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World runner, 61, returns to UK | World runner, 61, returns to UK |
(about 3 hours later) | |
A grandmother who has run more than 20,000 miles across 12 countries is back in the UK. | |
Rosie Swale Pope, 61, says she is "full of beans" after arriving in Scrabster at the northern tip of Scotland to finish her round-the-world trip. | |
She has overcome frostbite and broken ribs during her journey, which was to raise awareness of prostate cancer following the death of her husband. | She has overcome frostbite and broken ribs during her journey, which was to raise awareness of prostate cancer following the death of her husband. |
After landing, she plans to run to her home in Tenby, in Pembrokeshire. | After landing, she plans to run to her home in Tenby, in Pembrokeshire. |
A crowd which included her son, James, friends from Wales, and a bagpiper, greeted her as she arrived at 0430 BST after taking the ferry from the Faroe Islands. | |
It marks the final leg of her adventure which she began in Wales on her 57th birthday in 2003, in the belief it would take about two years. | |
With no back-up team and little funding, she ran through some of the planet's most remote and rugged areas, pulling a cart containing provisions. On most nights, she camped at the side of the road. | |
Her route has taken her across Europe, Russia, Asia and north America. When she reached Times Square in New York in October last year, she draped herself in a Welsh flag. | Her route has taken her across Europe, Russia, Asia and north America. When she reached Times Square in New York in October last year, she draped herself in a Welsh flag. |
During her journey she has been hit by a bus, suffered pneumonia, frostbite in Alaska and had a breast cancer scare. | |
She was confronted by a man with an axe in Siberia, was knocked unconscious as she tried to cross a rive and has gone through 45 pairs of shoes. | |
She has overcome her latest setback, breaking several ribs during a fall in Iceland, to begin the last UK leg of her trip. | She has overcome her latest setback, breaking several ribs during a fall in Iceland, to begin the last UK leg of her trip. |
But she said the trip had been worth it. | |
She took in Times Square, New York during her journey | |
"What else would I be doing? Sat around thinking about what I did in the past?" she said. | |
"The best thing is that if my run around the world, which is just a small thing really compared to what many people do, if it saves a life or two by raising cancer awareness and makes a little bit of money for charity, that's just brilliant." | |
Her plan is to run down the west coast of Scotland, through Cumbria and Lancashire, on to Liverpool, and then through Wales. | |
"It's fantastic to have set foot in Great Britain again," she said. | |
"It's a great moment." | |
The adventurer first became well known when she crossed the Atlantic alone in a 17ft boat. | |
As well as sailing around the world, she has completed a 3,000-mile horse trek through Chile and a run across the Sahara desert. | |
She is expected to end her round-the-world journey in August. | |
As well as aiming to increase awareness of prostate cancer, she is raising money for a children's home in Russia run by the Kitezh educational organisation. | As well as aiming to increase awareness of prostate cancer, she is raising money for a children's home in Russia run by the Kitezh educational organisation. |