June 8, 2024
Check-In starts at 7am.
Event starts at 8am.
We delivered the Ovid Days Color Run check to Children’s Hospital on September 30, 2024.This year our donation was $7,000!! Our total donations over the last 9 events is $48,500!! Thank you to everyone who donated, participated, and volunteered! ♥️💙
For Jeff Sittner, community is everything. It’s been that way since the day he was born into the close-knit
town of Ovid, Colorado, where he’s chosen to spend most of his life. Home to roughly 200 people, Ovid
rests just minutes from the Colorado-Nebraska border and is the type of place where there are no
strangers. When Jeff was born with several heart defects the entire community stepped in to support his
family as they navigated trips to and from Children's Hospital Colorado in Denver. Now more than three
decades later the support hasn't wavered.
When Jeff was born there were no signs of heart issues. It wasn't until weeks later that he started to
turn blue and was rushed to the hospital. “They didn’t have the technology then that they do now,” Jeff
explained, “Now they would know about the heart defect before a child is born.”
At six weeks old he underwent his first of many heart surgeries. Five years later, doctors performed the
most serious surgery yet, telling Jeff's parents he had a thirty percent chance of making it off the
operating table. He was at the hospital for three months.
Over the years Jeff has undergone more than a dozen heart surgeries to reform his heart and
restructure his arteries. He's overcome more health battles in 37 years than most experience in a
lifetime, yet his outlook is one of gratefulness and a desire to give back.
Paying It Forward: The Ovid Days Color Run
After spending months of his life at Children's Hospital Colorado, Jeff has nothing but positive things to
say. While some may dread returning to a place where multiple hardships ensued, he loves the doctors
and nurses he’s treated by during his visits.
“The atmosphere is different, they really know how to connect with their patients,” said Jeff. "I still see
the same surgeon that operated on me as a child, no one knows me better."
It was for this reason, the Sittner family felt the need to give back. They all had been positively impacted
by the hospital's care and wanted to return the favor. They were sitting around chatting one day as they
often do when they had the idea to start a Color Run. The Sittners quickly started planning their first-
ever fundraiser and between requesting road closures with the local police department and gathering
donations, to securing t-shirt orders and volunteers, no need was left unmet.
"The community embraced it really well," said Jeff. "They've let us do whatever we need to do. Local
organizations volunteer, the store donates water, we close off the highway for runners. Someone even
drives around on a four-wheeler to bring the participants water."
The Ovid Days Color Run takes place every June and along the way, volunteers douse participants from head-to-toe in different colored powder.
After the race participants and volunteers enjoy homemade breakfast burritos with ingredients donated
from the local grocery store and prepared by the Sittner family. As the day goes on residents and visitors
enjoy live music, food trucks, a softball tournament as a part of the town's annual Ovid Days.
At the end of it all, Jeff and his wife, Anne, hand deliver a check to Children's in Denver. Since it began in
2015, they've donated just over $41,000 to The Heart Institute at Children’s Hospital Colorado.
In addition to coordinating the race, Jeff donates his time and testimony to the hospital. He visits
children with heart conditions like his own and shares his experience. "It's nice to reassure their parents
that their child, while they'll go through struggles, can live a full life," Jeff shared. "I've had parents tell
me that they thought their child's life was over but seeing me gave them hope."
Looking at Jeff, you would never know what he's been through. Although he still has frequent visits to
the hospital, he's been able to live a normal life. He grew up playing baseball, went to college and is now
married with two children of his own. He loves to socialize and help around the community. He
volunteers on the town and cemetery boards, teaches high school Spanish, substitute teaches and
coaches the high school baseball team.
*Article originally wrote and printed by Highline Electric Association
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