Bernie Hoare just donated £12.72
Dianne Stephenson just donated £23.32
Lesley just donated £10.60
Pam and Iain just donated £10.60
Shân Hosking (nee Evans) just donated £15.90
Jan Sullivan just donated £20.00
Sarah and Esmae just donated £10.60
Alan & Ola just donated £12.72
Gwennan Evans - Brereton just donated £21.20
Little Annie ❤️ just donated £40.00
Sue and julie Donation just donated £10.60
Lucy Hobkinson just donated £12.00
Jackie Ide just donated £20.00
Arman just donated £10.60
Anonymous just donated £10.60
Maddie Smith just donated £7.42
Beth Hutchinson just donated £7.00
Elaine Thompson just donated £20.00
Sarah Savage just donated £12.00
Christy just donated £10.60
How it works
1. Register
Get a free beanie and set up your fundraiser.
2. Fundraise
Raise money to support children with cancer
3. Get Dipping
Organise your dip on 4 February
About the Challenge
Join thousands of others taking on a cold water dip for World Cancer Day on 4 February for Young Lives vs Cancer.
The challenge is simple. Organise your own dip with friends and family and simply brave the cold of the sea, a lido, or river this World Cancer Day. Yes, it's a challenge but with this comes a huge sense of achievement.
Your dip will help make sure children and young people with cancer, and their families, can be together this winter.
Join the challenge and make every minute count!

Why your support matters - make a difference this February.
Children and young people with cancer are facing a long, exhausting winter with days spent many miles from home.
This winter, children, young people and families going through cancer treatment will need to make early morning journeys to hospital and weary drives home in the dark. Parents will sleep in uncomfortable hospital chairs and spend hours worrying about the uncontrollable costs of hotels, petrol and food. Meanwhile, siblings will be left at home - their family separated at the most worrying time.
But your support changes everything.
It means the whole family can stay in our welcoming Homes from Home, close to specialist childhood cancer treatment centres. For families, it’s more than a free place to stay. It’s a place that feels like home. It’s having the time for a home-cooked meal together or a mug of hot chocolate with a bedtime story. But most of all, when everything else is uncertain, it’s a chance to just be together.
Cancer doesn’t have to mean families are torn apart. That special moments are lost. You can keep families together this winter.