So you do not fund any of your life style 🤣
I didn't say that I was just correcting your wrong statement.
So you do not fund any of your life style 🤣
IMHO doing something for charity should involve a high level of discomfort and effort. Part of that would fall under queuing. If someone was raising money via a sponsored queue, but skipped the queue, you'd think them lazy. See also sponsored skydive - yes a good cause but it would only be notably courageous if you had a real phobia of heights
That is why I never sponsor cyclists.
The concept is to do some goal-focussed activity of such an arduous or uncomfortable nature that it deserves recompense.
It is pretty easy to make cycling into an ordeal of horror . It is good for the charidee, good for the sponsee but often not good for the activity of cycling.
Cycling is its own reward and has such widespread benefits that turning it into an ordeal probably costs more life/years of health than were saved by donations.
On cost/benefit anslysis I prefer that cycling be seen as easy and donkey cancer wards go underfunded.
It can make a lot of sense, if you get sponsorship for doing it. You are raising more for the charity that way than you would probably contribute by yourself.
But this, I absolutely agree with.
So people are queueing because they don't want others in their photos, and not because you can't get to the trig point?Queuing for the trig point so someone can pretend it is deserted in their Instagram stories is silly.
I think it's more a case of I'd be far more inclined to sponsor a cyclist undertaking something they don't normally do. Sponsored to do something you love is one thing but to do something you really dislike being far more impressive.
So people are queueing because they don't want others in their photos, and not because you can't get to the trig point?
Usually, the undertaking is of a minor and unimportant or frivolous activity: parachuting, pedeloing the Channel etc. Harm to the activity is of no account. RAF pilots will still wear parachutes to work no matter how frightened your sponsored faller is.
Cycling is just different. A normal activity that needs to be normalised.
Is cycling different? No sure it is.
Paddy McGuiness did a ride for Children in Need on a chopper. That must have been pretty tough.
People do charity walks yet walking is a normal activity.
I'm not sure I get your point on cycling?
Paddy McGuiness did a ride for Children in Need on a chopper. That must have been pretty tough.
FTFY - now I agree!Everyday cycling is still anicheminority activity. People who dont ride have a mental image of it as something that is hard to do, difficult, arduous, dangerous.
Sponsored bike rides play into this mentality.