The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Fundraisin­g walker ends up on one knee at journey’s end

Arbroath man completes 117-mile Fife route for charity

- GRAEME STRACHAN gstrachan@thecourier.co.uk

A Tayside man who was once given just four weeks to live has completed a gruelling 117-mile challenge before falling to his knee.

However, it was not exhaustion that caused David Ogilvie’s dramatic completion of the Fife Coastal Path.

The 35-year-old from Arbroath, who suffers from Crohn’s disease, used the occasion to ask his girlfriend Judith Ann Hunter to marry him.

Mr Ogilvie carried the engagement ring on every step of the eight-day trek and it was made worthwhile when Judith Ann, 35, from Broughty Ferry, agreed to become his wife.

He said: “During the walk I did have points when I struggled with pains in my feet and the thought of proposing did help me focus and will me along.

“It’s true I never felt anyone would love me, having Crohn’s disease, but I was lucky I met Judith three years ago and we got on so well from the start.

“I spent New Year in Ninewells

“I want to show that it can get better and you can live life and enjoy it. DAVID OGILVIE

Hospital with a virus that really floored me and Judith was amazing for me at that time, through my surgeries and so many times in hospital – at that point I knew I wanted her in my life forever.

“The fact when I proposed and Judith said yes it means so much. We are already massively close but now our relationsh­ip moves forward in a much stronger way.”

Mr Ogilvie, who was diagnosed with Crohn’s disease aged just 18, has taken on a series of challenges since he recovered from life-saving surgery to remove his large bowel in 2014, having been told he would have four weeks to live if he did not have the operation.

In 2017 he marked three years since the surgery by climbing two Munros in one day – Mayar and Driesh in Glen Doll.

Mr Ogilvie, who works at AM Phillip’s Trucktech in Forfar, has since managed to climb a series of other Munros.

In 2018 he walked 96 miles over six days along the West Highland Way, camping each night to raise money for the Crohn’s and Colitis UK charity.

The Fife Coastal Walk was his biggest challenge yet and Mr Ogilvie said it was something he couldn’t have imagined being able to do a few years ago.

He said: “The pain and suffering the illness brings is difficult to deal with – I want to show that it can get better and you can live life and enjoy it.”

 ?? Picture: Paul Reid. ?? David Ogilvie and fiancée Judith Ann Hunter are planning to tie the knot.
Picture: Paul Reid. David Ogilvie and fiancée Judith Ann Hunter are planning to tie the knot.

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