Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

“Refugees Welcome” – two cyclists are creating the world’s biggest piece of GPS art in charity ride across southern England

Georgie Cottle and David Charles are spelling out their message on 2,400km ride

A pair of cyclists are creating what will be the world’s biggest ever piece of GPS art, spelling out the words “Refugees Welcome” across southern England.

Georgie Cottle, aged 26 and from Glasgow, and David Charles, 39 and from Bournemouth, have already broken the Guinness World Record, which stood at 761km, on their 2,400km journey across counties mostly bordering the English Channel.

They began their journey in Cornwall and will finish it in Dover, and so far their challenge – which goes by the name Spell It Out – has raised nearly £40,000 for charity, £7,000 of that through a fundraising page on Chooselove.org.

“The situation in Afghanistan was hitting the news just as we left,” said David, quoted on Kent Online.

“It’s certainly been uppermost in everyone’s minds while we’ve been riding.

“Everyone we meet seems to be aware of the horror of what’s happening and it’s been heartening to find that most people we’ve met show great compassion towards those forced to flee their homes.”

He continued: “Wiltshire has been the most generous county so far in terms of donations.

“It’d be unfair to pick out anyone in particular, but Laura and Jon at Bulstone Springs gave us full use of their glamping facilities, and also made us a homemade tiramisu.”

They surpassed the previous record while riding across the Somerset Levels, and David said:  “The mayor bought me a cup of tea and Georgie a Guinness and regaled us with the wonderful legends of Glastonbury.”

The two cyclists belong to a cycling group called Thighs of Steel, whose co-founders Harri Symes and Oli Kasteel-Hare devised the idea of spelling out the words, with Georgie using Komoot to plan the route.

“The south of England was the obvious place to plan the ride because Dover is the port of entry for many refugees, the route sends a very direct message of compassion, and because the letters fit nicely,” David said.

“There was an awful lot to consider, both in terms of cycling and logistical constraints such as easy access to overnight accommodation and railway stations.”

He added: “It takes a lot of mental as well as physical energy to keep going day after day after day.:

“The compensations are being able to eat as much as we like and, of course, the incredibly generous donations from people back home.”

On their fundraising page, they give more details of why they decided to undertake the ride, saying: “The British government is trying to make it almost impossible for refugees to claim asylum in the UK.

“Home Secretary Priti Patel's Nationality and Borders Bill is putting the UK in direct opposition to the 1951 Geneva Convention by shutting down even more legal routes to asylum in this country. Incredibly, it will also criminalise the courageous, life-saving work of the RNLI.

“That's why we're getting back on our bikes, cycling really really far and fundraising for grassroots organisations that offer refugees the welcome that our government withholds.”

They also each outlined their own personal reasons for taking on the challenge.

“I have been a keen bean cyclist since I was 19 and found myself cycling the length of America, sort of by accident,” Georgie said.

“Since then I have explored much of Scotland, Wales and New Zealand with my trusty Raleigh Capri (called ‘Sunny’).

“I first got involved volunteering with refugee and asylum seeker communities while studying Arabic in Jordan in 2016, at the height of the crisis. I learned one heck of a lot about what it meant to be a 'refugee', what people had to give up and why people were forced to flee.

“I now work with refugee and asylum seeker communities in Glasgow and it seems that people's journeys are being made ever more difficult by governments here in the UK and in Europe.

“Spell It Out is an incredible challenge that I am so privileged to be a part of. We are both really looking forward to getting on the road, and rallying as much support as possible for Choose Love!”

David said: “I've been going on ridiculously long bike rides for ten years now, including two stints on the London to Athens relay with Thighs of Steel.

“For me, bikes are the ultimate freedom machine, carrying me across continents, powered by nothing more than a croissant (or seven). I have also seen the transformational potential of bikes when put into the hands of refugees and asylum seekers, both here in the UK and in places like Calais, Athens, Chios and Samos.

“Bikes give us both independence and community and I'm proud to use mine in solidarity with those fleeing persecution, conflict and torture.

“I've been so lucky that I've been able to travel freely around the world, thanks only to the freak chance of being born in a politically stable, wealthy country. The sheer injustice that some human beings aren't allowed to cross borders makes me furious and anger is an energy, right? I hope so, because I've got an awful lot of cycling to do!

“We are far from powerless,” he added. “Please donate generously, make a noise and show the world that refugees are always welcome here.”

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

Add new comment

190 comments

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to Jenova20 | 2 years ago
6 likes

Absolutely hysterical, in both senses of the word.

Avatar
Steve K replied to Jenova20 | 2 years ago
10 likes

Jenova20 wrote:

Rendel Harris wrote:

Jenova20 wrote:

 It's seriously been 5 years since the vote. Grow the fuck up.

