The Central Stags cricket team and Black Cap Blair Tickner have pushed themselves to the limit in a heat chamber to raise money for charities supporting Tickner’s wife Sarah through her cancer fight.
The team took to Mitre 10 Park on Thursday to replicate climbing the highest peaks of each of the eight provinces that make up the ‘Central Districts area’, doing so either by replicating skiing, rowing or biking.
Inspired by the Cure Leukaemia UK Run the Nations challenge, which ran a leg for Sarah, Tickner and the team decided to replicate the challenge in Central Districts fashion.
The fundraiser included Mt Taranaki, Manawatu, Whanganui, Wairarapa, Hawke’s Bay, Horowhenua, Nelson, and Marlborough-themed challenges.
The athletes, who regularly challenge each other to test their fitness, had the additional factor of completing it in a heat chamber with temperatures between 30C and 35C and humidity that reached 70%.
When Hawke’s Bay Today spoke with Tickner beforehand, he felt confident the team would smash the challenge and only hoped they wouldn’t vomit.
“Any predictions? Me and Dane Cleaver usually go toe to toe, it’s going to be fun and there is going to be a bit of spewing and a bit of hard work and sweat - but we will have fun in the end,” Tickner said.
He hoped they could raise $2000 to $4000 each for the Givealittle page that would close on Sunday.
“We have always bound together, so this is just another challenge for the team as a unit.”
Sarah Tickner’s cancer journey
Tickner’s wife Sarah was diagnosed while he was playing county cricket for Derbyshire in England.
She started chemotherapy while they were overseas before being transferred to Palmerston North Hospital about three months ago.
“It was a bit scary flying back because there was the risk of blood clotting and we were given blood thinner injections that I was putting into her stomach every 12 hours,” Tickner said.
Back on home soil Sarah has continued with treatment and had another two rounds of chemo.
“She is doing well, but she doesn’t like me saying ‘well’, because every day is cancer,” Tickner said.
Tickner said they were still facing another three months of “heavy” chemo and a further 18 months of monthly chemo that was “maintenance-based”.
Michaela Gower joined Hawke’s Bay Today in 2023 and is based out of the Hastings newsroom. She covers Dannevirke and Hawke’s Bay news and loves sharing stories about farming and rural communities.