Four vicars from the diocese have embarked on a challenging five day motor biking ‘pilgrimage’ from Yorkshire to the island of Iona on the West coast of Scotland.
Stop Press - on Day Two the Bikers have been spotted (right) on the Corran Ferry between Glencoe and Ardgour as they head towards the Isle of Mull..
The vicars are members of the ‘West Yorkshire and the Dales Motor Cycle Club’ which was formed from clergy and lay motorbike enthusiasts when the new diocese began a year ago.
Update Two. The group reached their destination and spent Wednesday April 22nd on Iona, sharing Holy Communion on the beach in the afternoon
A total of eight bikes set off this Monday April 20th, and as well as the clergy bikers there will be four lay riders and four pillion passengers - a party of twelve clergy and lay people – all taking part in the five day ride, the longest yet by the club which has so far only made single day trips around the diocese.
The 725 mile round trip will take in the Kielder Forest, Edinburgh, the spectacular scenery of the Trossachs, Glencoe, Mull, Oban, Iona and then Glasgow and Gretna Green on the return leg.
The bikers set out from various parts of the diocese before meeting up and officially setting off as a group from St Matthew’s Church Leyburn , the church of one of the biking vicars, the Revd Canon Michael Hepper (pictured left in orange).
“This is very different kind of retreat to any I’ve experienced before”, said Michael. “I will be riding an Indian-built Royal Enfield single-cylinder Bullet made for the India Army and flying the flag for Wensley Deanery. Since this will be virtually the bike's maiden voyage I hope I won’t spend the trip stranded on the roadside!
“We will be riding as a group so it will be a good exercise in caring for one another along the way” he added. “It should be both a spiritual experience and an adventure but we will probably all need a holiday afterwards to recover!”
(Above:The vicars leading the pilgrimage: (Left to right) Revd Canon Michael Hepper, Vicar of Leyburn, North Yorkshire; Revd Neal Lefroy-Owen, Priest in Charge of St Hilda's Halifax and St John's Warley; Revd Canon Paul Tudge, Vicar of Farsley; and Revd Canon Stephen Kelly, Priest in Charge of Woolley with West Bretton and Area Dean of Wakefield . Right: Canon Stephen leads a prayer outside Bellerby church)
Day One of the pilgrimage, a 200 mile leg, takes them to Barnard Castle, over the moors to Hexham, then the Kielder Forest on the A68 to Jedburgh and on to Musselburgh (Edinburgh). Day Two is a no less strenuous, 175 miles via Callander and the Trossachs, Glencoe to Corran Ferry, before crossing to Mull and a scenic route to Aird of Kinloch and Fionnphort. With Day Three comes the destination of the pilgrimage and a day spent on Iona, described as the ‘cradle of Christianity’ where St Columba landed by coracle from Ireland and brought the Gospel in 563 AD
A more experienced rider, the Revd Neal Lefroy-Owen, Priest in Charge of St Hilda's Halifax and St John's Warley, has made several long distance trips including a 4000 mile ride across the USA last year. “I'm really looking forward to this trip, “ he said. “ It's great to be able to share my love of riding with fellow Christians from the new diocese and to get to know them better, a visit to Iona for the first time is the icing on the cake.
The other motor cycling vicars are the Revd Canon Stephen Kelly, Priest in Charge of Woolley with West Bretton and Area Dean of Wakefield; and the Revd Canon Paul Tudge, Vicar of Farsley (Leeds EA)who will be riding with his wife Rosie as pillion passenger. They are joined by priest in training, Phil Maries and his wife Belinda, Brian Sanderson, Matt Dowson, and Neil Crossley with wife Sonia
More pictures from Day Three, Iona... Below Canon Stephen Kelly leads Communion on the beach