And so we have it. Thirty-one days of walking and some cycling and 173.78 km behind us, all to raise funds for CRY (Cardiac Risk in the Young) in memory of Robert Rowan.
The organising team have done a tremendous job keeping everyone motivated and organising a few competitions along the way. We can look forward to our medals in due course. I would love to actually get them here in Peru but the postal service can be dodgy and so I think we will elect to collect them from our other "home" the next time we are back. The are very eco friendly with Rab's memorial logo and some Rowan berries with a honeycomb containing our achievement level.
Ours will be inscribed as Queen Bee because we elected for the highest level of challenge. We don't mess about you know. Aim for the top.
Nothing of any excitement or note happened on today's walk which was the same as the very first one except that we did it in the opposite direction, as if to bring the whole thing back to where it started. I would like to thank all of you who have followed along our journey and hope that I have managed to give you a flavour of the little corner of Lima where we live. Things are slowly improving here in terms of COVID so I hope that we will be able to explore a bit further afield soon. I might even add a few more entries to the blog if the mood takes me. Who knows what the future holds but one thing is for sure, we must all make the very best of what we have been given and live our lives to the fullest because there are many who never got that chance. Take care, be nice to each other.
There is nothing else to add except our final strava.


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