“Of course I want to collect donations with my campaign, and it’s a nice opportunity to shake the Pope’s hand,” Nowak told the Catholic News Agency (KNA). “But the most important thing for me would be to inspire others to fight against their own weaknesses or illnesses with my efforts and the fight against my weaknesses,” said the priest from near Krakow, who has been working in the diocese of Hildesheim since 2014.
Rain, heat and wild boars
He describes the hundred kilometres over the Appenine as the most difficult stage: “Narrow roads, tight bends, and then I also encountered wild boars,” says Nowak, who was supported by several families from his community in Bremen-Blumenthal in escort vehicles. He also had a puncture on his pink Colnago bike shortly before Garmisch; it is the same model that Tadej Pogacar won the Giro d’Italia in 2024.
Next start: Ultra Cycling World Championships
Nowak, whose parents Leschek and Grazyna and brother Rafael have travelled from Poland, plans to stay in Rome until Saturday. Then the next challenge awaits from Monday in Sankt Georgen am Attersee: the Ultra Cycling World Championships around Austria: 2,200 kilometres, 30,000 metres in altitude, but comparatively easy in seven days.