come in\, the odds shift — sometimes dramatically — to reflect the actual grid positions. A driver who qualifies on pole at Mount Panorama\, for instance\, will typically see their win odds shorten considerably\, because Bathurst’s circuit characteristics make overtaking genuinely difficult and pole position carries a statistical advantage that is well documented across the event’s history. \nWhat many punters fail to appreciate is that these movements are not always rational or purely data-driven. Public money — wagered by fans backing popular drivers regardless of form — can push odds on certain competitors shorter than their actual probability warrants. Shane van Gisbergen\, who dominated the series with three consecutive championships between 2021 and 2023\, was frequently overbet by casual punters\, meaning his odds were often shorter than the underlying data justified. Conversely\, less prominent drivers in competitive equipment sometimes offered genuine value because public sentiment was not inflating their market price. \nWhen examining how resources like Bettingguideau explain these dynamics\, the key contribution is contextualising what the numbers represent rather than simply listing them. In research compiled for Australian motorsport fans\, our experts found that the most common mistake among new Supercars bettors is treating short-priced favourites as near-certainties without accounting for the high attrition rate in endurance events — a factor that makes markets like the Bathurst 1000 particularly volatile and difficult to price accurately even for professional bookmakers. \nAttrition is worth expanding on here. The Bathurst 1000 has a historical DNF (did not finish) rate that regularly exceeds 30% of the field\, meaning mechanical failure\, contact incidents\, and strategic errors eliminate a significant proportion of competitors before the chequered flag. In a race of 161 laps around a 6.213-kilometre circuit in the New South Wales Central Tablelands\, the probability of any single car completing the race without incident is meaningfully lower than in a standard 250-kilometre sprint race. Bookmakers account for this by extending the market — offering each-way betting\, top-three finishes\, and safety car occurrence markets — and by pricing even the strongest favourites at odds that reflect genuine uncertainty. Understanding this structural volatility is fundamental to approaching Bathurst betting with realistic expectations. \nCircuit-specific pricing is another area where informed punters can develop an edge. Not all tracks suit all cars or drivers equally. Winton Motor Raceway in Victoria\, for example\, is a relatively short\, technical circuit where car setup and tyre management under heat are critical. Hidden Valley Raceway in Darwin has a surface that degrades quickly\, making tyre strategy a more significant variable than at smoother circuits like Sydney Motorsport Park. Bookmakers do factor these considerations into their pricing\, but they are working from aggregated data and market signals rather than granular technical analysis. A punter who has tracked individual driver performance at specific circuits over multiple seasons — something that requires genuine data discipline — can sometimes identify pricing anomalies before they are corrected by the market. \nChampionship Futures Markets and Long-Term Betting Strategy\nBeyond individual race markets\, Supercars also supports a futures market — betting on the outright championship winner before or during the season. These markets operate differently from race-by-race wagering and require a different analytical framework. The Supercars Championship runs from February through to November\, encompassing between 10 and 14 events depending on the calendar year\, with points accumulated across all races. The points system rewards consistency as much as outright speed: a driver who finishes in the top five across every event will accumulate more points than one who wins three races but retires from four others. \nThis consistency dynamic means that championship futures markets tend to price in team reliability and depth of lineup as much as raw pace. Triple Eight Race Engineering\, which has historically operated as one of the most resourced and strategically sophisticated teams in the series\, has won multiple championships partly because of their ability to manage points across a long season rather than simply producing peak performance at individual events. When betting on championship outcomes\, understanding which teams have the infrastructure to sustain performance across a 30-plus race calendar is as important as assessing driver talent in isolation. \nMid-season championship betting also presents specific opportunities. As the season progresses and the points standings clarify\, bookmakers adjust futures odds to reflect the current gap between contenders. A driver who holds a 150-point lead with six rounds remaining is in a statistically different position from one who leads by 30 points\, and the odds should reflect this. However\, because Supercars uses a points system where a race win is worth 150 points and a fastest lap adds a small bonus\, large leads can theoretically be overturned within a single event weekend — particularly if it involves multiple races. Monitoring how bookmakers price this volatility\, and whether the market is properly accounting for the number of remaining points available\, is a legitimate analytical approach for futures bettors. \nThe endurance races — specifically the Bathurst 1000 and the Repco Supercars Championship co-driver rounds — introduce an additional variable into futures betting: the co-driver pairing. During endurance events\, each car is driven by two drivers\, with co-drivers (many of whom compete in Supercars’ lower categories or international series) taking a minimum share of driving time. Co-driver performance and reliability can materially affect a team’s championship result at these events\, and punters tracking the futures market need to account for this when assessing probability at the season’s midpoint. A title contender with a weak co-driver pairing faces a genuine statistical risk at Bathurst that should influence how futures odds are evaluated in the weeks preceding the event. \nProposition Markets\, Live Betting\, and How Odds Change During a Race\nThe growth of in-play betting has added a significant layer of complexity — and opportunity — to Supercars wagering. Australian bookmakers that offer live markets on Supercars events typically update odds in near real-time as race conditions evolve. A safety car deployment\, for instance\, can dramatically reshape the race by compressing the field and effectively neutralising a large gap that a leading driver had built. When a safety car is called\, the odds on drivers who had fallen behind often shorten sharply\, while the leader’s odds may extend slightly to reflect the reset conditions. \nPit stop strategy is another live betting variable that experienced punters track closely. In Supercars\, teams make strategic decisions about when to pit relative to the broader field\, and these decisions are often triggered by safety car periods or early mechanical concerns. A driver who pits under a safety car and rejoins with fresh tyres in a strong track position will typically see their win odds shorten in the live market. Understanding the sequence of events — safety car called\, pit lane opens\, teams make decisions\, positions shuffle — and being able to anticipate how bookmakers will respond to each stage gives live bettors a narrow window to act before the market reprices. \nProposition markets — often called “prop bets” — offer additional wagering options beyond the outright race result. Common Supercars prop markets include: the number of safety cars during a race\, whether the race will be won from pole position\, the margin of victory\, and which manufacturer (Ford or Chevrolet) will win the event. These markets are typically offered with higher margins than outright race markets\, meaning the bookmaker’s edge is larger. However\, for punters with specific knowledge — for example\, a detailed understanding of how often safety cars are deployed at a particular circuit based on historical data — prop markets can occasionally offer value that outright markets do not. \nThe safety car frequency market is particularly interesting at Bathurst\, where the combination of a narrow circuit\, high car density\, and the physical demands of the mountain section create conditions that historically produce multiple safety car deployments per race. Between 2010 and 2023\, the Bathurst 1000 averaged more than three safety car periods per race\, with several editions recording five or more. Bookmakers set their safety car markets based on this historical data\, but they also factor in current car specifications and the specific competitive dynamics of a given year’s field. When a new technical regulation has just been introduced — as was the case with Gen3 in 2023 — the uncertainty around car reliability can push expected safety car frequency higher\, and the market may or may not fully account for this. \nFor Australian fans new to Supercars betting\, the key takeaway from all of this is that the odds presented by bookmakers are not arbitrary numbers — they are the product of modelling\, historical data\, market sentiment\, and real-time information processing. Learning to read them critically\, rather than simply accepting them as a measure of who is most likely to win\, is the foundational skill that separates informed wagering from guesswork. Resources that explain the mechanics behind the numbers — including how overrounds are constructed\, how live markets respond to race events\, and how circuit-specific factors influence pricing — provide genuine educational value for punters who want to engage with the Supercars market thoughtfully and with a clear understanding of what they are doing. \nSupercars betting is ultimately a discipline that rewards patience\, data literacy\, and a willingness to look beyond the headline odds. The series’ unique combination of tight technical regulations\, multiple race formats\, endurance events\, and a compact field of highly skilled drivers creates a market environment that is genuinely complex and therefore genuinely interesting for bettors who take the time to understand it. Whether approaching individual race markets\, championship futures\, or live proposition bets\, the punters who perform best over the long run are those who treat each market as a probability exercise rather than a loyalty test — and who have taken the time to understand why the numbers on the screen look the way they do.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/dementia-caregivers-support-group-roswell-ga/2024-12-26/
