Brooklyn rider toughens up for sick kids

IF the key to losing weight and keeping it off is motivation, then Brooklyn’s Michael Lee has plenty in reserve.

He is preparing to ride 700 kilometres in seven days for charity.

For Lee (pictured), it will be the second crack at the annual
Ronald McDonald House Charity Ride for Sick Kids. Last year, he tackled
the cold, rain, hills and 40km/h headwinds of Gippsland.

“I first wanted to do it in 2011, but I was a bit unfit and
overweight,” Lee, 58, said. “But one of the riders in the group was a
trainer who lived nearby, so I did a lot of indoor bike work and lost 20
kilograms in less than a year. The first few weeks were hell, but it
got easier. So now I’m older, but I feel much newer.”

This year’s ride starts in Bendigo on August 24 and winds through
Shepparton, Yarrawonga, Albury, Benalla, Seymour and Bundoora before
finishing at Ronald McDonald House in Melbourne on August 30.

Lee said the Gippsland ride was a brutal experience.

“It’s the hardest thing I’ve done since I was 19 and a full-time
soldier,” he said. “But you just have to grit your teeth and get through
it. You’ve got to be strong physically and emotionally.”

Lee has clocked up 100 kilometres a week around Williamstown,
Laverton and Altona, and along the coast in Anglesea and Torquay, to
prepare for the ride. Organisers hope to raise $250,000 this year.

To donate or follow Michael Lee’s progress, visit rideforsickkids.com.au