Injured Yorkshire soldier Ben Parkinson completes 1,000-mile charity cycle ride with team of amputee veterans
The 35-year-old, of Bessacarr in Doncaster, took part in Operation Ride UK, which saw the team join firefighters in riding from John O'Groats to Land's End over 13 days using push and hand bikes and specially-adapted tandems.
The veterans cycled 80 miles a day through a heatwave at the beginning of the challenge and torrential rain at the end.
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Hide AdAlong the way, the group had a number of celebrity endorsements including Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, and Oscar-winning actor Eddie Redmayne.
The team took on the challenge to raise awareness of motor neurone disease after their team-mate John Chart was diagnosed with the condition last year.
They have so far raised more than £14,500 for both motor neurone disease and charity Pilgrim Bandits, which organises gruelling expeditions for injured service and emergency personnel, many of whom are amputees or have PTSD, and who helped organise the ride.
Mr Parkinson - who is a Pilgrim Bandits patron and former Lance Bombardier, is one of the most seriously injured to survive the battlefield and lost both legs and suffered brain damage while serving in Afghanistan in 2006.
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Hide AdHe said: “It’s been a long time in lockdown and I hadn’t seen anybody for months —I couldn’t wait to be part of the team again. There’s always someone struggling and this was my chance to support John to get him on his way.”
A firefighter for 26 years, Mr Chart, from Beckenham, Kent, said he was “devastated” by his diagnosis but determined to fight.
The 49-year-old used a specially-adapted tandem throughout the challenge and was joined by people along the way, including his 14-year-old son Christopher and wife Arlene.