LOCATION:Roswell United Methodist Church\, 814 Mimosa Blvd\, Roswell\, GA\, 30075\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/people-in-a-support-group.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241226T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241226T153000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240715T201417Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240715T201417Z
UID:10000877-1735219800-1735227000@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection Café (Memory Cafe) - Alpharetta
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our Connection Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation and Senior Service of North Fulton  \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners \nWhen: Every Second & Fourth Thursday Of The Month \nTime: 1:30-3:30 PM \nWhere: Alpharetta | Crabapple Senior Center \n12624 Broadwell Rd\, Alpharetta\, GA 30004 \nFor More Info or to Sponsor A Cafe\, Contact Alyss Amster: 678-332-1711 or
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-cafe-memory-cafe-alpharetta-3/2024-12-26/
LOCATION:Alpharetta | Crabapple Senior Center\, 12624 Broadwell Rd\, Alpharetta\, GA\, 30004\, United States
CATEGORIES:Connection Café
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/elderly-people-playing-board-game.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250103T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250103T153000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240823T153756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240823T153757Z
UID:10001122-1735911000-1735918200@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection Café (Memory Cafe) - Roswell
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our Connection Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation and Senior Service of North Fulton  \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners \nWhen: First & Third Friday Of The Month \nTime: 1:30-3:30 PM \nWhere: Roswell Senior Center \n1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA 30076 \nFor More Info or to Sponsor A Cafe\, Contact Alyss Amster: 678-332-1711 or alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-cafe-memory-cafe-3-2-2/2025-01-03/
LOCATION:Roswell Senior Center\, 1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA\, 30076\, United States
CATEGORIES:Connection Café
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/2.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250106T130000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250106T150000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20230601T171618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240208T165218Z
UID:10000376-1736168400-1736175600@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Brooksville\,  FL)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Brooksville\, FL\nIn partnership with United Way of Hernando County. \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 1st Monday of the month at Oak Hill Senior Living\, located at 7411 Cortez Oaks Blvd Brooksville\, FL 34613. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nRSVP HERE \nFor more information\, please contact Gary Joseph LeBlanc at gary@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org or call (352) 345-6270.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-brooksville-fl/2025-01-06/
LOCATION:Oak Hill Senior Living\, 7411 Cortez Oaks Blvd\, Brooksville\, GA\, 34613\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/4.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Gary Joseph LeBlanc":MAILTO:gary@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250107T103000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250107T123000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240208T175130Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240208T182851Z
UID:10000429-1736245800-1736253000@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Hudson\, FL)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Hudson\, FL \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 1st and 3rd Tuesday of the month at Hudson First United Methodist Church\, located at 13123 US 19. Hudson\, FL 34667. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nFor more information or to RSVP\, please contact Laura Arnold at larnold32@gmail.com or call (727) 808-2053.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-hudson-fl-2/2025-01-07/
LOCATION:Hudson First United Methodist Church\, 13123 US-19\, Hudson\, GA\, 34667\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/3.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Laura Arnold":MAILTO:larnold32@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250107T103000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250107T123000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240209T030819Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240209T030819Z
UID:10000540-1736245800-1736253000@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Hudson\, FL)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Hudson\, FL \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 1st and 3rd Tuesday of the month at Hudson First United Methodist Church\, located at 13123 US 19. Hudson\, FL 34667. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nFor more information or to RSVP\, please contact Laura Arnold at larnold32@gmail.com or call (727) 808-2053.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-hudson-fl-4/2025-01-07/
LOCATION:Hudson First United Methodist Church\, 13123 US-19\, Hudson\, GA\, 34667\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/3.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Laura Arnold":MAILTO:larnold32@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250109T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250109T153000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240715T201417Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240715T201417Z
UID:10000878-1736429400-1736436600@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection Café (Memory Cafe) - Alpharetta
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our Connection Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation and Senior Service of North Fulton  \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners \nWhen: Every Second & Fourth Thursday Of The Month \nTime: 1:30-3:30 PM \nWhere: Alpharetta | Crabapple Senior Center \n12624 Broadwell Rd\, Alpharetta\, GA 30004 \nFor More Info or to Sponsor A Cafe\, Contact Alyss Amster: 678-332-1711 or
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-cafe-memory-cafe-alpharetta-3/2025-01-09/
LOCATION:Alpharetta | Crabapple Senior Center\, 12624 Broadwell Rd\, Alpharetta\, GA\, 30004\, United States
CATEGORIES:Connection Café
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/elderly-people-playing-board-game.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250110T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250110T130000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240823T161323Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240823T161323Z
UID:10001247-1736506800-1736514000@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection "AKA Memory" Café (DeKalb County)
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our DeKalb Connection “AKA Memory” Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation\, DeKalb County\, and Human Services of DeKalb County. \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners (DeKalb Residents Only) \nWhen: Second Friday Of The Month \nTime: 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM \nWhere: East Central DeKalb Community and Senior Center \n4885 Elam Road\, Stone Mountain\, GA 30083 \nParticipants must register to attend cafés. Please visit bit.ly/4dcuRmg or contact Alyss Amster at 678-332-1711 or alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org for application information.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-aka-memory-cafe-dekalb-county/2025-01-10/
LOCATION:East Central DeKalb Community and Senior Center\, 4885 Elam Road\, Stone Mountain\, GA\, 30083\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/group-of-diverse-senior-male-and-female-friends-doing-puzzles-at-home.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250117T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250117T153000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240823T153756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240823T153757Z
UID:10001123-1737120600-1737127800@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection Café (Memory Cafe) - Roswell
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our Connection Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation and Senior Service of North Fulton  \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners \nWhen: First & Third Friday Of The Month \nTime: 1:30-3:30 PM \nWhere: Roswell Senior Center \n1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA 30076 \nFor More Info or to Sponsor A Cafe\, Contact Alyss Amster: 678-332-1711 or alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-cafe-memory-cafe-3-2-2/2025-01-17/
LOCATION:Roswell Senior Center\, 1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA\, 30076\, United States
CATEGORIES:Connection Café
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/2.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250121T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250121T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240722T175043Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240722T175043Z
UID:10000935-1737453600-1737460800@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Land O' Lakes\, FL)
DESCRIPTION:In partnership with Keystone Place at Terra Bella. \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 3rd Tuesday of the month at Keystone Place at Terra Bella\, located at 2200 Livingston Rd\, Land O’ Lakes\, FL 34639. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nRSVP HERE \nFor more information\, please contact Gary Joseph LeBlanc at gary@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org or call (352) 345-6270.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-land-o-lakes-fl/2025-01-21/
LOCATION:Keystone Place at Terra Bella\, 2200 Livingston Rd.\, Land O’ Lakes\, FL\, 34639\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/people-attending-support-group-meeting-for-mental-health-or-dependency-issues-in-community-space.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Gary Joseph LeBlanc":MAILTO:gary@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250121T103000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250121T123000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240208T175337Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240208T175337Z
