Monaco cyclists ride 140km from St-Tropez Sunday to support Princess’ Foundation

Photo: Ed Wright Images
COCC St-Tropez to Monaco 2016. Photo: Ed Wright Images

It’s no secret that I’m an avid swimrunner and absolutely passionate about open water swimming. I am in the Mediterranean year-round, a minimum of three times a week and for at least 5 km a session, unless there’s a jellyfish infestation and I get grossed out, which happens once or twice a year. I’m not fast, by any means, but I am strong.

I swapped the 50-metre chlorine pool for the natural salty sea about three years ago, and have no regrets. It’s not a simple transition; you have to get used to all things living in the Med, some divine – a school of fish on a crystal-clear morning – and others, not so – like jellyfish, and the water can be face-burning cold and choppy. But it’s a glorious (and free) opportunity to connect with nature and I share my enthusiasm about swimming with anyone who’s willing to listen (and even those who aren’t).

Drowning: third leading cause of unintentional death globally
When I first heard about the Princess Charlene Foundation, which was set up five years ago with the goal to educate children in water safety and provide swimming lessons, I was all for supporting the cause. However, at first glance I presumed it was related to France, which has the highest rate in the world of infant death by drowning in swimming pools – “between 15 and 20 children aged up to five are killed every year in pool accidents”.

Even France’s former Prime Minister, Jean Pierre Raffarin, lost a relative to drowning, a precursor to the Raffarin Law, obliging all in-ground private pools on every French property to install from January 1, 2006, one of four types of pool safety features, with a penalty of €45,000 for those failing to do so.

But the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation isn’t about swimming safety along the Mediterranean coast. She promotes her global project in 30 countries, including South Africa, which is far away from France with its highest number of swimming pools in the European market.

I’ve heard heartbreaking stories about how African children drown on the way to school, when a flash flood arrives and they don’t know how to swim. Or when mothers are washing their clothes along the river, when suddenly the water rises and their children are swept away, without the basic knowledge of how to stay afloat and swim. There are no community pools to sign up young children for lessons. Think about that.

This “health problem”, as defined by the World Health Organisation (WHO), is not limited to the African continent. In fact, WHO reports that “drowning is the third leading cause of unintentional injury death worldwide, accounting for 7% of all injury-related deaths”, which results in an estimated 372,000 annual drowning deaths globally.

According to WHO, “Drowning death rates are highest in the WHO African Region, and are 10-13 times higher than those seen in the United Kingdom or Germany respectively.”

Princess Charlene and her Foundation have their work cut out for them.

COCC St-Tropez to Monaco 2015
COCC St-Tropez to Monaco 2015

The early years of Champagne and Oysters Cycling Club
Naturally, when I learned about the 140 km St-Tropez to Monaco charity bike ride, which takes place this year on Sunday, April 30, organised by the Champagne and Oyster Cycling Club (COCC), in aid of the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation, I knew I had to dust off my bike and pedal for a cause I firmly believe in.

I met with Damian Crean, McLaren Property Services in Monaco, to get a little background about the COCC ride, now in its sixth edition, and to see what non-riders can do to contribute.

I was surprised to learn that the idea for the ride actually stems from Movember, the annual campaign in November that encourages men to grow out their moustache to raise awareness about “men’s health issues, such as prostate cancer, testicular cancer and men’s suicide”. One of the now regular COCC St-Tropez-Monaco riders put forward the idea of doing something more active than growing facial hair, and so the first ride in 2011 came to be, and supported a cancer charity.

After the inaugural year with its seven riders, other friends wanted to join, as did Prince Albert, and so the group decided to support a local charity, the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation.

