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BRING ME THE HORIZON: Oli Sykes und Jordan Fish erklimmen Kilimandscharo!

Wir haben größten Respekt vor dieser Aktion: Wie jetzt verkündet wurde, werden Frontmann Oliver Sykes und Jordan Fish (Keyboards/Vocals) von ...

VON AM 09/10/2017

Wir haben größten Respekt vor dieser Aktion: Wie jetzt verkündet wurde, werden Frontmann Oliver Sykes und Jordan Fish (Keyboards/Vocals) von BRING ME THE HORIZON noch diese Woche den Kilimandscharo in Tansania besteigen, der mit knapp 5.900 Metern Höhe das höchste Bergmassiv Afrikas darstellt. Hinter dem Vorhaben steckt aber keine Lebensmüdigkeit, sondern ein karitativer Hintergrund.



Mit der ursprünglich 2016 verkündeten und eigentlich bereits für Januar diesen Jahres geplanten Aktion wollen Sykes und insbesondere Fish Spendengelder für Friends of PICU sammeln, ein Zusammenschluss, der sich auf Hilfe für krtisch kranke Kleinkinder konzentriert.

Für Fish waren Hirnblutungen seines Sohnes Eliot, die nur vier Tage nach seiner Geburt im August 2016 festgestellt wurden, ein maßgeblicher Antrieb für das Vorhaben. Im offiziellen Spendenaufruf bei JustGiving.com schildert er das Erlebte und erklärt die Stufen des geplanten Aufstiegs, der im Laufe dieser Woche erfolgen soll. Bisher wurden bereits rund 66.800 von den bisher gesteckten 100.000 Pfund erreicht.



Wir ziehen an dieser Stelle unseren Hut vor Fish und Sykes und drücken die Daumen, dass die Jungs sowohl ihr Ziel erreichen, als auch dass massig Spendengelder zusammenkommen und beide wieder unbeschadet zurückfinden.

„On the evening of Sunday 21st August, our 4 day old baby Eliot suffered what we eventually found out was a Brain Haemorrhage. My wife Emma and I reacted as quickly as we could as soon as we began to feel his crying changed from what you would consider ‘normal’ to something else. We called an ambulance in the early hours of the morning and did our best to keep him calm, awake and alive.

When we arrived at Basingstoke hospital Eliot had stopped breathing more than once and was having seizures. Emma held him in the ambulance and kept him alive even though she could feel him drifting away in her arms. The hospital staff put Eliot into a coma, took over his breathing and sedated him to get the seizure under control.

Once they felt he was stable enough, within about an hour or two of us arriving, they scanned Eliot’s brain. The scan showed an acute bleed in the centre of his brain and some ‘unusual’ tissue which may have caused the bleed.


In the early hours of Monday morning we were transferred in a special ambulance to the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit at Southampton hospital where he stayed for 5 days under the 24hr supervision on the amazing team there.

The Paediatric Intensive Care Unit in Southampton is the lead centre in South Central England. Their 14 bed purpose built unit cares for children from birth up to 18 years of age. They care for patients with some of the most complex illnesses and injuries and work closely with specialists from all surgical and medical areas. The unit, which looks after 950 to 1,000 patients per year from across southern and central England, is the sixth largest PICU in the UK by number of admissions and has one of the best survival rates. Children are referred to them from hospitals as far afield as Plymouth, Milton Keynes and the Channel Islands. They also have a 24-hour retrieval service which helped bring Eliot safely from Basingstoke to Southampton

While in hospital I decided that I would focus myself on doing something positive for the ward and trying to raise enough money to pay for a new bed for them. Oli asked immediately if he could join me and help raise as much awareness for this cause as possible. In October 2017 we will fly to Tanzania where we will climb Mt Kilimanjaro over the course of 8 days. Our itinerary will look something like this…

DAY 1 DEPARTURE FROM THE UK

DAY 2 MOSHI

DAY 3 MTI MKUBWA 2780m 3-5 HRS TREKKING

DAY 4 SHIRA CAMP 3505m 7-9 HRS TREKKING

DAY 5 BARRANCO CAMP 3972m 6-7 HRS TREKKING

DAY 6 KARANGA VALLEY 4002m 5-6 HRS TREKKING

DAY 7 BARAFU CAMP 4600m 5-6 HRS TREKKING

DAY 8 SUMMIT DAY 5895m 12-14 HRS TREKKING

In terms of Eliot’s recovery we still have a very long way to go and we are taking each day at a time, however he is still alive to fight, he is breathing on his own and we are seeing small improvements every day. He is a little fighter and has shown amazing signs of recovery already, even at this early stage. We owe that completely to the Nurses, Doctors, Neurologists and staff at PICU.

Please donate generously, share this page as wide as possible and help us reach our target.“

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