UID:10000483-1737455400-1737462600@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Hudson\, FL)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Hudson\, FL \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 1st and 3rd Tuesday of the month at Hudson First United Methodist Church\, located at 13123 US 19. Hudson\, FL 34667. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nFor more information or to RSVP\, please contact Laura Arnold at larnold32@gmail.com or call (727) 808-2053.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-hudson-fl-3/2025-01-21/
LOCATION:Hudson First United Methodist Church\, 13123 US-19\, Hudson\, GA\, 34667\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/3.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Laura Arnold":MAILTO:larnold32@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250123T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250123T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20230601T185459Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260416T101809Z
UID:10000276-1737626400-1737631800@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Dementia Caregiver’s Support Group (Roswell\, GA)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Roswell\, GA\nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nMeetings will be held every 4th Thursday of the month at Roswell United Methodist Church\, located at \n814 Mimosa Blvd\, Roswell\, GA 30075. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nAlyss Amster will be the facilitator and CaraVita Home Care will be providing care at RUMC\, at no cost\, for care receivers during the in-person meeting. \nFor more information or to RSVP\, please contact Toni Fagan at tfagan@rumc.com or call 770-261-1767. \n\nHow Bettingguideau Explains V8 Supercars Betting Odds to Australian Fans\nV8 Supercars\, now officially known as the Supercars Championship\, represents one of Australia’s most passionately followed motorsport competitions. Since the series formally adopted its current structure in the early 2000s\, it has grown into a betting market that attracts significant wagering activity across the country\, particularly during marquee events like the Bathurst 1000\, the Adelaide 500\, and the Darwin Triple Crown. For Australian punters looking to engage with this market intelligently\, understanding how odds are structured\, what they reflect\, and how they shift across a race weekend is essential. Platforms like Bettingguideau have emerged as resources that attempt to demystify these mechanics for everyday fans who want to move beyond simply backing their favourite driver and start making more informed decisions based on actual race data\, team performance patterns\, and market dynamics. The Supercars betting landscape is more nuanced than many newcomers assume\, and that nuance begins with understanding the odds themselves. \nHow Supercars Betting Odds Are Structured and What They Actually Mean\nAustralian bookmakers typically present Supercars odds in decimal format\, which is the standard across most domestic sports betting markets. A driver listed at $6.00 implies a 16.67% probability of winning according to the bookmaker’s model — calculated simply by dividing 1 by the decimal odds. However\, the actual probability assigned by the bookmaker is always slightly lower than what the odds suggest\, because the overround (or vigorish) is built into every market. In a typical Supercars race market\, the combined implied probability of all listed drivers will often sit somewhere between 108% and 115%\, depending on the number of competitors and how competitive the field is perceived to be. That gap above 100% represents the bookmaker’s theoretical margin. \nUnderstanding this structure matters because it helps punters identify where value might exist. If a driver is listed at $4.50 but a careful analysis of qualifying times\, tyre strategy\, and historical performance at a specific circuit suggests the true probability of a win is closer to 30% rather than the implied 22.2%\, there is a positive expected value case for that bet. Bettingguideau approaches odds explanation from this angle — not simply telling readers who is likely to win\, but helping them understand how to assess whether the price on offer reflects genuine probability or market sentiment driven by public popularity. \nSupercars markets also differ from many other sports in that the odds are heavily influenced by car specification regulations. The series operates under a control chassis framework (the Car of the Future platform introduced in 2013) and tightly regulated engine specifications\, which means the performance gap between manufacturers — currently Ford and Chevrolet — is managed by technical parity rules. When one manufacturer appears to gain an advantage through an upgrade cycle or a specific circuit characteristic\, bookmakers adjust their pricing to reflect this. In 2023\, for example\, the introduction of the Gen3 regulations brought both Ford Mustang and Chevrolet Camaro machinery into the field\, and the early weeks of the season saw significant odds movement as the market recalibrated around which teams had adapted most effectively to the new platform. \nRace format also shapes the betting markets in ways that are specific to Supercars. Unlike Formula 1\, where a single race on Sunday determines the weekend result\, Supercars often runs multiple races across a single event\, with separate markets available for each. At a Townsville 400 or a Winton SuperSprint\, there may be two or three races over the weekend\, each carrying its own market. Points are accumulated across these races\, and team strategy — including tyre allocation\, pit stop timing\, and safety car management — plays a different role in each. Punters who understand these format nuances can find edges that casual bettors miss entirely. \nReading Market Movements and Understanding Bookmaker Pricing Logic\nOne of the most instructive aspects of Supercars betting is watching how odds move from the time markets open (often days before a race weekend) through to the moment the lights go out. Early markets are largely driven by season-long form\, team resources\, and the bookmaker’s own modelling. As the weekend progresses and qualifying results come in\, the odds shift — sometimes dramatically — to reflect the actual grid positions. A driver who qualifies on pole at Mount Panorama\, for instance\, will typically see their win odds shorten considerably\, because Bathurst’s circuit characteristics make overtaking genuinely difficult and pole position carries a statistical advantage that is well documented across the event’s history. \nWhat many punters fail to appreciate is that these movements are not always rational or purely data-driven. Public money — wagered by fans backing popular drivers regardless of form — can push odds on certain competitors shorter than their actual probability warrants. Shane van Gisbergen\, who dominated the series with three consecutive championships between 2021 and 2023\, was frequently overbet by casual punters\, meaning his odds were often shorter than the underlying data justified. Conversely\, less prominent drivers in competitive equipment sometimes offered genuine value because public sentiment was not inflating their market price. \nWhen examining how resources like Bettingguideau explain these dynamics\, the key contribution is contextualising what the numbers represent rather than simply listing them. In research compiled for Australian motorsport fans\, our experts found that the most common mistake among new Supercars bettors is treating short-priced favourites as near-certainties without accounting for the high attrition rate in endurance events — a factor that makes markets like the Bathurst 1000 particularly volatile and difficult to price accurately even for professional bookmakers. \nAttrition is worth expanding on here. The Bathurst 1000 has a historical DNF (did not finish) rate that regularly exceeds 30% of the field\, meaning mechanical failure\, contact incidents\, and strategic errors eliminate a significant proportion of competitors before the chequered flag. In a race of 161 laps around a 6.213-kilometre circuit in the New South Wales Central Tablelands\, the probability of any single car completing the race without incident is meaningfully lower than in a standard 250-kilometre sprint race. Bookmakers account for this by extending the market — offering each-way betting\, top-three finishes\, and safety car occurrence markets — and by pricing even the strongest favourites at odds that reflect genuine uncertainty. Understanding this structural volatility is fundamental to approaching Bathurst betting with realistic expectations. \nCircuit-specific pricing is another area where informed punters can develop an edge. Not all tracks suit all cars or drivers equally. Winton Motor Raceway in Victoria\, for example\, is a relatively short\, technical circuit where car setup and tyre management under heat are critical. Hidden Valley Raceway in Darwin has a surface that degrades quickly\, making tyre strategy a more significant variable than at smoother circuits like Sydney Motorsport Park. Bookmakers do factor these considerations into their pricing\, but they are working from aggregated data and market signals rather than granular technical analysis. A punter who has tracked individual driver performance at specific circuits over multiple seasons — something that requires genuine data discipline — can sometimes identify pricing anomalies before they are corrected by the market. \nChampionship Futures Markets and Long-Term Betting Strategy\nBeyond individual race markets\, Supercars also supports a futures market — betting on the outright championship winner before or during the season. These markets operate differently from race-by-race wagering and require a different analytical framework. The Supercars Championship runs from February through to November\, encompassing between 10 and 14 events depending on the calendar year\, with points accumulated across all races. The points system rewards consistency as much as outright speed: a driver who finishes in the top five across every event will accumulate more points than one who wins three races but retires from four others. \nThis consistency dynamic means that championship futures markets tend to price in team reliability and depth of lineup as much as raw pace. Triple Eight Race Engineering\, which has historically operated as one of the most resourced and strategically sophisticated teams in the series\, has won multiple championships partly because of their ability to manage points across a long season rather than simply producing peak performance at individual events. When betting on championship outcomes\, understanding which teams have the infrastructure to sustain performance across a 30-plus race calendar is as important as assessing driver talent in isolation. \nMid-season championship betting also presents specific opportunities. As the season progresses and the points standings clarify\, bookmakers adjust futures odds