A PROUD son secretly nominated  his father for a prestigious award to recognise his fundraising for soldiers and  their families.
Joshua Hodson, 15, was so impressed  with his father Tony's charity work for Help For Heroes he nominated him for  Just Giving's Fundraiser of the Year award.
However, the pupil at Newcastle's  School for Boys in Gosforth didn't tell anyone what he had done until he got the  call from charity organisation Just Giving telling him his father had been  shortlisted.
And father-of-three Tony will now  attend a ceremony at the Emirates Stadium in London.
"I was genuinely taken aback and very pleasantly  surprised but I think the first thing I thought was is this a wind up," he  said."He came into the room and he said he  had some news for me, and when a 15-year-old boy says that you do not know what  to expect."
Tony, 52, of Darras Hall in  Ponteland, raised more than £15,000 for Help For Heroes after scaling the  world's highest peak outside the Himalayas. He spent 16 days on a triumphant  ascent to the summit of 6,962-metre high Aconcagua in Argentina's Andes mountain  range last January.
It involved a three-day trek in  sweltering, desert-like conditions to reach base camp, risking altitude sickness  while lugging heavy packs up the mountain and surviving a last-minute weather  scare which resulted in half of his group failing to complete the push to the  summit.
He reached the top and flew the Help  For Heroes banner over the top.
Speaking of his nomination Tony, who  runs his own people development consultancy, said: "I was actually quite shocked  and I had no idea about any award and it is not really me, to be honest. I was  not looking for any recognition.
"I just feel the case of the service  men and women is very just and they need all the help they can get."
Tony was inspired to raise funds for  Help For Heroes by Major Phil Packer, the former Army officer who completed the  London Marathon on crutches after being injured in a rocket attack in Iraq which  left him without the use of his legs.
He had pledged to raise £1 for each  metre of Aconcagua's height but he has now doubled his original target. Tony  also paid tribute to all those who helped and supported him through his  fundraising mission.
He said: "Without their commitment,  support and engagement to my summit attempt, we would not have smashed the  original target by 190%, the proceeds of which, I'm sure, have been put to great  use by the team at Help for Heroes."
Tony developed his passion for  mountaineering in the 1990s and has climbed throughout the world, and numbers  Mount Kilimanjaro among his conquests.
The awards ceremony  will be held on February 10, when the winner and runners-up within each category  will be announced.
Anne-Marie Huby, managing director at  JustGiving, said: "The JustGiving Awards are our opportunity to celebrate all  the people who do the most amazing, creative and even crazy things in the name  of charity.
"We were incredibly impressed by the  standard of entries this year – more than 500 in total – and we are delighted to  honour the efforts of our fundraising community."
More information can be found about  fundraising heroics by visiting www.justgivingawards.com
Source: Journal Live
 
