People walk, skate and run 170 miles to save pub

Claire Manning & Georgina Barnes
BBC News, South West
BBC A group of people at an outdoor event on a grassy area with trees and playground equipment in the background. Colourful streamers hang above a pathway where individuals are walking or jogging. One person is dressed in a brown cow costume. Others nearby are standing or sitting, some holding clipboards, appearing to organise or monitor the event.BBC
The Save the Stag campaign aims to raise about £500,000

Villagers skated, ran and cycled 170 miles (273 km) in a bid to save a Cornish pub.

The Save the Stag campaign aims to raise about £500,000 to save The Stag Hunt Inn in Ponsanooth and hosted its first event on Sunday.

Members of the group said they wanted to turn the building, which was up for sale, into a community-run pub so it can be kept in the village and managed by locals.

The fundraiser - which had a target or 100 miles (161 km) - raised £3,600.

Mark Grice Aerial view of a large group of people standing in a winding line on a grassy field. A red vehicle with an open trailer is parked in the top right corner, with several people nearby. In the background, a row of houses with backyards lines the edge of the field, and a paved path runs parallel to the houses with a few individuals walking along it.

Mark Grice
The event also included pig racing, live music and a line dancing workshop

Chair Sam Fitch said if they achieved their plans they would need "everyone behind us".

"Some people will be able to put in a little, some will be able to put in a lot.

"But just like the 100-mile challenge, we hope we'll be able to reach our target and purchase the pub."

The fundraiser also included pig racing, live music and a line dancing workshop.

The group also applied for grant funding - offering people the chance to buy shares.

Allison Mcgee-Harrison from the group said: "By buying it [the pub] as a community and sharing it with the community enables us to have different projects for young people and right the way through to knitting circles and things like that, so it is really important."

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