Kidd likes how all the money raised in Hawke's Bay stays in Hawke's Bay - "helping our families and communities".
The kindergarten has also entered the Relay for Life on March 10 with four teachers and a number of parents.
The principal of Heretaunga Intermediate has offered to send students to act as marshalls.
About 1200 people are expected to take part in the Relay for Life in Hawke's Bay on March 10, joining more than four million people in more than 6000 global communities who take part every year.
The event has raised more than $900,000 over the past five years, said Hawke's Bay Cancer Society centre manager Trudy Kirk, who thinks it is a unique event in New Zealand, and across the world.
"It is specific to all of those in our community who have a cancer diagnosis, or who have survived or lost loved ones. Each year we are faced with having to raise $600,000 to $700,000 to provide our services, and this goes a long way to support that."
The Cancer Society received no government funding for its work, which aimed to make the cancer journey easier for all involved, she said.
The Hawke's Bay service covered from Wairoa to Central Hawke's Bay, offering anything from free transport to Palmerston North Hospital for treatment, to private and confidential in-home assistance, support groups for carers, health promotion, and education programmes such as SunSmart in schools and businesses, and smokefree initiatives.
• To donate, visit: rfl-hawkesbay-2018.everydayhero.com/nz/camberley-kids
• For more information and to enter a team, visit: www.relayforlife.org.nz/