Megan Ramsay took part in the London Marathon on Sunday alongside celebrities including Mark Wright, Chris Evans, Kirsty Gallacher and Adele Roberts.
The daughter of celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay crossed the finish line while her sisters Holly and Tilly cheered her on.
Gordon shares Oscar, two, with his wife Tana, 47, as well as Megan, twins Holly and Jack, 22, and Tilly.
Megan, who was running to raise money for Great Ormond Street Hospital, donned. a purple vest and black leggings.
She went makeup free to take on the gruelling challenge and had her brunette locks styled in neat braids.
Impressive: Megan Ramsay took part in the London Marathon on Sunday alongside celebrities including Mark Wright, Chris Evans, Kirsty Gallacher and Adele Roberts
Support: The daughter of celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay crossed the finish line while her sisters Holly and Tilly cheered her on
Megan’s sister Tilly showed her support on Instagram by penning: ‘Best of luck to my sister and everyone running the London Marathon today.
‘Gutted to not be running but looking forward to supporting everyone running and raising money for Great Ormond Street Hospital.’
Holly wrote: ‘So proud of you Meg. Good luck to all of the runners’
Holly and Tilly bundled up in hats and jackets while standing on the sideline and supporting the runners.
As the celebs get ready alongside 40,000 other races, it marks the first time since 2019 that the marathon has taken place in April.
For the last three years, the event has taken place in October due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The London Marathon route has mostly remained the same since 1981.
The celebrities have trained to tackle the gruelling 26.2-mile course from Greenwich Park to the Mall near Buckingham Palace.
Many of those taking part will be doing so for charity, often with moving personal stories behind why they are putting their bodies through the wringer having spent months, and sometimes years, preparing for the big event.
Those competing will start in Greenwich, which serves as the neutral location for measuring all time zones around the world.
At around the halfway point, runners will pass the Cutty Sark and the Shard before crossing Tower Bridge.
They will then run along Victoria Embankment to Westminster, passing the London Eye, before heading in the direction of Canary Wharf.
Heading into the final stretch, runners will pass Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament. They will then turn onto The Mall and head towards the finish line, which is situated near Buckingham Palace.
Protesters waving Extinction Rebellion (XR) flags cheered as the first wave of elite male runners sprinted past a chiming Big Ben in the London Marathon, before spectators shouted ‘go on Mo’ as Sir Mo Farah tried to chase down the leaders.
Members of the climate group, some clutching placards emblazoned with statements such as ‘fix our environment fix our future’, are watching participants run past Parliament in Westminster.
An XR member said fellow activists avoided disrupting the London Marathon to ‘show people we are good people’.
XR ‘de-escalator’ Lu Curtis, 52, of Wandsworth, south-west London, was among the activists watching the race in Westminster – near where the climate group is protesting.
Sporty: Megan, who was running to raise money for Great Ormond Street Hospital, donned. a purple vest and black leggings
Megan’s sister Tilly showed her support on Instagram by penning: ‘Best of luck to my sister and everyone running the London Marathon today.’
Family: The short-tempered star shares Oscar, two, with his wife Tana, 47, as well as Megan, twins Holly and Jack, 22, and Tilly
She said: ‘We, as Extinction Rebellion, have a unity agreement with all the people we are standing with that we will all respect each other, but also respect the event that’s going on today.
‘We are doing it specifically today to show people we are good people because the press don’t give us any credit for the work that we are doing – they spin a narrative that casts us as the bad guys when, in fact, our movement’s all about love.
‘Love for our planet, love for our fellow human beings. Because we are in the end of days.
‘I have a niece and a nephew, and their future will already be very different to the one that I grew up with, and that breaks my heart, but I can try to mitigate for the worst of it by using my voice to put pressure on the Government.’
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