For the last 8 years (this year will be my 9th) I have taken part in a charity bike ride, always in the last week of August, supporting a small charity called Le Cure.
Le Cure was established in 2014 to raise money for cancer research. Every August, our annual cycle event “Le Cure de France” sees Curistas take on some of the Tour de France’s toughest climbs in the French Alps over four gruelling days. So far we have raised over £3.3 million for the Royal Marsden Cancer Charity in the UK, and created six Le Cure research fellowships.
In 2026, riders will again climb more vertical metres than Mount Everest and finish in Alpe d’Huez.
I’m passionate about cycling, and like many others, I’ve seen friends and family affected by cancer. Supporting this cause gives real meaning to my efforts, gives me a reason to train, and I’ve encouraged friends to join me who now take part regularly.
@Sean Perry - thank you for sharing, and you rock for biking such a course! 🚲🚲🚲
@Andy Gladstone - I feel like Le Cure de France is right up your alley bike lane!
@Dave Liao how well you know me! I have participated in a similar event here in the US. They raise over $10M each year. Bike 4 Chai supports the efforts of Chai Lifeline to improve the lives of children with illness, and started specifically focused on children stricken with cancer and has expanded to include a multitude of critical pediatric illnesses.
Throughout the year I do charity events, such as:
Date: Saturday 13 June 2026
Location: Battersea Park, London
https://marchformen.prostatecanceruk.org/
Dates: 1 July to 30 September 2026
Location: Anywhere
I don't actively support one single cause at the moment, but I really value initiatives around mental health and education, especially when they're local and practical. I also try to help in smaller ways when I can - donating, sharing awareness or supporting people directly around me 💙
I support my local food pantry by donating food regularly and extra money around the holidays.
You just reminded me to contribute time to my local food bank (Philabundance!).
Forever ago we participated in a food packing event, and I'm pretty sure some of the volunteers recreated a Supermarket Sweeps situation. 😂
🙏 I've been supporting a few non-profits, and I'll highlight two:
I know Atlassian, Adaptavist and Appfire (and others not starting with A) all have active internal donation and work programs where they match time and money. I think that this is a great way to also get to build teams.
As a family we donate money to a number of local causes - small businesses, LGBTQ+ orgs, food needs, education and some individuals directly. But most of our giving is to our Episcopal church, and then other organization through that. All the personal giving tends to be more private.
Never heard of Versiti, super cool!
Thank you for donating so much of your time! 🙌
Oooh, blood counts as well 🩸
Adding to this that I've donated blood just today, and it was my 29th donation :)
Btw @Amanda Barber , when do you actually work? 😅
A nice reminder @Dave Liao !
I do support UNICEF, but I've recently updated my bank information, so I'll need to update my details there as well.
Really glad to see so many people are contributing to all these causes 🙏 (there's still hope for this world, I guess 😅)