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Great Bakery Bike Ride Raises the Dough!

We are delighted to announce the total raised from the Great Bakery Bike Ride is a fantastic £76,000!

This is made up of £51,000 from sponsorship and fundraising, which will be split evenly to open 15 new Greggs Breakfast Clubs, giving an additional 600 primary school children a free, healthy breakfast, and to get our BBC Children in Need campaign for 2010 off to a great start!

An additional £25,000 will be donated by Greggs in 2011 to enable the 15 new Breakfast Clubs to stay open for 2 years, to help them get established.

This is a fantastic achievement, only made possible by the wonderful support of our shop and bakery teams and their families and friends around the country, and our customers.

A very big THANK YOU to you all!

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And Finally….

Richard Hutton writes…

So that was the Great Bakery Bike Ride. 

Strangely enough I do feel a little sorry that it’s over, it seems very odd not to be out on a bike today.  I’m really glad to be home to my family now, and I’m delighted with the amount of money we’ve raised.  And I did love every minute of the journey.

Travelling around the country with so many wonderful colleagues and friends has been a real privilege.  It has of course taken a bit of effort as well, but the knees and backside will recover soon enough.  All of that now seems almost inconsequential compared with the overwhelming feeling of pride I have in having seen so many people get on bikes, or support friends and colleagues to get on bikes, and achieve things they didn’t realise they could.

The money may take a couple more days to count up as our shops assess what our customers have donated (in the teeth of a recession let’s remember) but we know that the total of all donations to the Great Bakery Bike Ride is at least £40k.  We’ll make a real difference to children across the country through BBC Children in Need and should be able to open an additional 10-15 Breakfast Clubs – a wonderful legacy.

There are so many people to thank for making this happen:
•   All of you who so generously donated – friends, colleagues, family, and those who gave through our shops and directly to us on the route.  I’ll always remember the elderly lady who emptied her purse into Robin’s hands.
•   Our bakeries, including GDS, for giving us such wonderful welcomes as we passed through and managed to raise funds whilst also supporting us with the logistics of moving so many riders and bikes around.
•   The support drivers, who kept us fed and watered whilst coping with all the inevitable incidents and accidents that occur along the way.  We really relied on you.
•   Our shop colleagues, who rattled the collection buckets once again and welcomed us where we stopped.
•   The riders: Robin and Paul for your ever-present support and great company; my fellow board members and colleagues from around the country (particularly those who led the way) and Mr Daley Thompson, who was a great encouragement to everyone who rode with him.
•   GSK for the Lucozade drinks, bars and gels that fuelled us along the way – they complemented our own supply of fresh-baked buns and cakes!
•   Gratterpalm, Steel and Biss Lancaster for promoting what we were trying to do, and our very own Natalie Hopper who quietly made sure things happened.
•   Michelle Dobson, who held the whole thing together brilliantly and coped cheerfully with everything thrown at her.  You should feel very proud of what we achieved Michelle.
•   The support team – Melanie, Steve, Richard, Jackie, David and Janet for logistics, fundraising, safety and generally good advice.
•   And our families.  Jo, Hayley and Alicia, you’ve made it possible for us to go and do this.  And Sarah Leaver – you were very, very brave.

So what now?  People keep asking me if we’ll do it all again next year!  It feels like we have the start of something special, so many people have enjoyed cycling and all the benefits that go with it.  We’ve proved that our bakeries aren’t so far apart really, and once again revealed the wonderful spirit that exists amongst Greggs people.

We’ll certainly do something and I’d love to hear your thoughts on what that might be.  In the meantime if you haven’t tried the Cycle to Work scheme it’s a great way to get cycling and reduce your car usage.

So thank you for the fun, the fundraising and the sheer effort you put into this great event.  I am really proud of everyone who got involved. 

One more thing to come – the grand total……  Watch this space!  Richard

and a message from Paul Ryan to his fellow 900-milers:

Richard and Robin,
Just turned on my computer after our ten day “holiday”, as Mrs Ryan calls it!  Went straight to the BakeryBikeRide blog to remind myself of our journey, and the memories of fantastic welcomes and smiley people came flooding back!

I thoroughly enjoyed our bakery bike ride and am really grateful you asked me to join in. 
I’m also very grateful you came back in one piece Richard!

I feel I’ve known Greggs for 27 years…the Gosforth finish today reminded me of visits in the ‘80s as a young auditor, Alicia has been with you since the early ‘90s and for the last three years Malcolm Simpson, your predecessor Richard, has been on the Board of Excelsyn.  Most importantly, since my student days I’ve been a loyal customer!

Having visited your bakeries and many of your shops and having had the great pleasure of cycling with loads of your colleagues and meeting support crews along the way, I think your business is full of fabulous people, who reflect perfectly the values which Greggs is known for.  This bike ride has demonstrated the massive enthusiasm and support your company has for getting behind good causes.  It was a privilege to be part of it.

So rest up my friends, for that’s what I’ll be doing.……and remember Robin, that at the top of every big hill is a great view!
Paul

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The Peopleteamies…a poem!

An ode to the People team’s 64 mile  personal best….