Leavers carried on fighting the overwhelming result of the 1975 referendum to join the EEC for forty years, as was their right and, indeed, their duty if they believed a mistake had been made. But ever since winning the 2016 vote by a miniscule margin - a margin that virtually every poll since has shown would never be attained again - they have insisted on a form of playground "fainites and no returns", responding with the sort of dummy-spitting fury you exhibit here to the slightest suggestion that the decision has been a mistake. Telling other people to grow up because they won't let you have your own way without debate or opposition for ever and ever is richly ironic.

Lobbying for a vote is a bit different from: breaking parliamentary rules, meeting the EU in private and discussing ways to obstruct parliament, suing the Government multiple times to frustrate and invalidate the Democratic process, attempting to destabilise the Government to bring it down because you didn't get your way, and wishing the UK would burn just so you can say you were right. To say the Remainers have been childish is an understatement, some of them have acted disgustingly or even treasonously.

Not really the site for this debate but...

... it was Leaver MPs (the ERG) who sought to bring down the (May's) government

... it was Johnson's government which illegally sought to override the democractic process by proroguing Parliament.

But don't let facts get in your way.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to Steve K | 2 years ago
1 like
Steve K wrote:

Not really the site for this debate but...

... it was Leaver MPs (the ERG) who sought to bring down the (May's) government

... it was Johnson's government which illegally sought to override the democractic process by proroguing Parliament.

But don't let facts get in your way.

It wasn't quite that simple.

The ERG did try (and ultimately succeeded) in bringing down May's government but they were aided and abetted by the opposition parties.

This led to the very soft Brexit deal which May had negotiated being replaced by the much harder deal negotiated by Boris.

This delighted the ERG but presumably did not delight Labour and the Liberal Democrats who helped to bring it about.

The proroguing of parliament was deemed unlawful but until that ruling prorogation had not been considered justiciable.

The fact that the Supreme Court ruled it justiciable was a huge constitutional change for the UK.

Ultimately the prorogation was brought about by another huge constitutional change. This was John Bercow's decision to allow the amendment of previously un-amendable parliamentary procedures.

It was this decision by Bercow that allowed the opposition parties and Conservative rebels to essentially take over the running of the government and provoked a constitutional crisis.

That single act by the Remain supporting speaker did more to undermine parliamentary democracy in the UK than any other, going against, literally, centuries of precedent.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/jan/09/john-bercow-decisi...

Avatar
Jenova20 replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
0 likes

Good luck Rich. Remainers don't like facts.

Avatar
brooksby replied to Jenova20 | 2 years ago
9 likes

Jenova20 wrote:

Good luck Rich. Remainers don't like facts.

Cough-cough - £350 million per week for the NHS...

Avatar
Jenova20 replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
0 likes

brooksby wrote:

Jenova20 wrote:

Good luck Rich. Remainers don't like facts.

Cough-cough - £350 million per week for the NHS...

That pledge was met by Theresa May if you missed it, to the tune of £600 million a week (second citation), and Boris is handing the NHS even more from 2023. This is on top of the Covid funding, and in addition to the extra funding to clear the backlog. Proving my point - Remainers don't like facts.

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to Jenova20 | 2 years ago
9 likes

Your first two links conclusively state that the Leave campaign was lying about the £350M a week we would save from not being in the EU. Yes, the government has increased spending but none of that increased spending has come from savings made from leaving the EU. Your own links state this! Who doesn't like facts?

Avatar
stomec replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
4 likes

Rendel Harris wrote:

Your first two links conclusively state that the Leave campaign was lying about the £350M a week we would save from not being in the EU. Yes, the government has increased spending but none of that increased spending has come from savings made from leaving the EU. Your own links state this! Who doesn't like facts?

I think this is referred to as "OwNiNg tHe LiBs WiTh FaCtS aNd LoGiC"

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
1 like

The funding announced by May will deliver an extra £394 million per week to the NHS from 2023/24 onwards.

The vast majority of the Financial Settlement (Divorce Bill) will have been paid by 2023/24. Up until this point the UK will still be contributing to the EU budget.

From 2023/24 onwards there will, when these payments largely cease, be additional monies available to the UK government to spend.

This will not cover the entire cost of May's pledge but will cover the majority.

The £350m bus claim is therefore not entirely true but nor is it entirely false.

There were far bigger lies told during the referendum, it baffles me why there is this ongoing obsession with a simple bus advert.

https://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/explainers/brexit-deal-financi...

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
6 likes

Rich_cb wrote:

The £350m bus claim is therefore not entirely true but nor is it entirely false.

So if I go into a shop and hand over £10 but then claim I actually handed over £20, am I being "not entirely true but not entirely false" or am I lying through my teeth? And is it OK for me to lie because someone else actually told a bigger lie in the same shop the same day?