to reflect the current gap between contenders. A driver who holds a 150-point lead with six rounds remaining is in a statistically different position from one who leads by 30 points\, and the odds should reflect this. However\, because Supercars uses a points system where a race win is worth 150 points and a fastest lap adds a small bonus\, large leads can theoretically be overturned within a single event weekend — particularly if it involves multiple races. Monitoring how bookmakers price this volatility\, and whether the market is properly accounting for the number of remaining points available\, is a legitimate analytical approach for futures bettors. \nThe endurance races — specifically the Bathurst 1000 and the Repco Supercars Championship co-driver rounds — introduce an additional variable into futures betting: the co-driver pairing. During endurance events\, each car is driven by two drivers\, with co-drivers (many of whom compete in Supercars’ lower categories or international series) taking a minimum share of driving time. Co-driver performance and reliability can materially affect a team’s championship result at these events\, and punters tracking the futures market need to account for this when assessing probability at the season’s midpoint. A title contender with a weak co-driver pairing faces a genuine statistical risk at Bathurst that should influence how futures odds are evaluated in the weeks preceding the event. \nProposition Markets\, Live Betting\, and How Odds Change During a Race\nThe growth of in-play betting has added a significant layer of complexity — and opportunity — to Supercars wagering. Australian bookmakers that offer live markets on Supercars events typically update odds in near real-time as race conditions evolve. A safety car deployment\, for instance\, can dramatically reshape the race by compressing the field and effectively neutralising a large gap that a leading driver had built. When a safety car is called\, the odds on drivers who had fallen behind often shorten sharply\, while the leader’s odds may extend slightly to reflect the reset conditions. \nPit stop strategy is another live betting variable that experienced punters track closely. In Supercars\, teams make strategic decisions about when to pit relative to the broader field\, and these decisions are often triggered by safety car periods or early mechanical concerns. A driver who pits under a safety car and rejoins with fresh tyres in a strong track position will typically see their win odds shorten in the live market. Understanding the sequence of events — safety car called\, pit lane opens\, teams make decisions\, positions shuffle — and being able to anticipate how bookmakers will respond to each stage gives live bettors a narrow window to act before the market reprices. \nProposition markets — often called “prop bets” — offer additional wagering options beyond the outright race result. Common Supercars prop markets include: the number of safety cars during a race\, whether the race will be won from pole position\, the margin of victory\, and which manufacturer (Ford or Chevrolet) will win the event. These markets are typically offered with higher margins than outright race markets\, meaning the bookmaker’s edge is larger. However\, for punters with specific knowledge — for example\, a detailed understanding of how often safety cars are deployed at a particular circuit based on historical data — prop markets can occasionally offer value that outright markets do not. \nThe safety car frequency market is particularly interesting at Bathurst\, where the combination of a narrow circuit\, high car density\, and the physical demands of the mountain section create conditions that historically produce multiple safety car deployments per race. Between 2010 and 2023\, the Bathurst 1000 averaged more than three safety car periods per race\, with several editions recording five or more. Bookmakers set their safety car markets based on this historical data\, but they also factor in current car specifications and the specific competitive dynamics of a given year’s field. When a new technical regulation has just been introduced — as was the case with Gen3 in 2023 — the uncertainty around car reliability can push expected safety car frequency higher\, and the market may or may not fully account for this. \nFor Australian fans new to Supercars betting\, the key takeaway from all of this is that the odds presented by bookmakers are not arbitrary numbers — they are the product of modelling\, historical data\, market sentiment\, and real-time information processing. Learning to read them critically\, rather than simply accepting them as a measure of who is most likely to win\, is the foundational skill that separates informed wagering from guesswork. Resources that explain the mechanics behind the numbers — including how overrounds are constructed\, how live markets respond to race events\, and how circuit-specific factors influence pricing — provide genuine educational value for punters who want to engage with the Supercars market thoughtfully and with a clear understanding of what they are doing. \nSupercars betting is ultimately a discipline that rewards patience\, data literacy\, and a willingness to look beyond the headline odds. The series’ unique combination of tight technical regulations\, multiple race formats\, endurance events\, and a compact field of highly skilled drivers creates a market environment that is genuinely complex and therefore genuinely interesting for bettors who take the time to understand it. Whether approaching individual race markets\, championship futures\, or live proposition bets\, the punters who perform best over the long run are those who treat each market as a probability exercise rather than a loyalty test — and who have taken the time to understand why the numbers on the screen look the way they do.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/dementia-caregivers-support-group-roswell-ga/2025-01-23/
LOCATION:Roswell United Methodist Church\, 814 Mimosa Blvd\, Roswell\, GA\, 30075\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/people-in-a-support-group.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250123T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250123T153000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240715T201417Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240715T201417Z
UID:10000879-1737639000-1737646200@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection Café (Memory Cafe) - Alpharetta
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our Connection Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation and Senior Service of North Fulton  \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners \nWhen: Every Second & Fourth Thursday Of The Month \nTime: 1:30-3:30 PM \nWhere: Alpharetta | Crabapple Senior Center \n12624 Broadwell Rd\, Alpharetta\, GA 30004 \nFor More Info or to Sponsor A Cafe\, Contact Alyss Amster: 678-332-1711 or
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-cafe-memory-cafe-alpharetta-3/2025-01-23/
LOCATION:Alpharetta | Crabapple Senior Center\, 12624 Broadwell Rd\, Alpharetta\, GA\, 30004\, United States
CATEGORIES:Connection Café
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/elderly-people-playing-board-game.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250131T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250131T153000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240823T153756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240823T153757Z
UID:10001124-1738330200-1738337400@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection Café (Memory Cafe) - Roswell
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our Connection Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation and Senior Service of North Fulton  \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners \nWhen: First & Third Friday Of The Month \nTime: 1:30-3:30 PM \nWhere: Roswell Senior Center \n1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA 30076 \nFor More Info or to Sponsor A Cafe\, Contact Alyss Amster: 678-332-1711 or alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-cafe-memory-cafe-3-2-2/2025-01-31/
LOCATION:Roswell Senior Center\, 1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA\, 30076\, United States
CATEGORIES:Connection Café
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/2.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250203T130000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250203T150000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20230601T171618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240208T165218Z
UID:10000377-1738587600-1738594800@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Brooksville\,  FL)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Brooksville\, FL\nIn partnership with United Way of Hernando County. \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 1st Monday of the month at Oak Hill Senior Living\, located at 7411 Cortez Oaks Blvd Brooksville\, FL 34613. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nRSVP HERE \nFor more information\, please contact Gary Joseph LeBlanc at gary@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org or call (352) 345-6270.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-brooksville-fl/2025-02-03/
LOCATION:Oak Hill Senior Living\, 7411 Cortez Oaks Blvd\, Brooksville\, GA\, 34613\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/4.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Gary Joseph LeBlanc":MAILTO:gary@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250204T103000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250204T123000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240208T175130Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240208T182851Z
UID:10000430-1738665000-1738672200@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Hudson\, FL)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Hudson\, FL \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 1st and 3rd Tuesday of the month at Hudson First United Methodist Church\, located at 13123 US 19. Hudson\, FL 34667. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nFor more information or to RSVP\, please contact Laura Arnold at larnold32@gmail.com or call (727) 808-2053.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-hudson-fl-2/2025-02-04/
LOCATION:Hudson First United Methodist Church\, 13123 US-19\, Hudson\, GA\, 34667\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/3.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Laura Arnold":MAILTO:larnold32@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250204T103000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250204T123000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240209T030819Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240209T030819Z
