Earlier this month we reported on a Critical Mass ride which saw 150 cyclists ride from London to donate bikes to migrants living in the Calais refugee camp known as the Jungle. This week, Imogen Pettitt has written on the Bristol Bike Project website having also delivered bikes there.

Pettitt explains that she was inspired to take bikes after she saw the impact of the camp being moved 7km out of town earlier in the year.

“It was only because I was looking for them that I saw the hundreds of tents, hidden in the sand dunes. It hit me then that they were miles away from anything they would need to improve their situation, miles from the charities and offices they’d need if they wanted to do the paperwork for an asylum claim, miles from medical help, miles from public phones/sim card shops, food shops, anything. The constant walking would get exhausting.”

Pettitt subsequently approached The Bristol Bike Project for bikes and tools to take down in her van.

The long-standing project aims to provide free bikes to people who wouldn't otherwise have the opportunity to own one. This has typically been within the city, where unwanted bikes that would most likely end up in landfill are made roadworthy again via the project's ‘Earn-A-Bike Workshops’. Individuals work alongside a mechanic to refurbish a donated bike, learning basic mechanical skills in the process.

The organisation is currently accepting donations of bikes, parts or tools (but not clothes or bedding) ahead of another trip to Calais in October. Anyone who can contribute is asked to bring what they can to its premises at 7 City Road.

After making her trip to the camp, Pettitt said:

“I’d build them a house if I could but I am not a builder. I’d lobby the government but I don’t know how. I remember how exhausting it was walking everywhere with my young son and how much easier life became when I got a bike. There are so many obstacles stacked in front of these people – inadequate shelter, language barriers, trauma, insufficient medical attention and sanitation, forcing people to walk 7k in and out of town whenever they have a hoop to jump through is just cruel. A bike is the only bit of freedom I can give these refugees and I give it wholeheartedly.”