Charity Auction Of Ricky Gervais Signed Pictures To Help Disabled Animals

This is your chance to bid on signed pictures very kindly donated by Ricky Gervais in our ‘Charity Auction To Help Disabled Animals’.

This is a sealed bid auction, so all you need to do is decide which item you would like to bid for and send us your bid with the LOT NUMBER and name by email to protectallwildlife@btinternet.com by 21:00 on the 24th of August 2025. We will email you to let you know if your bid is the highest. Postage costs will be calculated when the auction ends. If you need any more information etc please email Paul at protectallwildlife@btinternet.com.

All funds raised help support the Miracle’s Mission Centre for Disabled Animals and their work in the rescue, treatment and rehoming of sick, injured and disabled animals .

Happy bidding and good luck 🐾.

Lot 1

This is a signed After Life picture. The frame is for illustration purposes and not included.

Lot 2

This is a signed After Life picture. The frame is for illustration purposes and not included.

Lot 3

This is a signed picture of Tony and Lisa (signed by Ricky and Kerry Godliman). The frame is for illustration purposes and not included.

Lot 4

This is a signed picture of Ricky Gervais. The frame is for illustration purposes and not included.

LOT 5

This is a signed picture of Ricky Gervais as David Brent in The Office. The frame is for illustration purposes and not included.

Thank you for taking the time to look at our auction and happy bidding.

If you would like to make a donation to our fundraiser to help support our work you can do so at Fundraiser To Help Disabled Animals. Thank you.

Mike Towler Rescued Cropper The Fox And Found His New Best Friend

When Mike Towler first met Cropper the Fox he had been in a tangle with a dog and came off worse. Cropper had been rescued by The Fox Project in Tunbridge Wells. Not only was he badly injured, he was also suffering from toxoplasmosis, a dangerous parasitic infection. He was in no shape to be returned to the wild. There were only two choices: euthanise Cropper or find him a home. That is where Mike came in.

Mike Towler with rescued red fox in garden. Kent, UK, May 2009.
Mike Towler with Cropper, the rescued Red Fox in his garden.

Mike Towler gave Cropper a home. A retired engineer, he has been described as a man on a mission. Mike is fascinated by Fox behaviour and spends a great deal of time with them. In addition to nursing injured Foxes back to health, he also takes in orphaned Fox cubs and raises them until they can be released back into the wild. He does this by releasing them into his nine-acre garden. A few remain to be fed each night, some stay in the area for several years, while others take off to establish their own territories further afield.

CROPPER 2
Mike and Cropper having a nap

When Cropper was nursed back to health by Mike’s patience, love and determination, Cropper became a member of Mike’s family. Cropper would eat food from the dog’s dish and curl up with the cats, but mostly, he would spend time with Mike. The two would even go for walks together and Mike would roll him over and give him belly rubs

After six happy years with Mike, Cropper passed away in 2007. However, another Fox, Jack, who had been suffering similar ailments, has moved in with Mike. Jack enjoys watching TV with Mike and even reluctantly tolerates a bath in the sink.

In addition to Foxes, Mike is also friends with a couple of Badgers. One of the Badgers, a female he named Benji, eats from a bowl while he holds it and allow him to pet her.

Mike warns that rescuing Foxes takes a great deal of patience and understanding, and a strong awareness of Fox behaviour. He says that Fox urine is especially odorous and difficult to remove.

Mike and Cropper Relaxing

Further Reading

My Friends The Foxes

Mike Towler and Cropper

A Day In The Life Of Jack

On Patrol With The Fox Ambulance

The National Fox Welfare Society

From Long-Covid To Stage 4 Stomach Cancer: An Appointment That Turned My Life Upside Down.

The False Beginning

It all started in October 2022 (although it almost certainly started long before then) when I caught Covid. I woke up one morning to feel my face all swollen up and feeling terrible. As a nurse, I took the obligatory LFT test which immediately went positive ~ I had Covid! Because I worked with vulnerable patients I had to have at least 10 days off and only return to work after having negative LFTs on two consecutive days. I felt okay after two days but returned later as per instructed.

However, in late January 2023 I started to feel really lethargic all the time. I put it down to long covid but it was getting worse and I started to lose weight. I had various blood test which all came back within normal ranges. I was put on the waiting list for the Long Covid clinic. I was working as a Charge Nurse in a psychiatric hospital, a ‘job’ that I really enjoyed. However, I found that I was struggling to keep up with my workload and couldn’t concentrate at meetings etc. My standards were dropping dramatically so I made the hard decision to revert back to a nursing role. I felt less stress immediately but my symptoms got worse.

