Charity cyclists finish Western Front Way challenge
- Published
A team of cyclists have completed their 1,000km (600 miles) trip through the World War One battlefields of France and Belgium.
Team Blind Dave, an eight-man group led by blind fundraiser Dave Heeley from West Bromwich, set off from the French-Swiss border on Saturday and completed the cycling marathon on Friday evening.
After three glorious days of weather, the riders faced torrential rain, bitter winds and muddy conditions in the days leading up to their arrival on the Belgian coast.
At the Menin Gate in Ypres, the cyclists remembered former West Bromwich Albion footballer Harold Bache, who was shot by a German sniper in 1916, with a commemorative cap and the laying of a wreath.
Mr Heeley, who's universally known as "Blind Dave", and rode a tandem, said: "It's been an incredible challenge.
"At some points, it was simply impossible to ride our bikes due to the mud and we encountered many sections that were rocky surfaces, so very difficult to ride on."
He paid tribute to his fellow cyclists who were all raising money for the Albion Foundation, the charitable arm of West Bromwich Albion Football Club.
"It's been an amazing experience for us all and I'm so proud of the lads and so thankful to them for supporting the challenge.
"And there are no words really to describe what it's been like this week visiting all these immaculate cemeteries with so many soldiers who paid the ultimate sacrifice."
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