Regina Leader-Post

FOUR THINGS ON A SCOTTISH MOUNTAINS QUEST

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1 COPING

For 81-year-old Nick Gardner, who moved with his wife Janet from suburban England to a remote corner of the Scottish highlands at age 50, climbing mountains has become more than just a boyhood dream. Two years after being diagnosed with Alzheimer's in 2018, Janet, a former teacher who also suffers from osteoporos­is, became so ill she needed 24-hour care. Gardner was devastated, and decided he needed a challenge to help him cope.

2 THE CHALLENGE

The task he set himself would challenge many half his age — to climb all 282 of Scotland's “Munros,” or mountains above 3,000 feet, in 1,200 days. He has completed 177 so far. “When it got too much for me to handle, when she went into hospital and care ... I just didn't know what to do. We've been used to each other's company all 24 / 7 for 30 years. And then suddenly it's gone,” he said. “Doing this climbing has enabled me to refocus to some extent. I had to find something of this type, otherwise I'd have had ... mental health problems. I know that.”

3 EXCITING

At the windswept summit of Buachaille Etive Mòr, a Scottish peak more than 1,020 metres above sea level, Gardner stops to gaze down at the rugged peaks, lochs and valleys through the drifting clouds. “It's so exciting, every time I still feel like a little boy,” he said. “I need my hat and gloves on, and my windproof jacket, but it's absolutely magnificen­t. I'd much sooner be here than in a centrally heated house.”

4 RAISING MONEY

In honour of Janet, Gardner is raising money for the charities Alzheimer Scotland and the Royal Osteoporos­is Society. Learning about social media as he goes, he records his progress on Facebook and Instagram. Many of the messages on his fundraisin­g webpage, where he has raised more than $51,000 of a $68,500 target, are from people he has met on the mountainsi­de.

“I think (it was) the third mountain I climbed where I just happened to be chatting to other climbers and I just happened to mention what I was doing for this challenge. And they couldn't believe it ...

They were amazed,” he said. “Obviously, I thought, I've got something here. I really have. And I didn't realize the potential. And so ever since then, when I see people on the hill,

I stop them and have a little conversati­on with them, tell them what I'm doing.”

 ?? RUSSELL CHEYNE/REUTERS ?? Climber Nick Gardner ascends Buachaille Etive Mor last week, one of Scotland's 282 `Munros', or mountains above
3,000 feet, which he has vowed to climb in honour of his wife, Janet, who is suffering from severe osteoporos­is.
RUSSELL CHEYNE/REUTERS Climber Nick Gardner ascends Buachaille Etive Mor last week, one of Scotland's 282 `Munros', or mountains above 3,000 feet, which he has vowed to climb in honour of his wife, Janet, who is suffering from severe osteoporos­is.

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