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
0 likes

It was an exaggeration. If you want to be absolutely binary about it then, yes, knowingly exaggerating something is dishonest.

If the bus had said £250m per week then it would have been accurate.

Would the bus advert have been less impactful with £250m on the side?

I doubt it. The exaggeration was therefore entirely inconsequential.

In the context of political campaigning, cherry picking or exaggerating figures is a pretty common and pretty insignificant occurrence which, as I said earlier, makes the ongoing prominence afforded to the bus advert rather strange.

Far more worrying was the deliberate deception instigated by the Treasury itself. This barely gets a mention anywhere and certainly never from Remain supporters.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
4 likes

Rich_cb wrote:

Far more worrying was the deliberate deception instigated by the Treasury itself. This barely gets a mention anywhere and certainly never from Remain supporters.

What deception was that?

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
1 like

They put out predictions of job losses, house prices etc. in the event of Brexit.

They were fairly apocalyptic in tone and garnered a huge amount of press coverage.

What was not readily mentioned was that the predictions were based on the premise that the Bank of England would decline to make any intervention whatsoever.

This was a ridiculously implausible scenario and it was presented as a realistic prediction. This was obviously hugely beneficial to the Remain campaign.

The use of a government department to produce deliberately misleading information knowing that such information would have a huge influence on a referendum was incredibly worrying in the context of our democracy.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
4 likes

Predictions often involve a certain amount of guessing, so I'm not sure that's really deliberate deception. Is there a specific prediction that you're referring to? I'm not trying to defend the Treasury, but am interested in how disingenuous they've been.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
0 likes

I accept that predictions do involve a certain amount of uncertainty but deliberately basing a prediction on a premise you know to be incredibly unlikely is misleading.

The predictions were mainly about unemployment and house prices. I'll try and find a link.

Edit:
https://amp.ft.com/content/d05c4b60-20d8-11e6-9d4d-c11776a5124d

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
0 likes

Sorry, I can't see that as it's paywalled

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
0 likes

https://www.google.com/search?q=Fact-checking+the+Treasury%E2%80%99s+lat...

It should load through Amp as it's quite an old article now

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
1 like

Rich_cb wrote:

https://www.google.com/search?q=Fact-checking+the+Treasury%E2%80%99s+lat... It should load through Amp as it's quite an old article now

The first link to the FT is still paywalled - doesn't seem to work with or without amp.

The second link (https://theconversation.com/fact-check-do-the-treasurys-brexit-numbers-add-up-58086) has this verdict:

Quote:

In short, the Treasury estimates are credible. Yet they are conservative: there are at least two ways in which the estimated losses from Brexit could increase. The report could have factored in the EU reforms being pushed by the UK government into the main numbers. It could also have used a definition of productivity that didn’t flatter the UK (like GDP per hour worked rather than GDP per capita). These are both included in section three, part three of the report, if anyone wanted to look at them. But I think the decision was correct to downplay these, given the uncertainty.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
0 likes

I seem to be able to read it, I don't have a sub to the FT, strange.

The FT were considerably less impressed by the report.

"Are the Treasury’s methods convincing?

No. There appears to be a lot of reverse engineering going on. Politics required lost jobs, a recession and lower house prices and officials chose methods that delivered that outcome — just.

All parts of the analysis are open to criticism and the Treasury’s reluctance to talk about margins of error or what are the real driving forces behind the results speaks volumes.

Dave Ramsden, chief economist at the Treasury and lead official on this report, has recently written about how the independent Office for Budget Responsibility “has ended the perception of bias associated with the forecasts that were previously produced by the Treasury”. This report will not escape a perception of bias."

"Another questionable element of the Treasury analysis is that it assumes no monetary or fiscal policy response. If the BoE cut interest rates and restarted quantitative easing, it could mitigate some of the negative effects, but it has cautioned that if a sterling fall raised expectations of inflation or if the economy’s capacity to supply goods and services was hit, it might not be able to act. Likewise, the government might respond to a downturn with spending increases or spending cuts.

Given these complications, the assumption of “no change in policy” is reasonable as a reflection of the choices available, but it is not reasonable as a prediction of the future, which is how David Cameron and George Osborne characterised the work."

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
0 likes

Could be something to do with my various script blockers.

Your quoted bits don't really strike me as "deliberate deception" - I'd sum up that summary as the Treasury being biased.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
0 likes

The FT said it was not reasonable to present the report as a prediction of the future.

Yet that is how Cameron and Osborne presented it.

I think that's deliberate deception.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
1 like

Rich_cb wrote:

The FT said it was not reasonable to present the report as a prediction of the future. Yet that is how Cameron and Osborne presented it. I think that's deliberate deception.

