Meet Tayler
Fellow runner Tayler will be keeping up the family theme as he will be lacing up with around 13 other family members and friends on Sunday as they all run in memory of his dad, Andy Curno, who sadly died in November.
28-year-old Tayler from Plympton will be running with his sister Maddi Curno, brother James Warren, brother-in-law Josh Abbott, Uncle Ty Nelson, cousins Erin Nelson, Cerys Nelson, Hannah Notman and her husband along with friends Andy Notman, Josh Coles, Tom Mullen, Ross Williams, Jack Holderness and Owen Head.
The team have already raised over £3,000 for St Luke’s, which will provide a package of care at home for three other families going through something similar. To Tayler, it is a way of saying thank you for the care his father received following his diagnosis of Stage 4 Bowel Cancer.
“I can’t thank St Luke’s enough for the love and care they provided for my dad and family around him in the short amount of time we had up there,” he said. “We spent around 4 days at St Luke’s and the team was fantastic. Constantly checking in on him, making sure he was comfortable as can be. While also providing us with food and drinks and giving us extra chairs or something to sleep on so we could spend our final moments together. It didn’t feel like a hospice, more like a place of comfort. He had a bay window looking across the Plymouth sound and if we needed to have a moment to ourself we could have a walk to the gardens overlooking the sea. It just helped to take your mind off the real world for a split second.”
On Sunday it will be memories spurring Tayler on, as he remembers the cherished moments he shared with his dad growing up.
“My dad was the best dad I could have ever asked for. He was loving, kind, funny and just had this warm presence when he walked into a room. People just got along with him and laughed at his jokes. He was a family man, and was usually referred to as a gentle giant. I have so many memories I can name in the 28 years we had together. From teaching me volleyball, camping trips and many more. One of my favourite memories was last summer when he fought so hard to get out of hospital for the England Euro finals which fell on my Birthday and managed to get to the pub with me.”
It was his dad’s jokes and light-hearted banter that encouraged Tayler to first sign up for the half marathon.
“Before my dad passed away he joked about saying that he had completed the half marathon one year on no training and I wouldn’t ever do it! After he passed it made sense to prove him wrong and of course give something back to St Luke’s for the care and support the team provided for him and all of us around him at the time. On top of that I’ll now be able to say I have finally completed a half marathon too!”
Follow Tayler’s fundraising here.