UID:10000541-1738665000-1738672200@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Hudson\, FL)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Hudson\, FL \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 1st and 3rd Tuesday of the month at Hudson First United Methodist Church\, located at 13123 US 19. Hudson\, FL 34667. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nFor more information or to RSVP\, please contact Laura Arnold at larnold32@gmail.com or call (727) 808-2053.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-hudson-fl-4/2025-02-04/
LOCATION:Hudson First United Methodist Church\, 13123 US-19\, Hudson\, GA\, 34667\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/3.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Laura Arnold":MAILTO:larnold32@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250213T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250213T153000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240715T201417Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240715T201417Z
UID:10000753-1739453400-1739460600@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection Café (Memory Cafe) - Alpharetta
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our Connection Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation and Senior Service of North Fulton  \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners \nWhen: Every Second & Fourth Thursday Of The Month \nTime: 1:30-3:30 PM \nWhere: Alpharetta | Crabapple Senior Center \n12624 Broadwell Rd\, Alpharetta\, GA 30004 \nFor More Info or to Sponsor A Cafe\, Contact Alyss Amster: 678-332-1711 or
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-cafe-memory-cafe-alpharetta-3/2025-02-13/
LOCATION:Alpharetta | Crabapple Senior Center\, 12624 Broadwell Rd\, Alpharetta\, GA\, 30004\, United States
CATEGORIES:Connection Café
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/elderly-people-playing-board-game.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250214T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250214T130000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20260416T101844Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260416T101844Z
UID:10001248-1739530800-1739538000@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection "AKA Memory" Café (DeKalb County)
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our DeKalb Connection “AKA Memory” Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation\, DeKalb County\, and Human Services of DeKalb County. \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners (DeKalb Residents Only) \nWhen: Second Friday Of The Month \nTime: 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM \nWhere: East Central DeKalb Community and Senior Center \n4885 Elam Road\, Stone Mountain\, GA 30083 \nParticipants must register to attend cafés. Please visit bit.ly/4dcuRmg or contact Alyss Amster at 678-332-1711 or alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org for application information. \n\nHow CasinosWelcomeBonus Explains Welcome Bonus Wagering Requirements in Canada\nWelcome bonuses are among the most scrutinized promotional tools in the Canadian online gambling market\, and for good reason. On the surface\, a 100% match bonus up to $500 sounds straightforward — deposit $200\, receive $200 in bonus funds\, and start playing. The reality is considerably more complex. Embedded within every welcome bonus offer is a set of conditions that determine whether a player can realistically convert bonus funds into withdrawable cash. Wagering requirements\, also called playthrough requirements\, sit at the center of these conditions\, and misunderstanding them is one of the primary reasons Canadian players feel misled by promotions that initially seemed generous. Platforms that specialize in explaining these mechanics serve a distinct educational function in the market\, helping players decode the fine print before committing their deposits. \nWhat Wagering Requirements Actually Mean and How They Are Calculated\nA wagering requirement is a multiplier that specifies how many times a player must bet through a bonus amount — or in some cases the combined bonus and deposit amount — before any winnings derived from that bonus become eligible for withdrawal. A 30x wagering requirement on a $100 bonus means a player must place $3\,000 in total bets before cashing out. A 40x requirement on the combined deposit and bonus — a structure sometimes called a “deposit + bonus” wagering format — applied to a $100 deposit and $100 bonus would require $8\,000 in total wagers. These are not equivalent offers despite both being described as “welcome bonuses\,” and the distinction matters enormously in practical terms. \nThe calculation becomes more complicated when game contribution rates enter the equation. Most Canadian online casinos apply differential contribution rates by game type. Slot games typically contribute 100% toward clearing wagering requirements\, meaning every dollar wagered on eligible slots counts in full. Blackjack\, roulette\, baccarat\, and other table games commonly contribute between 5% and 25%\, and some casinos exclude them entirely from wagering calculations. Video poker and live dealer games are frequently restricted or contribute at reduced rates. This means a player who prefers table games faces a dramatically higher effective playthrough burden than a slots-focused player\, even if the nominal wagering requirement appears the same on paper. \nThere is also the matter of time limits. Canadian online casinos typically impose a window of seven to thirty days within which the wagering requirement must be completed. Failure to meet the requirement within that period usually results in the bonus and any associated winnings being forfeited. Some platforms use a tiered expiry system\, where the bonus expires after seven days but winnings generated from bonus play are held for an additional period pending review. Players who do not read these conditions carefully often discover these limitations only after losing access to funds they believed they had earned. \nMaximum bet limits during active bonus play represent another frequently overlooked restriction. Many Canadian casinos cap wagers at $5 to $10 per spin or hand while a bonus is active. Exceeding this limit — even once — can result in the bonus being voided retroactively\, along with any winnings accumulated during that session. This rule is particularly consequential for players who adjust their bet sizes dynamically during play\, a common behavior among experienced gamblers who are accustomed to managing their bankrolls without such constraints. \nHow CasinosWelcomeBonus Approaches Transparency in Bonus Analysis\nThe challenge for Canadian players is not simply that wagering requirements exist — it is that the way these requirements are presented varies significantly across operators\, and the language used in terms and conditions is often deliberately ambiguous. Phrases like “standard wagering terms apply” or “bonus subject to promotional terms” provide no actionable information. Operators are not legally required under current Canadian provincial gaming frameworks to display wagering requirements in a standardized format\, which means a player comparing two offers must navigate two entirely different documentation structures to extract comparable data. \nResources dedicated to systematically breaking down these conditions fill a genuine information gap. A detailed breakdown of how individual Canadian casino offers are structured — including exact wagering multipliers\, game contribution tables\, time limits\, and maximum bet restrictions — can be found at https://casinos-welcome-bonus.com\, where these parameters are analyzed in a format that allows direct comparison across different operators. This kind of structured analysis is useful precisely because it removes the need for players to interpret legal-style terms and conditions language on their own\, a task that requires familiarity with both gambling industry conventions and contract interpretation. \nCasinosWelcomeBonus applies a methodology that goes beyond listing the headline wagering multiplier. The analysis accounts for the effective value of a bonus after accounting for the statistical house edge on the games eligible for wagering. A 20x wagering requirement on a slot game with a 96% return-to-player rate produces a different expected outcome than a 20x requirement on a game with a 94% RTP. The difference in expected loss across the wagering period can easily exceed the value of the bonus itself\, meaning a lower nominal wagering requirement does not always translate into a better offer when game selection and RTP rates are factored in. This kind of calculation requires access to documented RTP figures\, which are published by game developers but rarely highlighted by casinos in their bonus promotional materials. \nThe platform also addresses regional considerations specific to Canada. The Canadian online gambling landscape underwent significant structural change following the Ontario iGaming market launch in April 2022\, which created a regulated private operator market under iGaming Ontario. Operators licensed through iGaming Ontario are subject to advertising standards and responsible gambling requirements that differ from those applied to offshore operators serving other provinces. Bonus structures offered by Ontario-licensed operators are therefore subject to a different regulatory context than those offered by Malta Gaming Authority or Curaçao-licensed platforms serving British Columbia\, Alberta\, or Quebec residents. Understanding which regulatory framework applies to a given offer is relevant to evaluating both the enforceability of bonus terms and the recourse available to players in the event of a dispute. \nThe Regulatory Context Shaping Bonus Terms in Canada\nCanada’s gambling regulatory environment is provincially fragmented\, which creates meaningful variation in the standards operators must meet when marketing welcome bonuses. In Ontario\, iGaming Ontario’s operator agreements include provisions related to responsible gambling messaging and advertising content\, but they do not prescribe specific wagering requirement caps or disclosure formats for bonus terms. The result is that even within Ontario’s regulated market\, wagering requirements range from 20x to 50x or higher\, and the presentation of those requirements varies substantially between operators. \nOutside Ontario\, the situation is less structured. Most Canadians accessing offshore-licensed online casinos do so in a legal gray zone — the operators are not licensed in Canada\, but Canadian law does not explicitly prohibit individual players from participating. This means players in provinces like British Columbia\, Alberta\, Manitoba\, and Quebec who use offshore platforms have limited formal recourse if a casino refuses to honor a