"My ride from London to
Paris was a doubled
edged event for me. A
practical fund raiser to
thank CRY for the help
they have given my
family since loosing my
son Nolan Foley in 2008.
The other to commemorate
my son's life, and work
through my grief with a
positive action.
I entered the event on
my own. The other 111
riders all had
their causes but we all
shared a
common attitude, so
before a pedal was
turned I was chatting
and feeling part of a
group.
The first day was long.
Registration and
briefing at 6am. The
ride starting at
7am from Crystal Palace
. The route to Dover was
fully sign posted, with
official water stops
morning and
afternoon, and a buffet
style lunch stop at 55
miles. It’s a 95 mile
ride, which is more than
I had ridden in one day
before. It was demanding,
with the worst hills all
in the last 25
miles. Everyone made it
to Dover by the required
time of 4.30pm. The
ferry section took
some time (another
chance to meet others),
followed by a slow 40
minute ride to
the hotel in Calais .
That day finished at
about 10pm. With
that section under the
belt, although weary, I
felt the toughest day
was behind me.
Days 2 and 3 were
similar, covering close
to75 miles each day. All
via low traffic country
roads, passing
through small villages
(each seemed to have
a pretty church or town
hall to admire) with
historical content.
There were still many
hills to climb,
and often the riding was
difficult, as you carry
the previous day’s
weariness in your body.
On these days an early
breakfast and briefing
got me on the road by
8am. I was able to
reach the next
destination by 5pm, so
there was some evening
down time to sit and
drink a coffee; chat
with others about the
days ride, and about
each person’s charity
and motivations for the
ride.
The stop over’s were
Abbeville and Beauvais
. The ride from
Beauvais into Paris is
just about 55 miles.
Hence the 4th day
become's somewhat
easier. The surroundings
changed to suburban
traffic. The final
stretch was along the
banks of the Seine . The
last few miles being in
convoy. The whole party
guided and "escorted"
through the Saturday
Paris traffic by the
support vans. The Eiffel
tower was reached at the
pre-determined 4pm slot,
with friends and
relatives cheering
people home.
It was a challenge that
I am so glad I was able
to engage in, and I
achieved the personal
thinking time away from
life's "busyness" that I
wanted. I did
prepare for the event as
best I could, only
having weekends to
train, and by doing
other organised events
of 50-75 mile distances.
I am not a cyclist
historically. "
David Foley
You can still donate to
David's cycle by
visiting his Just Giving
page at
http://www.justgiving.com/david-foley0