Join 3,000 adventurers and walk, jog or run the spectacular Jurassic Coast.
Starting from Corfe Castle, the route heads past Durdle Door, with ups and downs to West Bay's famous cliffs, before the finish line at Bridport. Choose from a distance of 100km, 75km, 50km, 25km or even a 10km distance – with full support, food and drinks throughout.
As we are an official partner of the event, you will get a 50% discount on the "charity sponsorship" registration fee when signing up with TeamGOSH.
Event details
18 May 2024 - 19 May 2024
Dorset
Fundraising options
Charity sponsorship
Pay a small registration fee, do lots of fundraising and we will cover the cost of your event place. As we are an official charity partner of the event, you get 50% off the registration fee.
- 100km: Registration fee £40 (£20) / Fundraising Target - £575.
- Shorter distances and lower fundraising targets are also available.
Mixed funding
Pay half of the event place cost yourself, fundraise a bit less and we will pay the balance of your event place cost.
- 100km: Registration fee £100 / fundraising target £300.
- Shorter distances and lower fundraising targets are also available.
Own place fundraising
Pay the full cost of your event place, fundraise whatever you can with no set target or deadline.
- 100km: Entry Fee £198.
- Shorter distances and lower entry fees are also available.
Why we need you
Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity (GOSH Charity) needs your support more than ever. By fundraising, you'll help to fund:
- groundbreaking research
- advanced equipment
- children and family support services
- the rebuilding and refurbishment of wards and medical facilities within the hospital
Why trek for TeamGOSH at the Jurassic Coast Challenge?
As part of TeamGOSH, you'll receive:
A GOSH Charity t-shirt.
Access to professional training plans.
A digital welcome pack with tips, advice and fundraising materials.
Dedicated support from GOSH Charity's Challenge Events Team.
Ready to trek for TeamGOSH?
Lace up those walking boots and trek for seriously ill children at Great Ormond Street Hospital