A married couple from Leeds will be spending this Christmas – and much of the New Year – riding a tandem the length of South America. And in undertaking the 10,000-mile journey, they hope to raise £10,000 for charity.
Tim and Naomi Steere, from Bramley, want to raise funds for the Foundation for the Study of Infant Death, a cause close to their hearts due to Mrs Steere having lost a brother to cot death.
On their page on the charity website justgiving.co.uk, the couple say that their trip will take them “10,000 miles from the world’s most southerly town across the driest desert, climbing to the highest capital city, before descending through the Amazon basin to complete the challenge on the Caribbean coast within six months.”
Local newspaper Armley Today says that the pair, who fly out to Argentina this week, will have to carry all their supplies for the journey in four panniers, which is the most the tandem bike can carry.
It added that the pair, who have been saving for the trip for several years and have given up their jobs – Mr Steere worked as a data analyst, his wife as a nurse – to undertake the expedition, will rent their home out while they are away.
According to 26-year-old Mr Steere, the couple chose to ride tandem instead of using separate bicycles “For the novelty of it. Also, it would be really frustrating if we were on separate bikes, one of us would always be chasing the other.”
They aim to complete 75 miles each day, and will take a fortnight’s break from the saddle once they reach halfway.
The volatile political landscape in certain parts of South America holds no fears for the couple, although others are proving more difficult to convince.
“We are trying to convince our parents that we will be fine and we won't get kidnapped in Colombia," Mr Steere told the newspaper, "but they are not buying it yet."
Donations can be made via the couple’s Just Giving page here.
Definitely pet-specific. A friend bought a child trailer to take their dog with them to work etc. Dog was interested but was young and very...
As it's often said -'the way to justify the building of a bridge is not too count the number of people swimming the crocodile infested river!'
Agreed on all counts. And it's the tacit assumption that as it's only a cycle lane it doesn't really matter anyway.
I used to go that way to work. It's nasty and congested. I doubt any changes will make the congestion worse.
Both bikes are both 1x
I think you need to put some drop bars and slick tyres on a full-suspension MTB
Cambridgeshire villagers say parking problem is 'ridiculous' as buses squeeze past cars...
But who's going to lend them their Pinarello?!
Maybe Simoninspalding can reassure them - being in a Holland is OK....
Looks like it's happening.......