Eddie swaps postal route for Pyrenees charity trek

Former postman Eddie Drury – who plumped for early retirement last month – has just returned from a different and more difficult type of footslogging. Walking 135 kilometres for charity through the tortuous Pyrenees for the Southern Area Hospice.
Eddie Drury on his charity walk.Eddie Drury on his charity walk.
Eddie Drury on his charity walk.

He raised a stunning £5,500 for his cherished charity. The five-day walk was the second phase of a five-year plan by the charity foot soldier.

Last year – on the first phase of the Camino de Santiago Charity walk - he lifted £6,500 from friends and businesses in the Portadown area.

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The entire walk is 890 kilometres, and Eddie’s efforts so far have covered about 40 per cent of the steep up-and-down mountains that separate France and Spain. And it was all done in temperatures hitting the 30-degrees mark – even up to 34.

“It was tough going,” he said. “Hundreds from all over the world were there, for various charity reasons – six from Northern Ireland. They came from Canada, Korea, France, Germany, Spain…”

There was a Spanish woman on a donkey (covering the entire 890km) and there had been a murder a day or two earlier on the walk.

“We heard the devastating news en route,” said Eddie. “Apparently she was an American student, and a Frenchman in his 30s had been arrested and charged.”

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The scenery was stunning – “unbelievable” - and they stayed in hotels en route, all planned by the hospice, and the Ulster Six raised around £30,000.

“It’s a terrific charity, costing £6,500 a day to run, and they only get one-third of their funding from government sources,” said Eddie.

He thanked everyone who supported him – sponsors and individuals – and he warns everyone he will be back next year!

Meanwhile, he’ll be treading the boards as a Dame after Christmas, as Mother Goose, the title role in the Gateway pantomime in the Town Hall.