Clare Coast Guard volunteer Bernard Lucas left Ireland at the weekend for Tanzania on the 2022 Caitriona Lucas Challenge to climb Mount Kilimanjaro.
Dedicated to the memory of his late wife, Caitriona – the first Irish Coast Guard volunteer to die on active service – Lucas and team mates Cormac Coyne of Inis Oírr and Eoin Keane from Kilfenora aim to raise funds for the Burren Chernobyl Project.
The 5,895 meters (19,341 feet) peak is the highest mountain in Africa and the tallest freestanding mountain in the world.
Acclimatising to altitude will be one of the team’s greatest challenges, given the very individual impact on physiology of lower oxygen levels.
Bernard Lucas and colleagues Cormac Coyne, Micheál Healy and Eoin Keane on the summit of Kerry's Mount Brandon during final training for this year's Caitriona Lucas Challenge
Their final training run together involved participating in the Tom Crean Endurance Walk in Kerry last weekend.
Covid-19 had forced a pause to the annual challenge, which involved climbing 26 mountains across 32 counties in just 10 days in 2018 for charity.
Cormac Coyne, Pauliina Kauppila and Bernard Lucas on the Tom Crean Endurance Walk Photo: Cormac Coyne
The following year, 2019, Lucas and five colleagues – Cormac Coyne, Michael Healy, Pauliina Kauppila, Eoin Keane and Deirdre Linnane – travelled to Greenland for the Arctic Circle trail. An estimated average of 300 people annually tackle the 100-mile wilderness walk.
In an interview with Afloat’s Wavelengths podcast earlier this month, Lucas spoke about the Kilimanjaro climb preparations.
He also spoke about the situation with Doolin Coast Guard where he and nine other volunteers were dismissed, and about many unanswered questions relating to his wife’s death off the Clare coast on September 12th, 2016.
Several weeks ago, international maritime lawyer Michael Kingston questioned the delay in holding an inquest into the highly experienced Irish Coast Guard coxswain’s death.
Bernard Lucas on the Tom Crean Endurance Walk in Kerry (photo Cormac Coyne)
“It is shocking that almost six years after Ms Lucas’s death, no inquest has as yet been heard,” Mr Kingston told The Sunday Independent, pointing out that such a hearing would “properly investigate” what happened.
Mother-of-two Ms Lucas (41), an advanced coxswain with Doolin Coast Guard in Co Clare, had offered to help out the neighbouring Coast Guard unit from Kilkee in the search for a missing man.
She died after the Kilkee rigid inflatable boat (RIB) capsized in a shallow surf zone. Two other crew members on board the RIB, who were also thrown into the sea, survived.
Her husband and a number of Kilkee Coast Guard volunteers criticised aspects of the Marine Casualty Investigation Board report, which was published in two parts due to the extensive nature of submissions on the draft.
As Ms Lucas was pronounced dead in hospital in Limerick, responsibility for her inquest is with the Limerick coroner’s office.
The newspaper report said that the Limerick coroner’s office did not respond to several requests for comment
You can listen back to Bernard Lucas’s interview here And more details on the Caitriona Lucas Challenge are here