bonus or applies terms in a way the player considers unfair. Provincial gaming commissions do not have jurisdiction over offshore operators\, and while some players have successfully pursued complaints through payment processors or licensing authority complaint mechanisms in Malta or Gibraltar\, these processes are slow and outcomes are uncertain. \nThe Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO)\, which oversees the iGaming Ontario framework\, has published standards that touch on advertising honesty and the need for clear communication of promotional terms. The AGCO’s Registrar’s Standards for Internet Gaming\, which came into effect in 2022\, require that promotional materials not be misleading\, but the standards stop short of mandating specific disclosure formats for wagering requirements. This regulatory gap is one reason why third-party educational resources continue to serve an important function even in markets with formal regulatory oversight — the regulations address fairness and honesty in broad terms but do not eliminate the complexity that players encounter when trying to evaluate specific offers. \nIn 2023\, the Canadian Gaming Association reported that the Ontario regulated market had attracted over 40 licensed operators within its first year of operation. This rapid expansion increased competitive pressure on bonus offers\, with some operators increasing the nominal value of their welcome packages to attract new registrations. Higher headline bonus amounts do not necessarily correspond to better player value\, however\, particularly when accompanied by higher wagering requirements or more restrictive game contribution tables. The proliferation of operators makes the comparative analysis function of platforms like CasinosWelcomeBonus more relevant\, not less\, as players face a wider range of offers with more variation in underlying terms. \nPractical Strategies for Evaluating Welcome Bonus Value\nExperienced Canadian players approach welcome bonus evaluation as a mathematical exercise rather than a marketing response. The starting point is identifying the exact wagering requirement structure — whether it applies to the bonus only or to the combined deposit and bonus — and then calculating the total dollar amount of wagers required. From that figure\, the expected loss across the wagering period can be estimated by applying the house edge of the eligible games. If the expected loss exceeds the bonus amount\, the offer has negative expected value\, meaning the average player will lose more completing the wagering requirement than they received in bonus funds. \nFor a concrete example: a $200 bonus with a 40x wagering requirement applied to the bonus amount requires $8\,000 in total wagers. If the player completes this requirement exclusively on slot games with a 4% average house edge (equivalent to 96% RTP)\, the expected loss across the wagering period is $320. The player received $200 in bonus funds and is expected to lose $320 completing the requirement — a net expected loss of $120. In this scenario\, the welcome bonus has negative expected value for the average player. A 20x wagering requirement on the same bonus would require $4\,000 in wagers\, producing an expected loss of $160\, which would represent a positive expected value of $40. The difference between these two scenarios is entirely determined by the wagering multiplier\, not the bonus amount. \nGame selection within the eligible category also matters. Slot games are not homogeneous — RTP rates vary from below 94% to above 97% depending on the title\, and not all high-RTP games are eligible for bonus wagering. Some casinos explicitly exclude high-RTP slots from bonus play\, listing specific excluded titles in their terms and conditions. Players who identify high-RTP eligible games and concentrate their wagering on those titles can meaningfully improve their expected outcome\, though this requires access to documented RTP information and the time to cross-reference it against the casino’s game eligibility list. \nWithdrawal limits represent a final layer of complexity that affects realized bonus value. Many Canadian casinos impose maximum withdrawal limits on winnings generated from bonus play\, commonly set at one to five times the bonus amount. A player who runs particularly well during the wagering period and accumulates substantial winnings may find that only a fraction of those winnings is withdrawable. This cap effectively limits the upside of bonus play regardless of how skillfully the player manages their wagering strategy. Reading the maximum withdrawal terms before accepting a bonus is as important as understanding the wagering multiplier itself. \nThe landscape of welcome bonus offers in Canada is genuinely complex\, and the complexity is not accidental — it reflects the commercial interests of operators who benefit from players failing to complete wagering requirements or misunderstanding the conditions attached to their bonuses. Platforms that provide structured\, mathematically grounded analysis of these conditions serve a counterbalancing function\, giving players the information they need to make genuinely informed decisions about which offers represent reasonable value and which carry terms that make completion impractical for most players. As the Canadian regulated market continues to mature\, particularly in Ontario\, there is reason to expect that disclosure standards will become more prescriptive over time. Until that happens\, the burden of understanding bonus terms falls largely on individual players\, and the resources available to help them navigate that burden remain genuinely useful tools in a market that rewards careful reading over impulsive sign-ups.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-aka-memory-cafe-dekalb-county-3/
LOCATION:East Central DeKalb Community and Senior Center\, 4885 Elam Road\, Stone Mountain\, GA\, 30083\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/group-of-diverse-senior-male-and-female-friends-doing-puzzles-at-home.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250214T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250214T153000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240823T153756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240823T153757Z
UID:10001125-1739539800-1739547000@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection Café (Memory Cafe) - Roswell
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our Connection Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation and Senior Service of North Fulton  \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners \nWhen: First & Third Friday Of The Month \nTime: 1:30-3:30 PM \nWhere: Roswell Senior Center \n1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA 30076 \nFor More Info or to Sponsor A Cafe\, Contact Alyss Amster: 678-332-1711 or alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-cafe-memory-cafe-3-2-2/2025-02-14/
LOCATION:Roswell Senior Center\, 1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA\, 30076\, United States
CATEGORIES:Connection Café
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/2.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250218T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250218T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240722T175043Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240722T175043Z
UID:10000936-1739872800-1739880000@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Land O' Lakes\, FL)
DESCRIPTION:In partnership with Keystone Place at Terra Bella. \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 3rd Tuesday of the month at Keystone Place at Terra Bella\, located at 2200 Livingston Rd\, Land O’ Lakes\, FL 34639. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nRSVP HERE \nFor more information\, please contact Gary Joseph LeBlanc at gary@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org or call (352) 345-6270.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-land-o-lakes-fl/2025-02-18/
LOCATION:Keystone Place at Terra Bella\, 2200 Livingston Rd.\, Land O’ Lakes\, FL\, 34639\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/people-attending-support-group-meeting-for-mental-health-or-dependency-issues-in-community-space.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Gary Joseph LeBlanc":MAILTO:gary@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250218T103000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250218T123000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240208T175337Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240208T175337Z
UID:10000484-1739874600-1739881800@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Hudson\, FL)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Hudson\, FL \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 1st and 3rd Tuesday of the month at Hudson First United Methodist Church\, located at 13123 US 19. Hudson\, FL 34667. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nFor more information or to RSVP\, please contact Laura Arnold at larnold32@gmail.com or call (727) 808-2053.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-hudson-fl-3/2025-02-18/
LOCATION:Hudson First United Methodist Church\, 13123 US-19\, Hudson\, GA\, 34667\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/3.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Laura Arnold":MAILTO:larnold32@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250219T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250219T130000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20241230T150705Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241230T150705Z
UID:10001307-1739962800-1739970000@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Dementia Care Lunch & Learn
DESCRIPTION:Join Us for a Dementia Care Lunch & Learn: Empower Yourself as a Care Partner!\n \nAre you supporting someone living with dementia? Join us for an engaging Dementia Care Lunch & Learn Seminar designed to empower care partners like you with tools\, insights\, and strategies to enhance the care experience. \n💡 What to Expect:\n\nExpert speaker sharing practical strategies for dementia care\nTips to strengthen communication and connection with your loved one\nValuable resources to support you and your loved one\nOpportunities to connect with other care partners\n\nEnjoy a warm\, welcoming atmosphere and a delicious lunch while gaining knowledge that can make a meaningful difference in your journey as a care partner. \nWhether you’re seeking solutions\, fresh perspectives\, or a supportive community\, this event is for you. \n📅 Date: February 19th\n🕒 Time: 11:00 am-1:00 pm\n📍 Location: 2626 West Bearss Avenue\, Tampa\, Florida 33618 \nReserve your spot today and take the next step in your care partner journey. \nRSVP TODAY with Sales Director Rochelle Abrahante at 813-960-5346. \nWe look forward to seeing you there!
