Sask. Polytechnic helps young Saskatoon boy live Halloween dream
A trip to Disneyland wouldn’t have sparked the same excitement and ear-to-ear smile painted on the face of a seven-year-old Saskatoon boy the same way a motorcycle attachment for his wheelchair did.
“This is a dream come true for him. It warms my heart. It’s unbelievable, all these people I don’t know any of them and for them to do this for him, words can’t express how I’m feeling right now,” said Henry Craig’s mother Lexie. “I had tears in my eyes just because of the look on Henry’s face, he was so excited, and I’m so excited for him.”
On the day before trick-or-treating, Henry, who has cerebral palsy and is bound to a wheelchair, was fitted with a custom motorcycle attachment for his dream Halloween costume. It’s all thanks to his grandmother Annie Bradford who wanted to do something special for her grandson who loves motorcycles.
Bradford called up her good friend Rob Gilchrist who just so happened to be the department head of the industrial mechanic program Saskatchewan Polytechnic, who agreed to the favour in a heartbeat.


