Three corners of the world

The team is all over the place at the moment. I am in San Diego with the family at the Medical Rehabilitation & Kinematics Lab as we get intensive therapy for our daughter Zara. Tom is back in Australia working and Georgie has been in Italy doing some lunatic swimming holiday that would scare the hell out of me but then again my swimming abilities are up there with my ballet skills.

Whilst in San Diego, I am running every day to get the mileage up and in the glorious sun shine with low humidity, I am finding it a breeze. I am averaging 15km per day and rarely feel my heart rate being challenged in any form. I am also taking the opportunity to load up on kit as the stores here are great for the outdoors and the prices are a lot cheaper than Singapore!

I signed up for a training weekend in Hong Kong for the Sahara race at the end of August. The weekend will be a 30km each day run with pack and overnight camp out. It will be a great opportunity to test kit, question the experts and see where I am fitness wise before I head into the final month before heading to the Sahara.

On the 3rd August I will be heading to Hotham with Tom and Georgie. We will be spending three days on the technical side of cross country skiing before we head off into the mountains for a mini expedition to test our skills in the snow. I am looking forward to it as it will be the first time we have trained together and the first time I have been on skies!

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Polar team trip to Cambodia

This week, Tom, Georgie and I headed to Children’s Surgical Centre in Cambodia to see first hand the charity we would be looking to help through our North Pole Challenge. Our aim is simple, we are hoping to raise enough funds to provide for 2,500 operations and this trip was to give the guys an opportunity to meet the team at CSC.

Arriving on Monday night, we were at CSC by Tuesday morning at 8am and on the rounds with Dr Jim. The hospital was at half strength, as the US Navy hospital ship Mercy was in Cambodia and CSC had provided 75 staff to assist. This was my fifth trip this year with CSC being the charity Vanda Promotions also supports but it was no less interesting. After morning rounds and Dr Jim showing the guys what was going to be on the rosta for the theatre that morning, Tom elected to view some surgery and Georgie and I went with Jim as he worked his way through the cases that had arrived this morning. As always it was fascinating with a wide variety of children and young adults with anything from genetic or neurological disorders through to non union bone breaks. Jim, as always, dispensed his judgement with compassion to the patients and a sense of purpose to the surgical team.

After lunch we elected for some theatre time and witnessed the insertion of a bar down the tibular of a man that had lived with a severely broken leg for 18 years. What is worse is that he was delivered by the US medical team as someone who needed an amputation. One hour later and following a lot of  banging with a hammer, the job was completed. The following day, we actually witnesses this man walking !

That evening, we had dinner with Jim and his wife and caught up on other stuff. Jim has two brothers and a sister in California where I head tomorrow so we were organising to see them. We got to understand the challenges CSC was having at present and that they had been granted permission to build an extension that would allow them to increase the work they were doing.

The following morning saw Georgie and Tom spend the time with Dr Jim on his rounds as well as assessing the intake for the day. They got to understand the incredible range of surgeries CSC will undertake, as well as see for themselves how life changing these free operations can be for the children. It wasn’t always easy for them to to accept what they saw but they both got a great understanding of the skills the team at CSC has.

That afternoon we travelled to the Cambodian Acid Survivors house about 45 mins from the city. CASC is part of the CSC and is home to survivors of the horrific acid attacks that take place in Cambodia. I had the opportunity in 2008 and 09 to see the old CASC house and in 2010 my visits have allowed me to see the incredible progress at the new home that allows survivors to get physical, mental and psychological therapy .

All in all the trip cemented our resolve to make the challenge worthwhile by supporting CSC. The added benefit was the time we got to spend together which was good natured, full of humour and supportive. We are three very different people but similar in many ways. We clearly get on with each other and we can already see we bond well as a team. In the airport on Wednesday, as we prepared to travel home, we enjoyed reviewing and lambasting the web sites of the competitors we would face at the pole. There will be many well prepared teams with youth and in some cases experience on their side but I for one, would not bet against Team CSC. This team is talented, driven and competitive and driven by a purpose that is well beyond a winners trophy.

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Our team is complete!

Back in March, when Tom and I sat down to consider who we could approach as our team mate, we both knew what we wanted.  We knew that someone we were going to spend so much time needed to be someone we got on with first and foremost. It would be one thing spending a month in North Pole in a tent with each other but there is also the training trips planned to Victoria and Norway. Secondly, we needed someone with the competitive spirit, as we are not entering this race to just complete it. With all that considered, we both came up with the same person in Georgie Jones, a strong athlete with a great track record in triathlon and the half Iron Man distance. Tom, who still works with Georgie, had a call with her to gauge interest and it was strong. Georgie took the weekend to think it over and I met with her on the Monday to answer any questions she may have. However, Georgie had given it thought and felt the time commitment would be too much having taken on a new role and with a travel schedule that would see her move through more than 3 continents some months. We were back to square 1!

Roll on three weeks and Georgie was beginning to try and find solutions and like Tom and I, was keen to find a justification to all her training. Conversations re-started and solutions were found so we are thrilled to be able to announce our team in now complete with Georgie Jones, Tom Clipston and myself. We met for the first time as a team this week with the legendary Marcel who helped us get our strength and conditioning program underway.  On Monday next week we will depart on a three day mission to Children’s Surgical Centre in Cambodia so I can introduce the guys to the team over there. Our fundraising aim for this expedition is 2,000 operations to be funded for the children so I am eager for the guys to see what we will working towards.

We get back at midnight on the 16th and I have one day in Singapore before I depart for a month in the USA with the family as Zara has a month of intensive treatment and therapy at Medical Rehabilitation and Kinematics Lab in San Diego. When I return on the 19th July, I will have a week in Singapore before departing to Hotham, in Victoria, Australia where we will do some technical cross country training before setting off for a training trip in the mountains.

We will post some updates and pictures from Cambodia next week.

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