On the first training ride, which was about 30 km, 20 cyclists including the Prince “set out on a sensible ride” and on the way back, they stopped at their regular café at Place d’Armes, when a new hut was spotted serving Champagne and Oysters. This seemed more tempting than coffee. One of the riders decided this would be a fitting name – The Champagne and Oyster Cycling Club – or COCC for short. Since then, over 500 riders, from ages 15 to 60, have participated in the COCC St-Tropez to Monaco ride. In previous years celebrities such as Eddie Jordan, Jenson Button, Daniel Ricciardo, Mika Hakkinen, Paul di Resta, David Coulthard, Baden Cook, Matt Goss, Tiffany Cromwell, Thor Hushovd, Mario Cipollini, Lizzie Armitstead, Veronica Larsson, Modesta Vžesniauskaitė Byron Kellerer, and Caroline Coor have all taken part and given their support to the Foundation.

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A day you’ll want to be a part of
The ride on April 30 starts in St-Tropez around 8 am, and finishes at Stars’n’Bars in Monaco, give or take, 9 hours later. The entry fee is €1,000, of which €700 goes to the Foundation directly, while the rest covers the annual kit, insurance, and a one-year membership with Monaco Cycling Club. It also includes mechanical backup plus water and energy supplies along the route. Brunch at the half-way point, which this year will be at a spectacular penthouse apartment at a John Caudwell development, is also part of the deal. As is the post-cycle street party at Slammers Pub (6 Rue Suffren Reymond) with a barbeque and live music that will go on for most of the night (Monday is a bank holiday!).

For those not racing, you can buy tickets from Terry at Slammers for €75 – which covers the party and a donation to the Foundation. Anyone interested in becoming a sponsor or securing a place on next year’s COCC’s iconic cycling shirts, should see the sponsors’ page.

A Monaco charity that makes a difference worldwide
Monies raised from this year’s COCC charity cycle will go towards a first aid and CPR training complex in Loumbila, Burkina Faso, a joint project with the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation, the Monaco Red Cross and the Burkinabe Red Cross. The facility will include an Aquatic Rescue Center, as financed by the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation, to allow the training of “rescuers and lifeguards from Burkina Faso and other countries in the region”. Director of Aquatic Rescue Center of Monaco, Pierre Frolla, an ambassador to the Foundation, as well as four-time freediving world record holder, will oversee the development.

The mission will include a water-safety programme and swimming lessons available to the thousand local high school students, many of whom have never had an opportunity to be in a pool, but are often at risk of drowning during floods.

This is the first time I’m trying to raise money for a cause through a sport event, and I’m a little nervous. I’ve always been in awe of people like Monaco-based Ben Rolfe, who, since learning of his young daughter’s diabetes diagnosis a few years ago, has been tackling endurance races to raise money for Diabetes UK. He sets up his own Justgiving page and gets the word out about what he’s doing (which at the moment, is racing the Marathon des Sables with his 17-year-old daughter). I’m not that organised, so for my first fundraising go it’s easier to piggyback off COCC’s donation’s page.

I’ve set a goal of €1,000, which will go towards the Burkinabe Red Cross and the Aquatic Rescue Center, and donations can be made online.

For those who think that Monaco is only full of rich people, in addition to the 38,000 residents, there are 55,000 people who work in the Principality. We are not all rich with deep pockets. We are a regular community, united by sport for a good cause. It just happens to be in Monaco, with its “champagne wishes and caviar dreams” lifestyle.

Article first published March 9, 2017. Feature image: Ed Wright Images.

 

 

 

 

Design exhibit at Karl Lagerfeld’s former villa ends Sunday

Villa La Vigie
Villa La Vigie

La Vigie, one of Monaco’s historic villas, will be hosting a travelling design showcase from April 27-30. The target audience will be collectors, interior designers, architects, and art and design professionals, according to the organisers.

La Vigie was built in 1902 for the British publishing magnate Sir William Ingram and was a meeting place for French Riviera high society at the turn of the century. Other noted residents include Karl Lagerfeld, who lived here in the 1990s.

