BOXING DAY
DIP NO DROP IN THE OCEAN AS DOG LOVER BRAVES THE ELEMENTS TO RAISE FUNDS FOR
HOMELESS HOUNDS!
An animal lover and her dog have undertaken the ultimate challenge and leapt into the Irish Sea on Boxing day to raise money for Dogs Trust. Whilst the rest of Wales were recovering from over indulgence on Christmas Day, Laura Lacey, a Veterinary Nurse for Dogs Trust and her dog Molly took to the freezing water, alongside colleague Louise Card, at the 33rd annual Llandudno Boxing day swim to raise over £1500 for Dogs Trust over a series of events.
This is just
one of many of Laura’s fundraising challenges as she has already taken
part in a metafit class dressed in a dog outfit and her next feat will see
cycle from London to Paris to raise further funds for the charity. Laura’s
commitment to dog welfare extends beyond her fundraising efforts as having
worked as part of Dogs Trust campaigns team in Wales for the
past year she sees first-hand the valuable work which her fundraising
efforts will help to support.
Laura
explains.” It was pretty chilly but raising funds for a cause I am so
passionate about was well worth it and Molly absolutely loved getting involved.
I’m really looking forward to the next challenge. Whenever training gets tough
I am quickly spurred on by the knowledge that all proceeds from the bike ride
will be going to Dogs Trust so we will be able to continue caring for as many
dogs as possible, until they find loving homes of their own. “
To help Laura
raise pounds for hounds please visit
28/04/2014: Laura has completed the London to Paris Cycle!
Wow
I'm exhausted, every muscle aches, blisters on my hands, no strength and red
raw in parts. But it was amazing! The friendships made through the sweat and
tears will last for sure.
We
got to crystal palace at 6am wed for briefing and left at 7. Glorious sunshine,
busy roads, traffic in London, then we hit the South Downs, hills that just
went up and up and up.... Water stop then more gentle till lunch. After lunch a
15 mile uphill before we reached the ridgeway! Killer hills and we finally
reached Dover, some of us missed our ferry though due to "detours"!
the crew did an Amazing job getting 24 of us on the next ferry and we finally
got to our hotels In Calais at 9,45! 106 miles done. Sleep.
Day
2 was beautiful sunshine, Huge hills, little villages, pretty churches all 76
miles from Calais to abbeville, through the Somme. Very emotional. The amount
of effort it took to get back on the saddle that second morning was amazing.
After the first 10 miles everything was numb again, my fingers barely move.
Day
3 abbeville to beauvais 65 miles ish. I cried the first 10 today though the
distances were getting shorter and the hills getting a little lower. I felt
nauseous all day. Focused on sugar and gaviscon. The fast boys were slowing
down too now so it became a little more sociable even including a quick pub
stop 10 miles from Town. This was fancy dress day. (I went as a bay watch
lifeguard) but it was entertaining riding with characters such as bananaman,
the three musketeers, captain caveman...
Final
day, only 50 ish miles from Paris, woke up to howling wind and horizontal rain
and it never stopped till 3pm! The cold wind cut to the core, the rain meant
the roads were saturated and slippy, my feet squelched in my trainers, stopping
to eat was out of the question (till we found a dry macdonalds) every movement
on the bike saddle hurt something. Thigh muscles were burning. We rode none
stop till a holding area in a park in Paris 4 miles from the Eiffel Tower.
Finally the sun came out and the wind and rain had gone. We waited till
everyone had arrived so all 160 could ride together the final leg. (Some
through injury etc hadn't ridden all day each day but did manage the last
section) A very emotional ride in for all of us. The crew did a rolling
roadblock for us supported by amazing French attitudes we rode through red
lights with police permission. The Eiffel Tower was an amazing sight to finally
see. So we did laps around it for friends and family to see. I cried a lot!
Seeing the relief on people's faces and the pride on achieving it for their
charities or loved ones lost and battling was truly astounding. A well earned
glass of champagne before a soak in the bath and dinner, drinks and dancing all
night.
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