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Man carries 100kg barbell up Ben Nevis to raise funds for MND research

David Dooher, 38, was inspired by the late Doddie Weir.

Lucinda Cameron
Thursday 08 June 2023 10:11 EDT
David Dooher reached the summit of Ben Nevis on Thursday afternoon (Steven Fergus/PA)
David Dooher reached the summit of Ben Nevis on Thursday afternoon (Steven Fergus/PA)

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A father has scaled the UKā€™s highest peak carrying a 100kg barbell to raise money for research into motor neurone disease.

David Dooher set off at 7pm on Wednesday, the day he turned 38, from the Ben Nevis Inn and reached the 4,406ft summit early on Thursday afternoon.

He undertook the challenge to raise money for the My Nameā€™5 Doddie Foundation, launched in 2017 by Doddie Weir. Weir died last November aged 52 after a six-year battle with motor neurone disease (MND).

Mr Dooher said the barbell, similar to the weight of a giant panda, represents ā€œthe burden carried by those who live with MND, and their familiesā€.

After reaching the summit of Ben Nevis, Mr Dooher, a member of Police Scotlandā€™s mountain rescue team, said: ā€œIt feels amazing to be finished ā€“ very sore and tiring ā€“ but amazing.

ā€œIā€™d be lying if I said it wasnā€™t tougher than expected, but this wasnā€™t meant to be easy, and there was no greater motivator than who Iā€™m doing this for: Doddieā€™s memory and everyone affected by MND.

ā€œThe interest in the challenge and the outpouring of support has been incredible, itā€™s spurred me on every step of the way.

ā€œI want to thank everyone; my support team, the My Nameā€™5 Doddie Foundation, everybody who sent messages of support and encouragement, and the wider MND community for their backing.

ā€œIt means the world and I hope that this effort will play some part, no matter how small, in helping to find effective treatments and one day a cure for this devastating disease.ā€

Mr Dooher trained six days per week, every week, for the last six months ahead of the challenge, and upped his calorie intake beyond 4,000 calories during his training.

The father-of-two, from Uddingston in South Lanarkshire, bagged several Munros with a barbell on his back in preparation, including Ben Vorlich with 95kg and Ben Lomond with 75kg, but scaling Ben Nevis was his toughest climb yet.

Speaking ahead of the challenge, he said: ā€œI want it to be difficult and painful. Iā€™ve already been emotional during some walks just because of the pain and exhaustion, but that adds to the magnitude for me, so Iā€™m not afraid to show it.

ā€œIā€™ve received so many lovely messages from families of people diagnosed, or whose family have passed away due to MND. That reinforces the reasons for why Iā€™m tackling the task. Iā€™ll be thinking about Doddie with every step.

ā€œItā€™s been a big sacrifice. Iā€™ll take a week off to recover once Iā€™m done and maybe start planning a wee holiday when itā€™s all over.ā€œ

He has already raised more than Ā£13,000 and anyone interested in donating can do so at https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/david-dooher.

Paul Thompson, director of fundraising at My Nameā€™5 Doddie Foundation, said: ā€œWe are blown away by Davidā€™s efforts. His training alone is unthinkable.

ā€œWe are very grateful to him, and to everyone who has donated.ā€

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