A grouping of international galleries have joined together to show contemporary design from the Middle East, Russian porcelain and Brazilian Modernism, to name a few of the themes. A Special Projects section will feature Serpentine Galleries and an installation of jewellery and sculpture by Christophe Graber; a talks and events programme will be held in the gardens.

NOMAD was founded by Giorgio Pace, a publishing, art and luxury brand specialist, who has staged projects and events with partners from Garage Museum of Contemporary Art to Rick Owens to Pierre Huyghe, and Nicolas Bellavance-Lecompte, co-founder and art director of Carwan Gallery in Beirut. As the name suggests, NOMAD will travel to a number of destinations of architectural significance that will further explore design and context.

Article first published February 26, 2017.

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The Women of Monaco Life, A Series: Johanna Rossi

johanna rossi

Johanna Rossi, Founder of Raising Women

ML: How did you end up in Monaco?
JR: I am British, born and raised in West Sussex, and went on to study Art and Design and then Interior Architecture at the University of Brighton. There I met my husband, who was born in Monaco, and so I came here for love.

ML: You came to Monaco with your boyfriend-now-husband. What were your first impressions and was it easy to integrate into the community?
JR: When I first visited Monaco I was taken aback by its beauty and the magnificence of the surrounding area. I moved here 16 years ago and was very much surrounded by my husband’s friends, colleagues and family. I didn’t start to make my own “real” friends until I had children.

ML: What is something people would be surprised to learn about Monaco?
JR: I think just how much Monaco has changed over the last ten years. I do feel rather sorry for tourists as they negotiate the endless building and road works.

ML: Favourite place to take your kids to eat?
JR: As a family we don’t hang out much in Monaco, we use it as our home base and at the weekends we head over the border to Italy or up to the Turbie or Peille.

ML: You launched Raising Women in September. What were your goals when starting out and what were you most afraid of about starting your own business?
JR: My life has been a series of choices, some good and some bad, that have led me on a journey to where I am today. I’ve learnt who I am and why I am here. I’m driven by a need to belong, and to have a sense of true purpose and fulfilment. One of the main goals behind Raising Women was to create a community in which to inspire and motivate other mums to understand what they’re truly passionate about and to work out how they could use this passion in a unique way.

I’ve worked out that my purpose is to “encourage” which was one of the driving factors in creating Raising Women. I believe that we should all be allowed to be ourselves and be able to express our beliefs to the world, in our own way.

The thing I was most afraid of when I started was “Am I making the right decision?” But deep down you know, and you have to try.

ML: Tell us about how Raising Women works.
JR: Raising Women is a connected and supportive community helping women balance motherhood and becoming who they were meant to be. I’m creating a community, launching podcasts and I continue to coach clients.

The community is going to be built on women sharing personal written stories of self-discovery through motherhood, which will be posted every fortnight on the website. I’ve also created a Facebook group where women in the community can connect.

On the podcast, I interview the women behind the stories and find out more about their businesses and how they balance motherhood with being a “mumpreneur”.

Through my coaching, I work with women who either want to start their journey of self-discovery and would like support, or with women who already have a business and need help finding balance.

I have many goals for my business, but my immediate goals are to build the community and connect and support as many like-minded mamas as possible.

ML: When you refer to coaching, what does this entail and who would benefit?
JR: Yes I coach women through the journey of self-discovery that is motherhood. I know how it feels to be a mother and I’m just a little further along than the women I coach. I do one-off sessions and one-on-one mentoring packages that are carried out over a two-month period. I’m also working on a Signature program that will be in the form of a downloadable eBook.

ML: Why do new mums need a network?
JR: I think new mums just look for someone to understand. As a new mum you are so confused, and you are trying to make sense of so many things. Everything has changed over night and that is so destabilising, I think as new mothers, we just look for some one who can relate to what we are going through and feeling.

johanna

ML : You’re a busy mom! You also launched an online store, The Shop, that is linked to Care International UK.
JR: Raising Women is also about giving back. I consider myself lucky to have had an education and thus the tools to go on to further educate myself and do what I do. I wanted to help give other women this opportunity, and that is why I chose Care International UK as a charity. I created a T-shirt collection for women in the community to wear as a sign of support and €5 from every women’s tee and €3 from every girl’s tee will be donated to Care International.

