Weekend Herald

Following in firefighte­r dad’s gruelling footsteps

- Ben Leahy Photo / Dean Purcell

Tony Scott The challenge is the closest you feel [compared to when] you’ve really been working hard at a fire.

You could say Auckland’s Sky Tower firefighte­r challenge is in Harry Scott’s DNA.

The 16-year-old will today debut alongside 950 firefighte­rs racing up the tower’s 1100-odd stairs to raise money for the Leukaemia and Blood Cancer charity.

And he’s likely to know better than most what to expect, having gone up and down those stairs back in 2003 when aged 2.

Back then, Harry’s dad, Tony Scott — an Auckland Airport Rescue Fire Brigade member — was busy organising the first Firefighte­r Sky Tower Stair Challenge and began training with mates in a Queen St high-rise.

With firefighte­rs expected to lug 25kg of equipment during the race, Scott hit upon the idea of combining babysittin­g duties with training commitment­s.

So he simply strapped his son into a harness on his back and sweated and huffed up and down the stairs with young Harry, seemingly unfazed by the bumpy ride, soon nodding off behind him.

It meant Harry was almost preordaine­d to enter the race and 14 years later he sees only one thing as remaining to be done.

“I want to beat my dad’s time,” Harry said.

Although the race is shaping up as a showdown between the Scotts, the event will also hold meaning for the estimated 21,000 Kiwis living with blood cancer.

Every day, six New Zealanders are diagnosed with a blood cancer with many relying on the Leukaemia and Blood Cancer charity to provide them support.

In turn, the charity — which receives no funding from the Government — has come to rely on the Sky Tower stair challenge as its main source of cash.

Since Scott organised the first race with 88 firefighte­rs taking part more than 14 years ago, the challenge has raised more than $6 million for the charity and grown from strength to strength.

Last year alone, it raised more than $1.2m.

A prodigious fundraiser, who was awarded a Queen’s Service Medal in 2016 for his efforts, Scott said he got the idea for organising an Auckland race after taking part in a similar firefighte­r’s event at Seattle’s Space Needle tower.

He said he “weirdly” enjoyed the gruelling Seattle race, after it led him to get back in shape by losing 20kg.

With the Seattle race fundraisin­g in aid of those suffering from blood cancers — and because his grandmothe­r also passed away from leukaemia — it made sense to do the same in Auckland.

“I love organising events and so the two just went hand in hand,” he said.

“One of the things I am the most proud of, is when I first met the CEO of Leukaemia and Blood Cancer, they had one part-time nurse, now they have 11 full-time nurses,” he said.

The heat of climbing the Sky Tower stairs in full firefighte­r equipment also has practical applicatio­ns.

“The challenge is the closest you feel [compared to when] you’ve really been working hard at a fire,” Scott said.

“It is the feeling of that heat build-up and so it is a good endurance test for a firefighte­r.”

And as to Harry, Scott isn’t about to make way for the next generation just yet.

“I am just hoping I beat him one time, so I can say, ‘Hey, remember when’,” he said.

 ??  ?? Family pride will be on the line when Tony Scott and 16-year-old son, Harry, charge up the Sky Tower today. Inset, Tony carrying Harry in the challenge as a 2-year-old.
Family pride will be on the line when Tony Scott and 16-year-old son, Harry, charge up the Sky Tower today. Inset, Tony carrying Harry in the challenge as a 2-year-old.

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