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/dementia-care-lunch-learn/
LOCATION:Sodalis Tampa\, 2626 West Bearss Avenue\, Tampa\, FL\, 33618\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/cheerful-people-sitting-in-seminar.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Gary Joseph LeBlanc":MAILTO:gary@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250227T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250227T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20230601T185459Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260416T101809Z
UID:10000277-1740650400-1740655800@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Dementia Caregiver’s Support Group (Roswell\, GA)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Roswell\, GA\nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nMeetings will be held every 4th Thursday of the month at Roswell United Methodist Church\, located at \n814 Mimosa Blvd\, Roswell\, GA 30075. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nAlyss Amster will be the facilitator and CaraVita Home Care will be providing care at RUMC\, at no cost\, for care receivers during the in-person meeting. \nFor more information or to RSVP\, please contact Toni Fagan at tfagan@rumc.com or call 770-261-1767. \n\nHow Bettingguideau Explains V8 Supercars Betting Odds to Australian Fans\nV8 Supercars\, now officially known as the Supercars Championship\, represents one of Australia’s most passionately followed motorsport competitions. Since the series formally adopted its current structure in the early 2000s\, it has grown into a betting market that attracts significant wagering activity across the country\, particularly during marquee events like the Bathurst 1000\, the Adelaide 500\, and the Darwin Triple Crown. For Australian punters looking to engage with this market intelligently\, understanding how odds are structured\, what they reflect\, and how they shift across a race weekend is essential. Platforms like Bettingguideau have emerged as resources that attempt to demystify these mechanics for everyday fans who want to move beyond simply backing their favourite driver and start making more informed decisions based on actual race data\, team performance patterns\, and market dynamics. The Supercars betting landscape is more nuanced than many newcomers assume\, and that nuance begins with understanding the odds themselves. \nHow Supercars Betting Odds Are Structured and What They Actually Mean\nAustralian bookmakers typically present Supercars odds in decimal format\, which is the standard across most domestic sports betting markets. A driver listed at $6.00 implies a 16.67% probability of winning according to the bookmaker’s model — calculated simply by dividing 1 by the decimal odds. However\, the actual probability assigned by the bookmaker is always slightly lower than what the odds suggest\, because the overround (or vigorish) is built into every market. In a typical Supercars race market\, the combined implied probability of all listed drivers will often sit somewhere between 108% and 115%\, depending on the number of competitors and how competitive the field is perceived to be. That gap above 100% represents the bookmaker’s theoretical margin. \nUnderstanding this structure matters because it helps punters identify where value might exist. If a driver is listed at $4.50 but a careful analysis of qualifying times\, tyre strategy\, and historical performance at a specific circuit suggests the true probability of a win is closer to 30% rather than the implied 22.2%\, there is a positive expected value case for that bet. Bettingguideau approaches odds explanation from this angle — not simply telling readers who is likely to win\, but helping them understand how to assess whether the price on offer reflects genuine probability or market sentiment driven by public popularity. \nSupercars markets also differ from many other sports in that the odds are heavily influenced by car specification regulations. The series operates under a control chassis framework (the Car of the Future platform introduced in 2013) and tightly regulated engine specifications\, which means the performance gap between manufacturers — currently Ford and Chevrolet — is managed by technical parity rules. When one manufacturer appears to gain an advantage through an upgrade cycle or a specific circuit characteristic\, bookmakers adjust their pricing to reflect this. In 2023\, for example\, the introduction of the Gen3 regulations brought both Ford Mustang and Chevrolet Camaro machinery into the field\, and the early weeks of the season saw significant odds movement as the market recalibrated around which teams had adapted most effectively to the new platform. \nRace format also shapes the betting markets in ways that are specific to Supercars. Unlike Formula 1\, where a single race on Sunday determines the weekend result\, Supercars often runs multiple races across a single event\, with separate markets available for each. At a Townsville 400 or a Winton SuperSprint\, there may be two or three races over the weekend\, each carrying its own market. Points are accumulated across these races\, and team strategy — including tyre allocation\, pit stop timing\, and safety car management — plays a different role in each. Punters who understand these format nuances can find edges that casual bettors miss entirely. \nReading Market Movements and Understanding Bookmaker Pricing Logic\nOne of the most instructive aspects of Supercars betting is watching how odds move from the time markets open (often days before a race weekend) through to the moment the lights go out. Early markets are largely driven by season-long form\, team resources\, and the bookmaker’s own modelling. As the weekend progresses and qualifying results come in\, the odds shift — sometimes dramatically — to reflect the actual grid positions. A driver who qualifies on pole at Mount Panorama\, for instance\, will typically see their win odds shorten considerably\, because Bathurst’s circuit characteristics make overtaking genuinely difficult and pole position carries a statistical advantage that is well documented across the event’s history. \nWhat many punters fail to appreciate is that these movements are not always rational or purely data-driven. Public money — wagered by fans backing popular drivers regardless of form — can push odds on certain competitors shorter than their actual probability warrants. Shane van Gisbergen\, who dominated the series with three consecutive championships between 2021 and 2023\, was frequently overbet by casual punters\, meaning his odds were often shorter than the underlying data justified. Conversely\, less prominent drivers in competitive equipment sometimes offered genuine value because public sentiment was not inflating their market price. \nWhen examining how resources like Bettingguideau explain these dynamics\, the key contribution is contextualising what the numbers represent rather than simply listing them. In research compiled for Australian motorsport fans\, our experts found that the most common mistake among new Supercars bettors is treating short-priced favourites as near-certainties without accounting for the high attrition rate in endurance events — a factor that makes markets like the Bathurst 1000 particularly volatile and difficult to price accurately even for professional bookmakers. \nAttrition is worth expanding on here. The Bathurst 1000 has a historical DNF (did not finish) rate that regularly exceeds 30% of the field\, meaning mechanical failure\, contact incidents\, and strategic errors eliminate a significant proportion of competitors before the chequered flag. In a race of 161 laps around a 6.213-kilometre circuit in the New South Wales Central Tablelands\, the probability of any single car completing the race without incident is meaningfully lower than in a standard 250-kilometre sprint race. Bookmakers account for this by extending the market — offering each-way betting\, top-three finishes\, and safety car occurrence markets — and by pricing even the strongest favourites at odds that reflect genuine uncertainty. Understanding this structural volatility is fundamental to approaching Bathurst betting with realistic expectations. \nCircuit-specific pricing is another area where informed punters can develop an edge. Not all tracks suit all cars or drivers equally. Winton Motor Raceway in Victoria\, for example\, is a relatively short\, technical circuit where car setup and tyre management under heat are critical. Hidden Valley Raceway in Darwin has a surface that degrades quickly\, making tyre strategy a more significant variable than at smoother circuits like Sydney Motorsport Park. Bookmakers do factor these considerations into their pricing\, but they are working from aggregated data and market signals rather than granular technical analysis. A punter who has tracked individual driver performance at specific circuits over multiple seasons — something that requires genuine data discipline — can sometimes identify pricing anomalies before they are corrected by the market. \nChampionship Futures Markets and Long-Term Betting Strategy\nBeyond individual race markets\, Supercars also supports a futures market — betting on the outright championship winner before or during the season. These markets operate differently from race-by-race wagering and require a different analytical framework. The Supercars Championship runs from February through to November\, encompassing between 10 and 14 events depending on the calendar year\, with points accumulated across all races. The points system rewards consistency as much as outright speed: a driver who finishes in the top five across every event will accumulate more points than one who wins three races but retires from four others. \nThis consistency dynamic means that championship futures markets tend to price in team reliability and depth of lineup as much as raw pace. Triple Eight Race Engineering\, which has historically operated as one of the most resourced and strategically sophisticated teams in the series\, has won multiple championships partly because of their ability to manage points across a long season rather than simply producing peak performance at individual events. When betting on championship outcomes\, understanding which teams have the infrastructure to sustain performance across a 30-plus race calendar is as important as assessing driver talent in isolation. \nMid-season championship betting also presents specific opportunities. As the season progresses and the points standings clarify\, bookmakers adjust futures odds to reflect the current gap between contenders. A driver who holds a 150-point lead with six rounds remaining is in a statistically different position from one who leads by 30 points\, and the odds should reflect this. However\, because Supercars uses a points system where a race win is worth 150 points and a fastest lap adds a small bonus\, large leads can theoretically be overturned within a single event weekend — particularly if it involves multiple races. Monitoring how bookmakers price this volatility\, and whether the market is properly accounting for the number of remaining points available\, is a legitimate analytical approach for futures bettors. \nThe endurance races — specifically the Bathurst 1000 and the Repco Supercars Championship co-driver rounds — introduce an additional variable into futures betting: the co-driver pairing. During endurance