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B.C. veterans begin cross-Canada ride

Posted On 13 Apr 2015
By : Tom Fletcher
Leaving from the provincial Legislature building in Victoria, Quesnel rancher and veteran Paul Nichols leads a group of fellow veterans on horseback, from left, Nanaimo RCMP Constable John Gilmour, Nanaimo RCMP Constable  Mark Smith and Sooke veteran David Ristau on the first leg of the Veterans Foundation Ride Across Canada hat will draw attention to younger military vertans in Canada. Nichols will be joined by other veterans on the eight-month ride from Victoria to Newfoundland. Don DENTON/Victoria News

Leaving from the provincial Legislature building in Victoria, Quesnel rancher and veteran Paul Nichols leads a group of fellow veterans on horseback, from left, Nanaimo RCMP Constable John Gilmour, Nanaimo RCMP Constable Mark Smith and Sooke veteran David Ristau on the first leg of the Veterans Foundation Ride Across Canada hat will draw attention to younger military vertans in Canada. Nichols will be joined by other veterans on the eight-month ride from Victoria to Newfoundland. Don DENTON/Victoria News

Quesnel rancher Paul Nichols kicked off a cross-Canada horseback ride Monday to introduce a new generation of veterans to the public and seek their support.

Nichols, who served with Canadian troops during ethnic warfare in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s, struggled to control his emotions at a ceremony at the B.C. legislature.

“Our Canadian troops do a hard job for us, and when they choose to transition back into civilian life, some of them struggle and lose their way,” Nichols said. “And I can tell you from personal experience that a heartfelt thank-you and timely support from the community during that time of transition can be life-changing. So my job through this foundation is to put as many Canadian veterans in the saddle as I can.”

Accompanied by other B.C. veterans and his wife Terry, a therapeutic riding instructor, Nichols plans to connect with 700 veterans in an eight-month journey ending in St. John’s, Newfoundland.

“That awareness will create change, and with that change I believe that we can lower the incidence and severity of post-traumatic stress disorder, lower the incidence of family breakup and I think we can lower the incidence of veteran suicide,” Nichols said.

B.C. Lieutenant Governor Judith Guichon attended the ceremony to wish the riders well on their journey, offering a stop for hay and food at her ranch in the Nicola Valley.

The ride includes stops in Abbotsford, Chilliwack Hope, Princeton, Summerland, Kelowna, Vernon and Armstrong before continuing into Alberta in May.

For more information the ride, and to follow its progress, see their website at www.communitiesforveterans.com.

About the Author
Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and columnist for Black Press newspapers. He's based in Victoria.
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