One sunny Thursday in Appleby town
The People team gathered by a pub called the Crown
The purpose that day was a task to raise smiles
How would the team bike sixty four miles?  

At ten-thirty sharp down from the hills
Came the earlier raiders who talked of the thrills
Of climbing a mountain and flying down dales
They had flies on their glasses and wind in their sails

Hutton and Leaver and Alicia’s beau Paul
Who’d travelled a week and were having a ball
The Cumbrian team who were as fit as fiddle
And Hindmarsh caught drafting asleep in the middle

As we climbed the first hill we started to think
Why is young Rhodes wearing shoes that are pink?
The distraction they caused helped him displace the pain
That racked through his rear as his bum took the strain

Nashy forgot that her tyres needed air
So she traded her bike for one that was spare
That meant poor Kevin had drawn the short straw
He pedalled like hell then he pedalled some more

Walton the athlete looked sharp and felt strong
Downed a few Mars as she cycled along
With speed in her legs and power in her hips
Fuelled by the thought of some fish and some chips

Her pedalling was powered like a nuclear reactor
Her tyres looked like they would fit on a tractor
Kazia looked strong and with power in her boots
She looked like she’d keep on like this the whole route

Roisin our leader a talent quite budding
Dreamed of the finish and a battered black pudding
Cath kept on pushing with vigour and glee
By the end of the day she’d have her PB

In Penrith a greeting fit for a Lord
With burgers served up by a crowd who had roared
We said our goodbyes and set off on our way
With huge thanks to Claire for her help on the day

Just short of Carlisle as we stopped for some snap
Somebody noticed a tyre had gone flat
So the lads hung on back as the tyre was fixed
And helped their poor team mate get back in the mix

But a chain of events had been well set in motion
And puncture on puncture created commotion
By Gretna his guilt at disrupting the plan
Meant that he threw the old bike in the van

So on Nashy’s small bike he set off again
In the tightest of V’s formed by three honest men
Who carried him home in their cocooned slipstream   
This is what it feels like to work with a team

As the day lingered on faces looked worn
Would the bold cyclists hit Lockerbie by dawn?
But in the last few miles a sensation took hold
We all knew we’d make it, we’d all claim the Gold

In our last stop at Dalton we created a flap
A lady from Thailand demanded a snap
One got the impression that in this quiet street
Nothing much happens bar the bus once a week

Then out of the pack like a bat out of hell
One of the cyclists dug deep in her well
Her pedals a blur, her wheels making smoke
Came Kazia blitzing with flames from her spokes

“We did it, we did it” the whole team did scream
Sixty four miles by all of the team
Will you still love it, will you still care,
When it’s sixty four miles from here to there?
 Thanks to David Hindmarsh for the poem!

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CONGRATULATIONS! YOU DID US PROUD!!

At 9.30am this morning (day 11), Richard, Robin and Paul led the Greggs Operating Board and Ian Gregg across the finish line at Gosforth Bakery, Newcastle.

What a journey…..over 900 miles in ten days; hundreds of punctures; an RAC rescue; an over-the-handlebars incident for Richard and numerous personal bests for many of the Greggs staff who joined the cyclists on route!

Thank you very much to Gosforth Bakery for the finish line welcome. 

We don’t yet know how much has been raised from the Great Bakery Bike Ride – we’ll post the amount when all the donations have been counted.  A really big THANK YOU to everyone who has helped out, supported, cycled, cheered and donated!

CONGRATULATIONS TO RICHARD, ROBIN AND PAUL FOR THIS AMAZING ACHIEVEMENT – YOU HAVE MADE US ALL VERY PROUD AND THANKS TO YOU, HAVE HELPED IMPROVE THE LIVES OF HUNDREDS OF DISADVANTAGED CHILDREN – WELL DONE!

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The England Football team might disappoint, but our cyclists go all the way!

Day 10 – Eyemouth to Balliol – 92 miles!!

Robin Leaver writes:

11.47:  Left Eyemouth this morning in bright sunshine and now 30 miles into our ride today so only about 50 to go on our epic journey (I’m almost sad!, well, not really.  Next stop Embleton for lunch and to pick up some more bikers.  Getting peckish! 

At 8.15 on Sunday evening a weary threesome and their merry band of fellow cyclists arrived at Balliol, to the cheers and tears of their families and friends from Greggs.  A fantastic buffet from Lynne and Pam at Balliol (thank you!) and champagne toast from Ken to celebrate a fantastic achievement on arrival in Newcastle.  We are so proud of you all!

Only the very last leg tomorrow – 2 miles from Balliol to Gosforth!

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Raymond’s Scottish Adventure!

Well, what a day!

After being piped into the Clydesmill bakery on Friday evening, we were also sent off in memorable fashion on Saturday morning  with the sound of vuvuzellas ringing in our ears.   Huge thanks to the Alan, Lesley and the team for their unforgettable hospitality.

