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SunnyAdventures Outdoor Club is taking Fullhouse 1124 hills challenging raise money for 3 charities over the next 2.5 years, this challenge is being supported by team members of SunnyAdventures Outdoor Club throughout the whole duration in participating any mountain trips amoung the 1124 hills. On 25th Oct. 2021, there are 73 people registrered Fullhouse completion with Scottish Mountaineering Club, hoping to be still within the 100 by the time we complete the challenge and Sunny will become the first Chinese to complete the Fullhouse Challenge. The list: 282 Munros 226 Munro tops 222 Corbetts 219 Grahams 86 Donalds 52 Donald tops 34 Furths. SMC website below.
https://www.smc.org.uk/hills/compleators
Charities: To raise money for Christian Aid the Vision of bring an end to poverty around the world to help people around the world fight their way out of poverty. To raise money for Scottish Mountain Rescue Team to help volunteers to save lives in the Scottish Outdoors. To raise money for Lifeboats RNLI to help volunteers to save lives at sea.
To celebrate life of Steve Perry Sunny Huang's big FiveO, and all the club members who was born the same day: Martin Carery Stuart Jammieson, happy birthday to 4 of you! we would like all the birthday gifts goes to this donation page at your own choice of any of the 3 Charities. Please click one of the 3 team members below which are all under SunnyAdventures Outdoor Club. Do not click the Charity Icon on the right hand side of the page as that wont be donate under Fullhouse Challenge Page. Thank you very much for your support.
Sunny's story: I was brought up in a very poor family, in all my childhood memory that me and my brother always hungry, there were lots of kind of food I had never knew till when I was in Nursing school. My colleague might find it funny when seeing me taking every single drop out of my lunch box while making a squeaky noise as the spoon rubbing my lunch box made of glass. Its not because of I m hungry just need that little drop of soup, it is cause I had built up a habit not to waste food since when I was little, I don't like waste.
Remember my parents couldn't afford buy clothe for us, me and my brother always wear clothes given by other people which they no longer wanted, and my grandma made shoes for us by her own hands with the recycling material, they were extremely ugly and uncomfortable, we always got made fun of by the school kids, they gave our shoes a name- 'big veg steam dumplings'. so we were two kids different from everyone els at school.
Now I don't have all those problems anymore, I am not rich but at lease I have enough to feed myself and have a roof over my family. I always want to help for poverty, therefore we are helping Christian Aid in making their vision--an end to poverty become reality.
Christian Aid Charity works in over 60 Countries around the whole helping people in need, regardless of religion believes or race, the money raise will be in good use for the poors.
Mountain Rescue Teams are formed by amazing highly skilled volunteers who go out rescue mountain users in need in various adverse conditions put their own life at risk without getting paid. As we are outdoor club and most of our active members are out hills all the time, we always take hat off to these guys. Any hour, Any day, Any weather......volunteering to help save lives.
Scottish Mountain Rescue (SMR) represents 25 Mountain Rescue Teams (MRTs) made up of highly trained volunteers who are available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year to respond to emergencies and carry out a specialist search and rescue service in the mountains and remote communities in Scotland to keep people safe and help people if and when they get into difficulty. Together we are here to save lives in the outdoors.
SMR and our 25 MRTs are all charities. In addition to representing these member MRTs, SMR also serves three Police Scotland MRTs and one RAF MRT. We are proud to have more than 850 dedicated volunteer team members who are always prepared and willing to drop everything they are doing to assist total strangers.
The remote nature of the Scottish mountains, the terrain and the prevailing weather mean that many search and rescue operations in Scotland simply cannot be carried out without large numbers of volunteers able to go out on foot and who can be mobilised quickly. It often is simply not possible to search for people by helicopter in Scotland, because low clouds often prevent the helicopters from flying.
These volunteers are the foundation of the mountain rescue community. Each MRT and team member saves lives in the Scottish outdoors.
Royal National Lifeboats Institution: Our volunteer lifeboat crews provide a 24-hour rescue service in the UK and Ireland, and our seasonal lifeguards look after people on busy beaches. Our Flood Rescue Team helps those affected by flooding.
RNLI crews and lifeguards have saved over 142,700 lives since 1824 but we’re more than a rescue service. We influence, supervise and educate people too. Our Community Safety teams explain the risks and share safety knowledge with anyone going out to sea or to the coast. And our international teams work with like-minded organisations to help tackle drowning in communities at risk all around the world.