The Morning Live presenter has been forced to quit the mission during which she and endurance athlete Mimi Anderson hoped to cycle 300 miles in three days.
BBC star Louise Minchin has been taken to hospital with frostbite having taken part in a gruelling Arctic challenge. The Morning Live presenter has been forced to quit her mission with endurance athlete Mimi Anderson.
The pair had hoped to cycle 300 miles in three days through Canada’s Northwestern Territories. With the aim of raising money for the Duke of Edinburgh Award Scheme, Louise, 57, and Mimi got to about 87 miles when disaster struck.
After battling treacherous winds and temperatures that reached as low as -40C, they realised something was horribly wrong, and they needed immediate medical attention.
Speaking to her Instagram followers from her hospital bed on Friday, Louise explained: “We are out of the race, but we are safe, warm and being well looked after.”
After 14 hours, they had no choice but to leave the Inuvik Weekend Warrior Fat Bike Challenge, which sees participants cycle across the Arctic wilderness and frozen rivers. The Mirror reports that the challenge is described as taking cyclists “through some of the coldest, toughest and most beautiful terrain.”
Louise wrote: “We did around 140k in temperatures as low as -40 degrees. When we got to this point, both of us knew we were very dangerously cold. The combination of the temperature and wind meant despite having prepared as much as we could have it was a huge risk to go on.
“Turns out we were right to stop. We both have frostbite and are being looked after incredibly well looked after. At the moment we remain in good spirits.”
The video Louise shared showed her and Mimi with their fingers bandaged up in blue dressings as they sat in hospital together. Frostbite can be caused in as little as 10 minutes when they wind chill is as cold as -36C, which were the conditions Mimi and Louise faced as they cycled through the Northwester Territories.
The condition can cause pain and numbness to begin with, but if left untreated and exposed it can lead to frozen skin, swelling, blood-filled blisters and a loss of sensation. In extreme cases, necrosis can begin, which is when the skin turns black as it starts to die.
Louise’s celebrity pals flooded the comments with well-wishes after their disappointment. Good Morning Britain host Susanna Reid said: “Big hugs,” while Olympian Greg Rutherford posted: “Bloody hell Lou! Be safe.”
Fellow BBC presenter Helen Skelton shared: “What an achievement so far.” With endurance runner and writer Susie Chan added: “Bloody hell ladies. You are such a pair of baddies!!!! Stay warm!”
Author Adele Parks praised their journey, typing: “What a huge achievement doing 140k! So proud of you both. Especially proud for recognising when you need to get in doors!! So sorry to hear about the frostbite!!! Take excellent care of each other and please please please get fully better soon xxx”
Just the day before, Louise shared a photo of herself as she set off on her journey. She wrote: “Today I set off on what is likely to be the adventure of a lifetime, an epic bike race in the Arctic Circle, 300 miles in 3 days in temperatures as low as minus 30C. Why? You might ask, believe me, I have been asking myself the same question a lot recently.
“The simple answer is that when Mimi Anderson, legendary endurance runner and friend invited me to join her on the inaugural Weekend Warrior in Canada’s Northwest Territories it sounded fun. @marvellousmimi.”
She added that her aim of raising money for young people to join the Duke of Edinburgh Award Scheme would be the incentive to keep pushing when “the going gets tough”. Louise shared: “I went on my first expedition with DofE over forty years ago and that is where my passion for challenging myself started.”
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