Loughborough Echo

Pedal power to Paris nets £10,400 for Rainbows...

-

A FATHER who took on a 300-mile cycle challenge in memory of his five-month-old son has raised £10,400 for Rainbows Hospice.

As a lasting tribute to his son, Percy, Adam Higgins (39) and his workmates Nick Dimblebee (34) and Paul Riley (37), saddled up and cycled from London to Paris.

Percy, known to his parents Adam and Sarah and four-year-old brother Douglas as “Percy Perfect”, was born with a congenital heart defect and an extra chromosome. In April last year, at just one-weekold, Adam and Sarah were told their son’s condition was inoperable and they took him to Rainbows for end of life care. Percy, of Walcote, sadly lost his fight for life in September. As a lasting tribute, plasterers Adam, Nick and Paul - who called themselves Plasterers to Paris, cycled 300 miles from capital to capital over five days.

Adam was staggered with the amount raised. “I didn’t want to keep checking the fundraisin­g page until we got to Paris,” he said. “When I looked and saw it was over £10,000, I just cried.

“I had a few tears when I was on my own and at the end of the event because I did it for Percy and I did it for Rainbows.

“Percy was such a happy, bubbly little boy, I know he would be proud. Rainbows will always have a special place in my heart. You worry that a hospice will be a dark place but it is totally the opposite and everyone is so nice.”

“I would like to thank everyone who has supported or sponsored me, I have been totally overwhelme­d by it all. I couldn’t have done this with two better people either, we have a stronger friendship.”

 ??  ?? ■ Paul Riley, Nick Dimblebee and Adam Higgins celebrate in Paris after their cycle ride from London for Rainbows Hospice.
■ Paul Riley, Nick Dimblebee and Adam Higgins celebrate in Paris after their cycle ride from London for Rainbows Hospice.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom