Harrogate cyclist aiming to ride 1,000 km in 48 hours

A Harrogate business owner will be setting out on the challenge of a lifetime next week, inspired by the people who cared for his late aunt.

Simon Gregory is planning to ride 1,000 kilometres — more than 620 miles — in just 48 hours to raise money for Macmillan Cancer Support.

His aunt, Rev Ruth Scott, was cared for by a Macmillan nurse after being diagnosed with lymphoma until her death in 2019, aged 60.

Simon is no stranger to challenges, having completed a 288-mile ride in 24 hours in 2021 for the same cause. He told the Stray Ferret:

“The first one I did two years ago was 100% about Ruth. This one has been more about Ruth’s journey and a lot about the Macmillan nurse who supported Ruth and us.

“When I did the last ride, people were telling me stories about having cancer or losing people to cancer without that support that Macmillan provide. That just scared the life out of me. I want everyone to be able to get the support Ruth had and that we had.”

For this challenge, Simon will head to Ardnamurchan Point in west Scotland, from where he will set off next Friday at noon.

He will cycle the length of Britain, aiming to finish at Winchester Cathedral at noon on Sunday.

The aim of the ride is to raise £25,000 – enough to fund 101 days of care from Macmillan nurses, in tribute to the nurse who cared for Ruth.

The two ends of the route have particular significance to Ruth and her family, he said.

“Some of her ashes are scattered near where I’m starting. The Isle of Mull and Iona were her happy place – somewhere she went to rest and recharge. The rest of the ashes are interred at Winchester.”

Simon Gregory and Rev Ruth ScottSimon is completing the ride to raise funds for Macmillan nurses, who supported Rev Ruth Scott.

While the ride itself will be challenging enough, the training has also been gruelling.

Simon has spent long hours on his bike, setting out on rides of up to 20 hours from his home in Harrogate in recent weeks.

Early in his training, he got hypothermia after encountering a freezing hilltop on an otherwise warm day. Last year, he had two operations on his shoulder after shattering his collarbone when his bike slipped on black ice.

He said:

“I’ve had interesting things, like chains breaking and punctures. A couple of weekends ago I get sun stroke, which was fun.

“There have been hard times. I’ve got my nutrition wrong and ‘bonked’, which means there’s nothing left in the tank and I’ve had to lie in a ditch and eat stuff and wait until I could get going again.”

Support crew

Fitting all of the training and recovery around his job running a recruitment business with his wife, and spending time with their two young children, has been a challenge – but he says being busy has also helped to keep the nerves at bay.

He has also been given support from his business, Returners’ Tribe, Paria, Precision Fuel & Hydration, and Starling bar in Harrogate, whose founder, Simon Midgeley, will be part of the first support crew setting off with Simon to Scotland next Thursday.

As well as offering practical support in shifts en route, the support crews – made up of close friends and family – will keep him focused during the 48-hour challenge. Simon said:

“I think it’s going to be very emotional. It’s not just about me and Ruth – it’s the other people involved in the support team.

“I’m going to be carried by the names of other people: my sponsors have put loved ones’ names on the bike, people who have survived cancer or who have supported them through cancer. I’ve even got the name of a dog who’s survived cancer.

“There are 23 names on the bike. Having them with me is going to add to that emotion.

“48 hours is an awfully long time, so it’s going to be a whole range of emotions, a whole spectrum of emotions, some I won’t expect, some I am anticipating.”

To get ready for the event and boost his fundraising, Simon will be on his turbo trainer outside Marks and Spencer on Parliament Street in York tomorrow, collecting donations from shoppers.

To follow Simon’s progress on his Instagram page, click here. Find out more about the challenge and donate to his fundraising on his JustGiving page.


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Harrogate cyclist plans 24-hour challenge in aunt’s memory

A Harrogate man is preparing to take on a 300-mile cycling challenge in memory of his aunt, a well-known national radio broadcaster.

Simon Gregory will cycle from Harrogate’s Sir Robert Ogden Macmillan Centre to the Southampton hospital where his aunt, the Rev Ruth Scott, was treated for lymphoma.

He plans to complete the 288-mile route in just 24 hours in June, which will mean cycling through the night on his own. Despite the scale of his challenge, Simon is a relatively new cyclist. He said:

“I got into cycling around the time Ruth died and when the UCI cycling was coming to Harrogate. A client entered me for the sportive and I raised £2,000 for Leeds Cares.

“From there, I realised the physical benefits and mental health benefits of cycling, which really helped me with my grief.”

Simon continued to ride and, having raised £2,000, began to wonder what he could do to raise even more for cancer charities.

One of several family members to go through cancer treatment, his aunt was diagnosed with a rare form of lymphoma which did not respond to normal treatments – though some long-shot options taken by her doctors did give better results. Throughout her treatment, Ruth and her family were supported by Macmillan.

Pause for Thought

Until shortly before her death in early 2019, Ruth was known as one of the voices of Pause for Thought on the BBC Radio 2 breakfast show, first with Sir Terry Wogan and then with Chris Evans. However, Simon said her appearances were just one of the remarkable things in her life.

“She was a priest, and before that she was a clown in a circus. The first service she did after she was ordained involved a bit of fire eating.

“She never said no to a challenge and she spent a lot of time in the Middle East and North Africa, to try to increase understanding between Christian and Muslim communities there.”


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Ruth herself once cycled from Rome to Jerusalem, giving Simon even more inspiration for his challenge. He began training last year and has stepped up his mileage in recent weeks.

At the same time, he is juggling home-schooling for his two primary age children, and running specialist recruitment business GPS Return with his wife, Miranda.

“They’ve been incredibly supportive. These last couple of weekends, the snow has interrupted training but Miranda has still been encouraging me to go.

“For some of the rides, I’ve been out for 10 or 11 hours. Last year, they jumped in the car and had a day on the beach at Saltburn. I cycled up and met them there for 20 minutes then set off home again.”

The current lockdown restrictions mean Simon is staying closer to home: his next 100-mile training ride will be completed in laps starting from his Harrogate home.

Although he told his wider family last year about the challenge he was taking on, Simon has only just revealed it to friends. Now, he’s hoping to get as close to his £10,000 fundraising target as possible before he starts the challenge in mid-June.

To donate to Simon’s challenge, click here, or follow his progress on Instagram at @ruthscott24hr.