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Gulf Coast High School teacher Julie Sprague wears a backpack during her time at school to help her train for her climbing trip to Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania in August.

Gulf Coast High health teacher to attempt to scale Mount Kilimanjaro

By RAY PARKER, brparker@naplesnews.com
May 30, 2004

Julie Sprague adds 5 pounds each week to the backpack she wears, even to her classroom.

And the 2 miles she jogs on her Stairmaster adds to the challenge, especially with her bum knees.

But the 50-year-old Gulf Coast High School health teacher can glimpse glory at the summit of the tallest freestanding mountain in the world, Africa's Mount Kilimanjaro.

"This is something I've always wanted to do and it's for Cathy (Robinson)," Sprague said.

Sometime on Aug. 29, Sprague will start her seven-day climb, along with an expedition of about 10 other climbers, hiking through rain forests the first day and six days later reaching the Uhruru Peak, when she'll hike through darkness for much of the six to eight hour climb, while reaching the mountain's summit at 19,340 feet.

The event is part fund raiser, part educational.

Sprague wants to raise money for the Friends Together organization, which hosts weekend camps for children who are infected with HIV/AIDS.

Its founder, Cathy Robinson, was happily married and expecting her second child when the discovery that she was HIV-positive shattered her life.

Or so it seemed.

She tested HIV positive during a routine test for life insurance. Later, she discovered how she'd contracted the HIV virus.

She'd been raped while working in a convenience store and her attacker, who died in prison, had the disease.

Robinson has gone on to become one of Florida's leading AIDS activists, speaking to Collier County schoolchildren for the past dozen years.

"She's able to connect with them in a way students understand," said Sprague.

And if she can find a satellite phone, Sprague wants to transmit directly from the mountain to her classes back in Naples.

Otherwise, she'll be transmitting via laptop with a time delay, discussing such topics as altitude sickness, HIV in Africa and other academic areas, including math and geography.

CLIMBING FOR A CAUSE

Gulf Coast High health teacher Julie Sprague will attempt to climb Mount Kilimanjaro from Aug. 29 to Sept. 4. She is seeking donations for the following items:

— A satellite phone so she can teach directly while climbing

— Frequent flyer miles from Northwest, KLM or Delta to help her plane fare

— A synthetic sleeping bag rated for zero degrees

— Lightweight laptop computer

— Portable car battery charger

— Money for trip costs or for FriendsTogether.org.

Those wanting to sponsor Sprague can log onto http://www.friendstogether.org/.

Her Medical Academy students have gotten involved in the event. They collected more than $300 and their teacher agreed to a get a stylish haircut and go on a blind date.

Sophomore Lauren Gardner has heard Robinson speak the last three years and felt inspired to get involved.

She joked about Sprague wearing her backpack and hiking boots to class, and agreeing to the students' demands.

"If we collected enough, then she agreed to a make-over and a date," the 17-year-old said. "She's had the same haircut since ninth grade."

Throughout the year, Robinson's nonprofit group puts on weekend camps for people and their children dealing with HIV/AIDS. Sprague, who's volunteered, thinks the free camps offer people something unique.

But organizers must turn away dozens from every camp because they lack the money for everyone to attend.

"There is nothing else in the entire country like we do, but because we run on private donations it is always a struggle to make ends meet," Robinson said.

That's why the Gulf Coast teacher flys to Africa this fall.

But first, she'll return to her native upstate New York to train in the Adirondacks.

She remains philosophical about reaching Kilimanjaro's summit.

"You can't really train for the altitude," Sprague said. "If I don't reach the summit, no big deal, it's the journey that counts. . . . What matters is the cause (and) bringing money to Friends."