events\, each car is driven by two drivers\, with co-drivers (many of whom compete in Supercars’ lower categories or international series) taking a minimum share of driving time. Co-driver performance and reliability can materially affect a team’s championship result at these events\, and punters tracking the futures market need to account for this when assessing probability at the season’s midpoint. A title contender with a weak co-driver pairing faces a genuine statistical risk at Bathurst that should influence how futures odds are evaluated in the weeks preceding the event. \nProposition Markets\, Live Betting\, and How Odds Change During a Race\nThe growth of in-play betting has added a significant layer of complexity — and opportunity — to Supercars wagering. Australian bookmakers that offer live markets on Supercars events typically update odds in near real-time as race conditions evolve. A safety car deployment\, for instance\, can dramatically reshape the race by compressing the field and effectively neutralising a large gap that a leading driver had built. When a safety car is called\, the odds on drivers who had fallen behind often shorten sharply\, while the leader’s odds may extend slightly to reflect the reset conditions. \nPit stop strategy is another live betting variable that experienced punters track closely. In Supercars\, teams make strategic decisions about when to pit relative to the broader field\, and these decisions are often triggered by safety car periods or early mechanical concerns. A driver who pits under a safety car and rejoins with fresh tyres in a strong track position will typically see their win odds shorten in the live market. Understanding the sequence of events — safety car called\, pit lane opens\, teams make decisions\, positions shuffle — and being able to anticipate how bookmakers will respond to each stage gives live bettors a narrow window to act before the market reprices. \nProposition markets — often called “prop bets” — offer additional wagering options beyond the outright race result. Common Supercars prop markets include: the number of safety cars during a race\, whether the race will be won from pole position\, the margin of victory\, and which manufacturer (Ford or Chevrolet) will win the event. These markets are typically offered with higher margins than outright race markets\, meaning the bookmaker’s edge is larger. However\, for punters with specific knowledge — for example\, a detailed understanding of how often safety cars are deployed at a particular circuit based on historical data — prop markets can occasionally offer value that outright markets do not. \nThe safety car frequency market is particularly interesting at Bathurst\, where the combination of a narrow circuit\, high car density\, and the physical demands of the mountain section create conditions that historically produce multiple safety car deployments per race. Between 2010 and 2023\, the Bathurst 1000 averaged more than three safety car periods per race\, with several editions recording five or more. Bookmakers set their safety car markets based on this historical data\, but they also factor in current car specifications and the specific competitive dynamics of a given year’s field. When a new technical regulation has just been introduced — as was the case with Gen3 in 2023 — the uncertainty around car reliability can push expected safety car frequency higher\, and the market may or may not fully account for this. \nFor Australian fans new to Supercars betting\, the key takeaway from all of this is that the odds presented by bookmakers are not arbitrary numbers — they are the product of modelling\, historical data\, market sentiment\, and real-time information processing. Learning to read them critically\, rather than simply accepting them as a measure of who is most likely to win\, is the foundational skill that separates informed wagering from guesswork. Resources that explain the mechanics behind the numbers — including how overrounds are constructed\, how live markets respond to race events\, and how circuit-specific factors influence pricing — provide genuine educational value for punters who want to engage with the Supercars market thoughtfully and with a clear understanding of what they are doing. \nSupercars betting is ultimately a discipline that rewards patience\, data literacy\, and a willingness to look beyond the headline odds. The series’ unique combination of tight technical regulations\, multiple race formats\, endurance events\, and a compact field of highly skilled drivers creates a market environment that is genuinely complex and therefore genuinely interesting for bettors who take the time to understand it. Whether approaching individual race markets\, championship futures\, or live proposition bets\, the punters who perform best over the long run are those who treat each market as a probability exercise rather than a loyalty test — and who have taken the time to understand why the numbers on the screen look the way they do.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/dementia-caregivers-support-group-roswell-ga/2025-02-27/
LOCATION:Roswell United Methodist Church\, 814 Mimosa Blvd\, Roswell\, GA\, 30075\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/people-in-a-support-group.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250227T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250227T153000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240715T201417Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240715T201417Z
UID:10000754-1740663000-1740670200@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection Café (Memory Cafe) - Alpharetta
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our Connection Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation and Senior Service of North Fulton  \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners \nWhen: Every Second & Fourth Thursday Of The Month \nTime: 1:30-3:30 PM \nWhere: Alpharetta | Crabapple Senior Center \n12624 Broadwell Rd\, Alpharetta\, GA 30004 \nFor More Info or to Sponsor A Cafe\, Contact Alyss Amster: 678-332-1711 or
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-cafe-memory-cafe-alpharetta-3/2025-02-27/
LOCATION:Alpharetta | Crabapple Senior Center\, 12624 Broadwell Rd\, Alpharetta\, GA\, 30004\, United States
CATEGORIES:Connection Café
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/elderly-people-playing-board-game.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250228T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250228T153000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240823T153756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240823T153757Z
UID:10001126-1740749400-1740756600@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Connection Café (Memory Cafe) - Roswell
DESCRIPTION:Join Us For Our Connection Café!\nPresented by Dementia Spotlight Foundation and Senior Service of North Fulton  \nWho: Those Living w/ Dementia & Their Care Partners \nWhen: First & Third Friday Of The Month \nTime: 1:30-3:30 PM \nWhere: Roswell Senior Center \n1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA 30076 \nFor More Info or to Sponsor A Cafe\, Contact Alyss Amster: 678-332-1711 or alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/connection-cafe-memory-cafe-3-2-2/2025-02-28/
LOCATION:Roswell Senior Center\, 1250 Warsaw Rd\, Roswell\, GA\, 30076\, United States
CATEGORIES:Connection Café
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/2.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Alyss Amster":MAILTO:alyss@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250303T130000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250303T150000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20230601T171618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240208T165218Z
UID:10000378-1741006800-1741014000@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Brooksville\,  FL)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Brooksville\, FL\nIn partnership with United Way of Hernando County. \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 1st Monday of the month at Oak Hill Senior Living\, located at 7411 Cortez Oaks Blvd Brooksville\, FL 34613. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nRSVP HERE \nFor more information\, please contact Gary Joseph LeBlanc at gary@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org or call (352) 345-6270.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-brooksville-fl/2025-03-03/
LOCATION:Oak Hill Senior Living\, 7411 Cortez Oaks Blvd\, Brooksville\, GA\, 34613\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/4.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Gary Joseph LeBlanc":MAILTO:gary@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250304T103000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250304T123000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240208T175130Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240208T182851Z
UID:10000431-1741084200-1741091400@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Hudson\, FL)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Hudson\, FL \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 1st and 3rd Tuesday of the month at Hudson First United Methodist Church\, located at 13123 US 19. Hudson\, FL 34667. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nFor more information or to RSVP\, please contact Laura Arnold at larnold32@gmail.com or call (727) 808-2053.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-hudson-fl-2/2025-03-04/
LOCATION:Hudson First United Methodist Church\, 13123 US-19\, Hudson\, GA\, 34667\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/3.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Laura Arnold":MAILTO:larnold32@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250304T103000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250304T123000
DTSTAMP:20260417T060850
CREATED:20240209T030819Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240209T030819Z
UID:10000542-1741084200-1741091400@dementiaspotlightfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Caregivers Support Group (Hudson\, FL)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Dementia Spotlight Foundation’s Caregivers Support Group @ Hudson\, FL \nThis supportive gathering offers caregivers the opportunity to connect with others who understand the challenges and rewards of dementia caregiving. Gain valuable knowledge and practical tips to help you navigate the journey of caring for a loved one with dementia. \nThe Caregivers Support Group takes place every 1st and 3rd Tuesday of the month at Hudson First United Methodist Church\, located at 13123 US 19. Hudson\, FL 34667. It is a safe and welcoming environment where caregivers can share their experiences\, and find emotional support from fellow caregivers. \nFor more information or to RSVP\, please contact Laura Arnold at larnold32@gmail.com or call (727) 808-2053.
URL:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/event/caregivers-support-group-hudson-fl-4/2025-03-04/
LOCATION:Hudson First United Methodist Church\, 13123 US-19\, Hudson\, GA\, 34667\, United States
CATEGORIES:Care Partner Support Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dementiaspotlightfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/3.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Laura Arnold":MAILTO:larnold32@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR