Thank you for taking the time to visit my fundraising page on iDonate.ie I'm taking part in Spinal Injuries Ireland Tall Ships Challenge starting Wednesday 22nd of May 2019 at Cork harbour and finishing in Southampton on the 27th on board the Lord Nelson Ship. I have the priviledge of doing th...
Thank you for taking the time to visit my fundraising page on iDonate.ie I'm taking part in Spinal Injuries Ireland Tall Ships Challenge starting Wednesday 22nd of May 2019 at Cork harbour and finishing in Southampton on the 27th on board the Lord Nelson Ship. I have the priviledge of doing this alongside 6 people with spinal cord injuries, their assistants and 17 able bodied people, working and learning as a team of equals. Having never sailed before, it is very out of my comfort zone, but I am very excited for the challenge. I've chosen to fundraise for Spinal Injuries Ireland to help them continue providing vital support and rehabilitation programmes for poeple with spinal cord injuries and their families. All funds raised here will go directly to this great cause. I hope you can help me by donating whatever you can. Simply click the Donate button above. All donations are processed securely. You can also share my page using Share options below. This is a great way to show your support and raising awareness. Thank you for your support it means a lot.
Ultimate fire walk challenge in aid of Spinal Injuries Ireland Tall Ships Challenge. For Spinal Injuries Ireland
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Donation summary
Total raised:
€605
Offline donations
€0
Online donations
€605
About the Cause
Spinal Injuries Ireland
Spinal injuries Ireland is Ireland's only specialised and dedicated support service working with people who have sustained a spinal cord injury (SCI) in Ireland and their families. We work with people from the point of injury, through each stage of recovery and rehabilitation how, when and for as long as they need us.
A spinal cord injury is noted to be one of the most devastating injuries an individual can sustain by the World Health Organisation. An SCI can result in paralysi