Top-hat grandad completes mammoth 124-mile challenge for The Salvation Army

It was no walk in the park for an 81-year-old grandad who completed a mammoth feat - first walking 112 miles before finishing the Great North Run - all to raise money to help The Salvation Army support survivors of modern slavery.
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Andy Peddle’s eight-day charity walk started from his home in Wakefield on September 2 and ended in Newcastle on Saturday, September 9 before he took part in the UK’s biggest half marathon on Sunday.

Wearing his signature top hat, Andy’s route took in Leeds, Harrogate, Ripon, Northallerton, Darlington and Sunderland, during the late summer heatwave last week, ending with a welcome party at The Salvation Army’s Newcastle City Temple Corps the day before the race.

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Andy, who has two children and four grandchildren, who joined him on route, said: “It was no walk in the park! I think I underestimated how difficult it would be and at the end of each day I definitely needed a lie down!

Andy Peddle on his walk.Andy Peddle on his walk.
Andy Peddle on his walk.

“The toughest day was when we ended up having to do 20 miles. Psychologically I was prepared for 16, but then my walking partner said we had another four miles to reach our next stop.

"Somehow that knocks the stuffing out of you, but we got there. It was lovely to reach Newcastle City Temple Corps on the last day where I had a welcome party.

“The Great North Run was astonishing.

" A couple of miles from the finish line there was a torrential downpour and at the bottom of the hill a great big puddle you could have done backstroke in! I ran more of it than I expected so finished a lot quicker than I thought I would, managing it in three and a half hours.

Andy during the Great North Run.Andy during the Great North Run.
Andy during the Great North Run.
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"The atmosphere was amazing. There were people running who were mourning a loss and then you have all the crowds cheering you on, it was very emotionally charged, an incredible experience.”

No stranger to a challenge, Andy completed the London Marathon in 2015. He also did a 7,760 mile walkathon a decade ago visiting more than 900 Salvation Army churches, charity shops and 92 football grounds. In the 1990s he completed an 8,020 mile walk to raise funds for victims of drought in Ethiopia, Sudan and Somalia.

The idea of this challenge was to have others walk alongside him as he aimed to raise £8,100 - a hundred pounds for each year of his life.

Andy, who volunteered with The Salvation Army as a driver transporting and accompanying rescued survivors to safe houses, said: “I feel passionately about doing this because I am passionate about what The Salvation Army does and what it stands for.

Reaching Newcastle on his walk.Reaching Newcastle on his walk.
Reaching Newcastle on his walk.
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"It is the church I belong to, but it has this vision of helping other people which has been there since the start. I’m glad to be part of that vision and do my own little bit, to do it at my age and encourage other people to do it too.”

To sponsor Andy visit his fundraising page here.