Deliberate deception by Cameron and Osborne - quite possibly. This is becoming somewhat nebulous as we're now comparing FT's opinion to Cameron/Osborne's opinion. I don't have much opinion on the FT, but Cameron and Osborne wouldn't be high on my list of favourite people.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
0 likes

I think the Treasury was implicated in the deception too.

Obviously under direction from Osbourne and Cameron but it's still, IMHO, highly inappropriate.

Avatar
Jenova20 replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

Predictions often involve a certain amount of guessing, so I'm not sure that's really deliberate deception. Is there a specific prediction that you're referring to? I'm not trying to defend the Treasury, but am interested in how disingenuous they've been.

It was beyond negative predictions: They wheeled out Obama and got him to sign a public statement, written in British English by someone at Downing St, saying that he wouldn't sign a trade deal with us if we left. David Cameron personally got the head of a trade union sacked for saying that he was pro Brexit (can't remember the name). George Osborn threatened voters with a punishment budget the day after a leave vote if Remain lost. The Government spent £9 million on propaganda leaflets to everyone which were left out of the financing both sides agreed to stick to. The electoral commission authorised Vote Leave's spending, then reinterpreted the rules after Leave won and tried to prosecute them for their spending.

The contest was rigged in Remain's favour and they still lost. Imagine how many extra Leave votes we'd have had without the interference, threats, and rigging in Remain's favour.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Jenova20 | 2 years ago
5 likes

Jenova20 wrote:

It was beyond negative predictions: They wheeled out Obama and got him to sign a public statement, written in British English by someone at Downing St, saying that he wouldn't sign a trade deal with us if we left.

..and has Obama signed a trade deal with us since we've left?

Edit: In the interest of trying to find facts about this, I found this article which I presume is what you're referring to: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/apr/22/barack-obama-brexit-uk-back-of-queue-for-trade-talks

Quote:

The US president used a keenly awaited press conference with David Cameron, held at the Foreign Office, to explain why he had the “temerity to weigh in” over the high-stakes British question in an intervention that delighted remain campaigners.

Obama argued that he had a right to respond to the claims of Brexit campaigners that Britain would easily be able to negotiate a fresh trade deal with the US. “They are voicing an opinion about what the United States is going to do, I figured you might want to hear from the president of the United States what I think the United States is going to do.

“And on that matter, for example, I think it’s fair to say that maybe some point down the line there might be a UK-US trade agreement, but it’s not going to happen any time soon because our focus is in negotiating with a big bloc, the European Union, to get a trade agreement done”.

He added: “The UK is going to be in the back of the queue.”

That seems different to how you portrayed it, but anyhow, we do not seem to have signed a trade deal with the U.S. yet and it seems quite reasonable that it wouldn't be their top priority.

Avatar
Jenova20 replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter]</p>

<p>[quote=Jenova20 wrote:

That seems different to how you portrayed it, but anyhow, we do not seem to have signed a trade deal with the U.S. yet and it seems quite reasonable that it wouldn't be their top priority.

Because it's a lie, and is directly contradicted by both Obama himself, and by David Cameron. Obama was urged by Cameron to interfere in the referendum.

https://www.politico.eu/article/how-barack-obama-came-to-david-camerons-...

"Rattled by tighter-than-expected poll numbers, Cameron asked Obama to make the trip during the referendum campaign rather than wait until July when the president was also scheduled to be in Europe.

White House officials insist the president will not meddle in Britain’s internal debate over Europe, but acknowledged that if he happened to be asked his view, “as a friend, he will offer it.” Cameron aides expect the intervention to be an important moment, particularly in motivating young voters."

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to Jenova20 | 2 years ago
5 likes

Just curious, are you actually interested in cycling at all or do you just come here to bang on about Brexit?

Avatar
Jenova20 replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
1 like

Rendel Harris wrote:

Just curious, are you actually interested in cycling at all or do you just come here to bang on about Brexit?

I'd be quite happy if people just moved on. Unfortunately the left is largely intolerant of others and incapable of this, just like how they protest for years after losing Democratic elections here and in the US.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Jenova20 | 2 years ago
7 likes

Jenova20 wrote:

I'd be quite happy if people just moved on. Unfortunately the left is largely intolerant of others and incapable of this, just like how they protest for years after losing Democratic elections here and in the US.

Is that supposed to be ironic?

From my recollection, there was a significant storming of the capitol protest just earlier this year and it wasn't the "left". Personally, I think this partisan left-v-right is way too simplistic and is a hangover from a far more simplistic, tribal way of thinking. (c.f. football supporters shouting insults at the opposing team supporters)

Avatar
brooksby replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
6 likes

Since the 9/11 attack, far-right extremists killed more people in the US than did American-based Islamist fundamentalists

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/sep/08/post-911-domestic-terror

 

Pages

Latest Comments