ML: What’s the hardest part of running your own business?
JR: The hardest part of running your own business for me is keeping focused. I have a very creative brain so I come up with lots of ideas that I want to execute. You have to learn timing and knowing what is right for your business in that moment.

ML: What is a typical day for you?
JR: My day starts just before 7. We have the before school routine, breakfast, getting kids ready and out the door. My days differ, I go to have acupuncture therapy at least twice a week at the start of the day and then I will either see clients, have a podcast to record or be at my desk working on client files, preparing features or dealing with orders. I try and wind my day up for the school pick up and then I go into “mama mode” for dinner, baths, play, stories and bed. I also have my evening rituals of making sure I’m very much prepared for the morning: workbag packed, kids snacks and sports bags ready, clothes laid out. It helps so much with the morning routine. Then I’ll try to be in bed between 10 to 11 pm.

ML: What is the best/hardest part of aging as a woman?
JR: Well until I read this question I didn’t really consider myself as ageing. I know I am, but at the same time I feel like life is just beginning for me in so many ways. I would love to think that as I age I just learn to feel more and more at ease with my journey.

ML: What is something you’ve always wanted to do?
JR: There are so many things I would love to do. But two things comes to mind: the first is write a book about what I have learnt, and the second is that I’ve always wanted to give lectures to young women in their late teens. I think when we leave college and set about our lives there is so much focus on grades and what we did well at, and not enough emphasis on what we actually enjoy and what comes most naturally to us. Then we head out into jobs that are demanding and are perhaps unsuitable and we start to lose our sense of self gradually in return for the steady pay cheque. However the thought of public speaking fills me with dread!

ML: Best piece of advice another woman gave you?
JR: To ask myself who did I want my children to see when they looked at me. That was a game changer for me.

ML: What has motherhood taught you about yourself?
JR: Motherhood has taught me how important sense of self is.

Article first published November 2, 2016.

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Princess Charlene visits South Africa to promote Foundation, attends charity race day at Turffontein

Photo: Eric Mathon
Photo: Eric Mathon

Princess Charlene returned from an eventful weekend in South Africa, where she continues to promote her foundation, with a mission in aid of water safety and drowning prevention, as well as teaching CPR.

On Friday, April 21, Her Serene Highness hosted a private cocktail function in Sandton, Johannesburg, which included many of South Africa’s most prestigious names. The Princess, along with several of South Africa’s most highly-regarded athletes, addressed the group about her Foundation, which was “created to raise public awareness about the dangers of the water, teach children preventive measures, and teach them to swim”.

According to the World Health Organisation, drowning the third leading cause of unintentional injury deaths worldwide and in 2012, approximately 372,000 people died from drowning, with “children, particularly in low and middle-income countries” being at the highest risk of drowning.

Photo: Eric Mathon
Photo: Eric Mathon

In a touching speech, Princess Charlene expressed how the Foundation is committed to saving lives. According to Her Serene Highness, “Here in South Africa, drowning is the second leading cause of accidental death after road accidents.” She continued, “We can save so many lives, simply by teaching people essential water safety skills and how to swim and by focusing on one person, one family, one community at a time.”

While the Princess Charlene Foundation works in 30 countries, in South Africa alone, the Foundation’s three programmes in 2016 helped over 30,000 people – Learn to Swim: 2,507 people; Water Safety: 27,242; and Sport & Education: 467.

Gavin Varejes, President of the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation South Africa, who was in Monaco last month as part of the Monaco-South Africa Rugby Exchange, commented, “By working with children in underprivileged areas, who are at greater risk, to teach them about water safety, the Foundation is ensuring that fewer senseless deaths from drowning occur. These children can go on to live healthy and fulfilled lives, and that is key to the future of our country.”

