Islander bikes across Canada to help children fight cancer - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 01:33 AM | Calgary | -16.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Islander bikes across Canada to help children fight cancer

Nathan Carter launched his cycling fundraising trip six days ago in Vancouver, with a goal to raise $5,000 for the SickKids Foundation. He's hoping to reach P.E.I. by the end of September.

A journey of cycling over 6,000 kilometres from B.C. to P.E.I.

Carter holds up his bike on the first day of the 6,000-km bike ride in White Rock, B.C. There's a QR code on his shirt that people can scan to donate. (Submitted by Nathan Carter)

These days Nathan Carter wakes up at about five, then by six he gets on the road and continues his trek biking home to P.E.I. from British Columbia.

"It's been a heck of a heatwave out here in B.C., so I'm trying to race the sun right now," he said from Kamloops.

Carter launched the trip six days ago in Vancouver, with the goal of raising $5,000 for the SickKids Foundation. He hopes to reach P.E.I. in about two months.

"I hope I raise some money for the SickKids Foundation, but the ultimate goal is to inspire," he said.

"You can help out and do things in different ways, be it volunteering at a soup kitchen or whatever it maybe. You don't have to do some big grand gesture, like what I'm so fortunate to be able to do here."

Carter on day four of the trip, riding up B.C.'s Jackass Mountain. (Submitted by Nathan Carter)

Carter is one of more than 15,000 people who have registered for this year's Great Cycle Challenge, which started in 2016. It encourages riders to set a personal riding goal throughout August and the money raised will go to childhood cancer research, said the foundation in an email.

'Anything I can do to help out those little warriors'

Carter said he had always wanted to cycle across the country for charity, inspired by his friend Matt Lawrence,who biked across Canadain support of Parkinson's research in 2011.

And he wanted to raise money to help children fight cancer a cause that is close to his heart, he said.

"Cancer has affected probably everyone. And definitely myself, I've lost a lot of family members. Just recently my father-in-law passed away last year due to cancer, and, specifically with children, it's awful," he said.

"Anything I can do to help out those little warriors, that's great."

When Carter is done biking for the day, his wife picks him up and they drive to a nearby campsite and stay there for the night. (Submitted by Nathan Carter)

He started to get himself back in shapelast summer. This year he took two months off from work to go on the 6,000-km bike trek.

He said one of the challenges he's facing is the heat, so he wakes up early to get on the road and shuts down between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. to avoid it.

Another is wildfires, which are taking place across B.C., he said.

"If there is a fire, the biggest concern on my end would be the smoke inhalation, because when you're bikingyou do breathe quite heavy," he said. "But the air quality seems good right now."

His wife Enooyaq Sudlovenick is traveling along in an RV. Wherever he ends up at night, she picks him up and they drive to a nearby campsite and stay there. In the morning, she then drives him to the location where he needs to start.

Sudlovenick said she decided to be her husband's "support vehicle" along the trip because it's been one of his dreams since they first met.

"We got married last year and he came with me to Winnipeg to make one of my dreams come true, which is to get my PhD and I was like, 'OK, well, why don't we do it in 2022?Like this big trip, because we're moving back to P.E.I. anyways?"

But she has a lot of mixed emotions seeing her husband off on the road every day, she said.

"I'm scared for him being on the Trans Canada because there's so much traffic," she said. "But mostly, I'm excited for him that he's so excited."

These days, Sudlovenick can't put her phone away because Carter might need something, like when his bike broke down two days ago so she brought him the backup bike.

"My wife is an absolute rockstar," Carter said.

Coming home

Carter spends about eight hours a day on the road. He said it's "a very isolating experience," but it's no different from him and his wife alone in their apartment in Winnipeg during the pandemic.

At least this way, he will eventually return to his hometown something that keeps him going so far, he said.

"Getting back home to P.E.I. is the number one because, you know, you've got ADL milk and the best potatoes you can get, and my family and loved ones as well."

Pictured here is Carter's bike as he takes a break on day five of the trip in Kamloops. (Submitted by Nathan Carter)

He hopes to complete the ride and be on the Island by the end of September. Carter has raised more than $3,000 so far, which is over half way to his fundraising goal something he didn't expect.

"The generosity and support I've received from Islanders and across the country so far has been pretty mind-blowing to me."