This morning joining Richard Robin and Paul were eight additional riders including yours truly, hoping to reach the Edinburgh Bakery.   The weather was cool and overcast and pleasant to ride in.   We headed for Coatbridge and Airdrie – and had a well earned stop at the Airdrie shop for a breather and a photo.   Onward from there we made good progress towards Bathgate.   At 25 miles this was halfway to the bakery.   Another stop at the local shop and macaroni pies and sausage rolls all round was the order of the day.

We zipped through Livingston and then headed out towards Currie.   I found myself at the head of the pack on a busy road.   After whizzing through a set of lights, a sign off to the right for the cycle path caught my eye and I braked quickly.   What I hadn’t bargained for was the group behind me!    CRUNCH, SCREECH, STRAMASH……bikes and bodies everywhere!! These bakers are hardy souls  – not a single complaint.   Sorry lads!!!

The rest of ride was less eventful but we were tiring and the back roads into Edinburgh were more hilly than we’d hoped.   But we all got through this difficult stage.   We eventually pulled in to the Edinburgh bakery 6 hours 18 mins and 34 seconds and 51 miles after we left Clydesmill.   The time is significant because there is a sweepstake running in Scotland for the closest to this time winning a mountain bike!

The welcome at Edinburgh Bakery was just smashing.   I was surprised and delighted to see everyone wearing T-Shirts with my photo on it saying “Well Done Raymond”.   Marion was dressed as Pudsey and the team laid on a very welcome buffet to re-fuel us.   It was just fantastic!
We were all sore, tired and relieved to have crossed the line.   We were also aware that Richard, Robin and Paul weren’t finished for the day.   They had another 46 miles to go before they were due to stop for the evening in Eyemouth.   I couldn’t have gone any further.   How these guys are able to pound out these distances day after day is truly remarkable.   I am completely in awe of their achievement.

…..Raymond

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One small pedal for man, one giant ride for mankind….

Scott Jefferson, Group Customer & Marketing Director, writes:

I was so [word deleted by editor!!!]  knackered last night that all I could do was jump in the shower, fall asleep on the sofa and drag myself off to bed.   I was hungry but could only muster up enough energy for a bowl of muesli before crashing out.  

 I have it on good authority from Mr Hutton that Robin’s biggest ever hill up to Glossop was nothing compared to what we encountered yesterday.   I was expecting a number of tough but short climbs.   The reality was one enormous mountain – we climbed from something like 400’ to 1500’ in 2.5 miles.   When we reached the top, high up on Saddleworth Moor, it felt like we were the first men on the moon.   Anyway, we did it, and I did it on my Penny Farthing which was the source of much mirth from the other cyclists.   It’s a 15 year old “sit up and beg” bike with, in theory, 12 gears but I can only fathom out how to use 6!   My trusty steed didn’t let me down though and the reward came in the 40mph ride down the other side to Compo’s Cafe where we consumed well-earned fish and chips.

Easy this cycling lark.  Scott.

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Football and fundraising!

Yesterday at Innovate House, Newcastle, Greggs Head Office staff showed their support for our boys (our cyclists as well as the England team!) by raising money at the screening of the footie match and BBQ.

A big THANK YOU to the Social Committee and Charity Committee for joining forces to organise a great event (all the better for the England win!).  And a big THANK YOU to everyone who showed up to support the event and kindly made donations.

Photos below….

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Day 7 update – can’t miss the match

Wednesday, 23rd June, Day 7.

Robin Leaver writes:

13.18:

Going well today, 40 miles gone and we are now on our way to Kirby Lonsdale, 15 miles away.  Our last stop today is Sedbergh, and we’re aiming to get there in time for the footy.  Not too many hills today (did I mention I don’t like hills?)

15.36:

WE ABSOLUTELY BLASTED IT!!!  Left Leeds at 9.00am, and arrived in Sedbergh in time for the footy – 70 miles!  Sitting with a pint watching the match and feeling gooooooooood!  Hope you are all enjoying the game, C’MON ENGLAND!

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King of the Mo…..?

Mountains?

No, self proclaimed King of the molehills!

And that’s the only thing I could ascend with any degree of cycling speed.  But what a feeling of elation on Tuesday lunchtime to reach the summit of our climb up over Saddleworth Moor on the Manchester to Leeds leg.   I have to say I was mightily impressed with Scott’s effort – he has a bike that is just like a proper baker’s bike, save that he has white-walled tyres, which seems a bit more Beverley Hills than Pennines!   And to say he was only using 6 gears, he fairly flew up the hills.   Nice one!

The day after my two-day effort (Wednesday), its fair to say I was absolutely knackered.   Strangely, my thumbs went completely numb and to my embarrassment, Catherine, my wife, had to cut up my bacon chop that I had for tea on Tuesday evening!   How weird is that?   Thankfully I am now able to feed myself again……….. I was certainly able to hold a pint glass and toast the England boys last night!

Anyway, apart from the last few miles next Sunday, that’s me done.   But I will be getting on my bike again, that’s for sure.

Thanks to all for support and encouragement, and donations of course.   And if some of my exposures made you smile, please add a few more quid at www.justgiving.com/jonathanjowett.
B’bye now.  Jonathan.

Jonathan Jowett, Greggs Company Secretary.

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