Official Retrobike Charity 2008

Corduroyboy

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Just ran an idea past Jez about an Official Retrobike Charity for 2008. It would be run by the mods and members could donate directly or ask for donations from other members for stuff they might otherwise give away (or even sell!).
I figured we could run a poll of charity suggestions and the winner would be the Official Retrobike Charity for 2008.

If anyone has any other suggestions, such as special events that could be run for said charity, add it to this thread. I figured that such events could potentially gain exposure for the site and for the charity in the press.

Discuss! :D
 
I think its a good idea :D

My wife and I have always supported ASBAH http://www.asbah.org/ as our son has hydrocephalus (water on the brain).

A sponsored ride for our RB charity would be good.
 
All good suggestions! (I thought this thread was going to die a death - there is a charitable streak among us after all!)

Any mods care to add their weight to proceedings? After all you will be the hub* of organising & collecting donations.

*Pun intentional
 
Yeah, like the idea. Would be good to get 'official' earning going for a charity for events like Mayhem as I'm sure we all intend to get sponsored for races and events and don't end up getting it organised as well as it could or at all.

Air Ambulance would have my vote for sure. They saved my life in a bike incident and I owe them as I'm sure many of us do/ could. ?
 
I for one think this is a great idea.

The air ambulance would get my vote as i have seen it in action on a few occasions in cornwall.

Give me a shout if you need help with sorting things down this end of the country.

Cheers,Al
 
Actually, maybe an idea would be to have say, Air Ambulance for any sponsored events, races etc and Recycle for any bits we may wish to donate.

Mr K and I have been meaning to get our community connected with Recycle for a while and this might be the kick up the ass we needed.

They are a charity that takes the old bike parts we in the developed and over indulged world deem as too crappy to pimp our bikes out with and turn them into fully functioning bikes that transform people's lives in developing countries.

So old handlebars that aren't worth the hassle of selling for £4 or a set of boggo flat pedals you get on a restoration project and get replaced by some onZa ho clipless pedals don't just sit in the garage, they adorn a bike that enables someone to actually transform their life in a really simple way but huge way.
 
The thing is with giving to an air ambulance charity is which one, almost every UK county has one.

How about mountain rescue, there's one in England & one in Scotland.

The RUSS appeal for Riders United in Serious Situations.
http://www.russ-appeal.org.uk/

Over at UK-MTB.com forum we are in the proceeds of raffling off 2 MTB's (a retro 'Hopper & a not so retro Hardrock! We chose our charities to reflect those who built the bikes (The Neuroendocrine Tumour Foundation and the Foundation for Sudden Infant Death syndrome) and we then had a poll to decide who would get the rest of the money raised, we chose Mountain Rescue.

Links to the charity build over on UK-MTB...

http://uk-mtb.com/viewtopic.php?t=5381& ... rity+build
http://uk-mtb.com/viewtopic.php?t=5376& ... rity+build
 
Air ambulances are run by a county by county basis. Here in the peak District we can call upon East Midlands air Ambulance who have two choppers based at East Midlands airport. My bit of the Peak can also be served by south yorkshire, greater manchester or for one small bit (lyme park) merseyside air ambulances

Mountain Rescue (vested interest here as I am a member of Kinder Mountain Rescue Team, based in Hayfield) - is a bottom up organisation (unlike RNLI which is top down). Individual teams fund raise for themselves, my own team needs approx £12 k to remain operational. We receive no government funding, we are all volunteers and rely upon our employers to conveniently and generously allow us out of work to attend jobs. Local teams are then members of regional organisations. Kinder team is part of the Peak District Mountain Rescue Organisation, sort of a regional admin, training and policy think tank. PDMRO's biggest role is to provide call out officers (duty controllers) - these controllers are the direct link between the police and the team. When you dial 999 you will get through to the police, police contact the duty controller. The duty controller then decides which team(s) are needed for the job in hand.
Individual teams and regional organisations are then members of the national councils. England and Wales has its own 'national' organisation MR(E&W), as do Scotland, and Ireland. The three councils join up for conferences.

Individual teams make up their own methods and strategies, policies, ways of working; regional organisations help run medical and training at a strategic level locally. National Councils sort out stuff like indemnity insurance, drugs licensing, they administer medical stuff etc

If you decide to plump for MR as an adopted charity then you need to decide who to help. Say you raise a grand over a year- an individual team, like mine, could do a lot with a grand - fuel for two land rovers for six months say.

Kinder team for example are hoping to start fundraising for a new base soon - we have an 'offer' in the pipeline which could really do us good. We need garaging for our ambulances (£65k's worth of land rovers are currently parked in a field); a toilet would be good; gear storage necessary....

ALL teams could repeat such stories of need. Please click on my website button to find out more about Mountain Rescue. You will go to the Kinder website, links to other teams, PDMRO, MR(E&W) etc.

The diary of a team member section will give you an insight into what individual team members commit to, when they join up. And yes we are on call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year!
 
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