BBC presenter Louise Minchin has been taken to hospital after contracting frostbite during an Arctic adventure challenge.
The 57-year-old had been attempting to cycle 300 miles (483km) in three days in Canada's Northwest Territories to raise money for the Duke of Edinburgh's Award.
But little over a quarter of the way, she and Guinness World Record holding endurance athlete Mimi Anderson were forced to pull out after enduring dangerously cold winds despite preparing for the sub-zero temperatures, the broadcaster announced on Friday evening.
"We are out of the race but we are safe, warm and being well looked after," Minchin told her Instagram followers from a hospital bed.
The two had been 14 hours into the Inuvik Weekend Warrior Fat Bike Challenge - a three-day cycle across frozen rivers, remote highways and Canada's Arctic wilderness - when they were forced to withdraw.
"We did around 140k in temperatures as low as -40C," the former BBC Breakfast host explained.
"When we got to this point both of us knew we were very dangerously cold."
She said the "combination of the temperature and wind meant despite having prepared as much as we could have it was a huge risk to go on".
Minchin added: "Turns out we were right to stop.
We both have frostbite and are being looked after incredibly well looked after.
At the moment we remain in good spirits."
She posted a video in which she and Anderson, 61, could be seen with her fingertips bandaged up.
March average temperatures in the Northwestern Territories range from -13C to -23C (8.6 to -9.4F) - but the region was particularly cold on Friday, dropping to -30C in places.
Wind chills were as cold as -36C, which can cause frostbite to set in in as little as 10 minutes.
Extremities such as fingers and toes are particularly vulnerable.
Initial signs of frostbite can include numbness, pain, and skin appearing red or pale, according to the NHS.
However under prolonged exposure, symptoms can get worse to include:
Fellow presenters offered words of support after Minchin revealed her brush with the freezing cold.
"Big hugs," wrote Good Morning Britain's Susanna Reid, while former Blue Peter host Helen Skelton said: "What an achievement so far."
Meanwhile, Morning Live's Gaby Roslin commented: "Oh my word.
Please take good care of yourself."
Louise Minchin to leave BBC Breakfast
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Source: This article was originally published by BBC News
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