Photo: Eric Mathon
Photo: Eric Mathon
Photo: Eric Mathon
Photo: Eric Mathon

During her stay in South Africa, the Princess visited Gugulesizwe Primary School, also on Friday, to meet with staff and children, as a follow up to her visit in 2012 when she donated to the school a vegetable garden, now a thriving garden that helps to feed the community.

Over the weekend, Princess Charlene, who is a Patron of the Red Cross, worked with the Red Cross SA to give teachers and children who function as the head of their households a lesson in essential first aid and CPR to help them protect their family and friends. Acting Mayor of Ekurhuleni, Cllr Lesiba Mpya, and the Mayoress, Mrs Sinazo Masina attended the event, and generously provided lunch for the 900 school children, as well as the staff and guests.

Photo: Eric Mathon
Photo: Eric Mathon

On Saturday, the inaugural Princess Charlene Ladies Day was held at Turffontein Racecourse in Johannesburg. This charity race day was created to benefit three deserving associations through a first-class sporting event for the public to enjoy and featured a raffle prize of an exquisite diamond pendant sponsored by Petra Diamonds.

“It was great to see the Racing Association taking the initiative to host such an exciting charity race day at Turffontein to benefit the Red Cross, Gugulesizwe Primary School and the Highveld Horse Care Unit, three exceptionally worthwhile causes,” Princess Charlene told Monaco Life. “The track was buzzing with excitement and it was wonderful to see so many families there.”

There were two maiden plate races on the day and the Empress Palace Stakes, each of which carried the name of Her Serene Highness Princess Charlene. After the incredible success of the day, it is hoped that this racing event will become one of the most highly anticipated events on the Gauteng social calendar, with an increasing number of needy organisations benefiting from the initiative.

Article first published April 26, 2017.

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Monaco runner in Athens for inaugural No Finish Line 

Patrice Loquet at NFL in Athens
Patrice Loquet at NFL in Athens

After nearly 20 years, No Finish Line (NFL), the 24-hour race over eight days on a 1370-metre circuit, has easily become one of the most popular events in Monaco across the year.

The concept is simple: to do as many circuits as you want and for each kilometre a participant completes, donors and sponsors will donate €1 to Children & Future, an association that supports projects in favour of disadvantaged or sick children.

For the 2016 edition, 11,739 runners and walkers completed a total of 392,000 kilometres from November 12 to 20, surpassing the goal “to the moon” – 384,400 kilometres is the exact distance from the earth to the moon.

Since Philippe Verdier started the first NFL in 1999, some 69,000 people have taken part.

Mr Verdier expanded NFL to Paris in 2015 and last year to Oslo, and has said that he hopes one day to have an NFL every week of the year worldwide. His dream continues with the first NFL in Athens, which kicked off Wednesday, April 26, at 7 pm. The event is with the support of Stavros Niarchos Foundation.

Patrice Loquet, who lives in the Condamine, has participated in Monaco’s No Finish Line over a dozen times and his personal best over eight days is 828 kilometres. He said that he stays motivated by pushing his limits “despite the pain”.

“For the Monaco NFL, I run day and night for the Automobile Club of Monaco team,” Mr Loquet told Monaco Life from Athens. “I sleep on the course on a bed the team provides.”

At the NFL start in Athens Wednesday, Mr Loquet said he’s in Greece for the same reason he runs in Monaco: “To raise money for children and the underprivileged. Also, I want to help promote this event that Hélène and Philippe Verdier have created.”

Mr Loquet, who describes NFL as “sharing, conviviality and fun to run”, has, additionally, participated in NFL’s initial Paris and Oslo events. “I meet so many different people, but I can also give advice to the cities organising NFL for the first time.”

He added, “There are three of us here in Athens. And enjoying a new country and spending a few extra days also adds to the inspiration, not to mention making friends with fellow runners.”

