Son, Father Hike 110 Miles to Benefit Oral Cancer Foundation
10/10/2005 Glen Allen, VA April Karys A Glen Allen, VA, boy and his father put blood and sweat (but no tears) into an effort to memorialize a loved one and support the Oral Cancer Foundation in the process: They hiked 110 miles of the Appalachian Trail and gave the donations they raised to the California-based Foundation. “It was tough,” said Robbie Schwieder, 15, who came up with the idea of doing the trek through the Shenandoah National Park portion of the Appalachian Trail, and later asked his father to join him. “It was really brutal, physically, mentally, in every way.” But despite the 40 pound backpacks, grueling terrain, stifling heat, and blisters upon blisters, Robbie and his father, Wylie, persevered and never complained. After all, they were walking in memory of Robbie's maternal grandmother, Elaine Hegarty, who'd undergone immense suffering of a graver kind-oral cancer. Hegarty was diagnosed with mouth cancer in 1993. The dignified, independent Milwaukee resident was initially told she'd have to have a radical, disfiguring surgery. After a second opinion, she underwent a procedure during which doctors accessed the tumor from inside her mouth and removed it completely. She healed, and life returned to normal-at least for a few years. “About 6 years later she developed a second tumor inside her mouth,” said Hegarty's daughter Katie Schwieder. “They removed that one, and then she was never the same. She wore dentures that never fit properly. She was having pain a fair bit.” By the summer of 2002, [...]