Enjoy a keeper chat while observing as Aldabra tortoise training session.
Added by Upcoming Robot on October 19, 2009

Hi Grant
Not to be pedantic, but everyman has symbolic significance. The term, technically speaking, is not gender specific.
In literature and drama, the term everyman has come to mean an ordinary individual, with whom the audience or reader is supposed to be able to identify, and who is often placed in extraordinary circumstances. The name derives from a 15th century English morality play called Everyman.
The everyman character is written, so that the reader or audience can imagine themselves in the same situation without having to possess knowledge, skills, and abilities outside their everyday experience. Such characters react realistically in situations that are often taken for granted with traditional heroes.
Eve·ry·man
- noun
1. (italics) a 15th-century English morality play.
2. (usually lowercase) an ordinary person; the typical or average person.
–pronoun
3. everybody; everyone.
Random House Unabridged Dictionary, 2006.
Everyman or everyman
n. An ordinary person, representative of the human race.
The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition, 2000
I hope this is explanation is suffice. I could change the title of the event, but the term "everyman" has so much more symbolic significance than everyone. Everyone, is everyone, but everyman is the person in each of us that finds themselves in trying times and having to address issues with a scope that is outside of their normal everyday lives.
Regards
Grant Neufeld
Why has the title of this been set to the gendered “everyman” instead of the title on all the other 1day events which list it as “everyone”?