 

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Outward Bound teens bowl with Monaco champions

bowling1On Tuesday, April 25, Outward Bound Monaco (OBM) teamed up 25 members, between the ages of 14 to 18, with some of Monaco’s top sport celebrities for an amusing evening of bowling at Ni Box, sponsored by Samy Sass of Sass Café and Rommy Gianni of the Monte Carlo Polo Team.

Founded in 2004, the non-profit Outward Bound Monaco promotes outdoor education “survival courses” for youths. The programs are one or three weeks in length, and take place in July and August. As Monaco is the only one of Outward Bound’s 35 countries that does not have its own training centre, kids from OBM head to Aberdovey and Ullswater in the UK to participate in Skills for Life, Serious Adventure and Discover Adventure courses.

General Secretary Judy Churchill told Monaco Life, that Outward Bound is “about teaching kids how to give back to the community”.

Certainly they could learn this from some of Monaco’s own champion athletes on hand for the event, with proven track records that hard work, determination and self-esteem pay off.

Francesco Castellacci, Paula Radcliffe, Tiffany Cromwell, Jack Doohan and Rommy Gianni
Patrice Servelle, Paula Radcliffe, Tiffany Cromwell, Jack Doohan and Rommy Gianni

Amongst the celebrities who gave their time to be with the Young people were two-time world snow polo champion and captain of the Monte Carlo Polo Team Rommy Gianni, Tiffany Cromwell (professional cyclist), Paula Radcliffe (world record holder for the women’s marathon), Patrice Servelle (Monegasque 4 time Olympic bobsledder) and Mick Doohan (five-time motorsport world champion) and his son Jack, 14, a talented young racing driver, to act as captains for the association’s first bowling activity.

Mick Doohan, who has returned to Monaco after living in his native Australia for the past 18 years, told Monaco Life, “Opportunities like this even communicate team work and problem solving to kids. And winning is great, but you learn more from losing and it keeps you humble.”

Mick Doohan, five time motosport world champion
Mick Doohan, five-time motorsport world champion
Outward Bound Monaco members Ronda, 15, and Marina, 14.
Outward Bound Monaco members Ronda, 15, and Marina, 14.

Marina, 14, and Ronda, 15, completed a one-week survival program last summer in Ullswater, with a group of three other girls and five boys.

As part of their training, the friends had to hike 56 km over three days, carrying on their backs tents, sleeping bags, gas burners and other supplies. There’s also the“ Leave No Trace” philosophy, so everything (think toilets) has to be carried out of the forest and disposed elsewhere.

“I really appreciated the little things when I returned home,” Ronda told Monaco Life.

Marina, confirming that both the girls would like to return to do another training, added that the program “makes you realise that you’re stronger than you think.”

OBM has a local membership program since it launched 13 years ago, when HRH Prince Andrew, Duke of York, was visiting Monaco for an Outward Bound event on HMS Leander and asked Prince Albert to become Patron of the association in Monaco.

Since then, OMB has helped send over 300 kids to the UK, in many cases supplementing the costs of the programs – which range from £650 to £2000 (€770 to €2370), plus transportation.

The biggest challenges for the association are twofold: first, getting the word out locally that Outward Bound Monaco exists. As Ms Churchill pointed out, there’s not a huge selection of activities for children in Monaco, and “money solves nothing as far as kids are concerned. They need to be motivated, stimulated, and learn values they can take anywhere in life.”

OBM has very low overheads and has just launched crowdfunding on their website, but their second hurdle is finding individuals and businesses needed for sponsorship. Noaro Frères, the Stelios Foundation, the James Mitchell Foundation, Rommy Gianni and John Michael Midziwill are currently local sponsors.

“We want to help anchor children locally, so they develop values and create a community that they can give back to,” Ms Churchill added.

For membership and course registration contact Vanessa@outwardboundmonaco.com, or for general information, event sponsorship and membership of the Parton’s Company contact judy@outwardboundmonaco.com

 

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