Eventually, in late May 2023 I spoke with my GP who referred me on a Vague Symptom Pathway which led to me getting an emergency CT scan. Everyone tells you not to do it but you always do – I Googled Vague Symptom Pathway, It gave me a choice of two conditions to pick from…’patients who present with vague (non-specific) symptoms could have a serious disease or a cancer.’

I went for an an emergency CT scan and by the time my wife and I got home we received a call from York Hospital with an appointment with a consultant the following day. It turned out the consultant was the top man in oncology. As we waited to see him I said to my wife “what if they don’t know what it is, what happens now?” She replied “they wouldn’t get the head of oncology to break news to you that a GP could do instead.” That’s when it started to sink in and the alarm bells started ringing loudly!

The Appointment That Changed My Life.

The consultant started asking various questions including are you off work at the moment which when I said I was still working full time he sounded shocked. He went on through various symptoms such as difficulty swallowing? (NO), stomach pain? (NO), indigestion that doesn’t go away? (NO), feeling full after eating small amounts? (NO), a loss of appetite? (NO), feeling or being sick? (NO), dark poo? (NO), weight loss? (YES), tiredness? (YES).

He then turned to face me closer and lowered his voice. I am sorry but I have to tell you that you have advanced Stage 4 stomach cancer and that it is inoperable and incurable!! They would do everything they could to slow it down and keep it at bay. We didn’t ask for any indication of life expectancy but on checking later it would be about 18 months, hopefully longer because I am still relatively fit.

Let Treatment Commence

I commenced an intensive course 8-week course of chemotherapy at York Hospital with the view that if the tumour had successfully reduced in size I would then have surgery to have my full stomach removed. My oesophagus would then be attached to my small intestine. At the end of this treatment I had further CT scans and endoscopies which showed that the tumour had unfortunately NOT shrunk enough to operate. I was back at square one.

On November 28th I met with a specialist at St. James Hospital in Leeds. They say they couldn’t operate because the tumour is also in some important vessels (to the spleen, liver and stomach) and if they operated there would be still be cancer cells left. Radiotherapy MIGHT be an option and they will discuss that but again it would only be to keep the tumour at bay. They might consider more chemo but not as intensive as I’ve been having and again it would just be to keep it at bay. Whatever was decided, it would be palliative care.

On December 14th I had another appointment at St James where I was told I would be starting chemoradiotherapy, a mixture of radiotherapy and chemo. This would consist of 5 consecutive weeks of daily treatment. Each week would consist 5 radiotherapy and 1 chemotherapy session.

I started this treatment on January 9th this year. Three months after it finishes I’ll have more scans to see how it has gone. It won’t cure it but will hopefully keep the tumour at bay or slow it down. The risks are far higher because of where the tumour is but nowhere near as high if I didn’t have the treatment!

The Side-Effects Are Horrible

At the end of week 3 of my chemoradiotherapy the promised side-effects finally started hitting home. Severe stomach cramps and feeling nauseous all the time so struggling to eat. I am losing wait so might have to have a nasal feeding tube fitted.

At the end of week 4 I had my consultant review where I was told my bone marrow levels are low so might not be able to have my next chemo session. I am continuing to lose weight so been prescribed stronger pain relief and anti-sickness medication and build up drinks.

At the end of week 5  the side effects were awful – feeling sick all the time and unable to eat (have lost half a stone this week). Had Stomach pain most of the time. The Sunday was the worst day so far. Collapsed 4 or 5 times in the morning so rushed through to St. James. Vital signs were sky high. Had a chest X-ray and was put on an IV drip. It appears to have been a mixture of not eating enough etc and taking High Blood Pressure medication prescribed when I was 2 stones heavier leading to my blood pressure going disastrously low.

The chemoradiotherapy has just ended but will keep working in my body for several months. I will then have further CT scans and endoscopies etc to see if there is any change in the tumour. It is now a question of wait and see.

Work And Finances

At the time diagnosis I worked full-time as mental health nurse. Unfortunately, due to my diagnosis, treatment and severe side-effects etc I was unable to work and have been off sick since September 2023. I was initially paid fully but will go to half pay on December 1st. I now only receive state benefits and PIP which is a drop of 75% of my wages. It doesn’t amount to enough to pay my bills and general living costs. In addition to this, I have had to travel daily from York to Leeds (a 60-mile round trip) which ahs cost a fortune

As a result, I am humbly turning to the Internet and hoping I can raise enough funds so money troubles aren’t another issue to deal with whilst dealing with my cancer.

I started a fundraiser in the hope that I could keep my finances in check in order that I can concentrate on my treatment etc. If you would like to help in any way you can donate ANY amount at Paul’s Stage 4 Stomach Cancer Fundraiser

Cancer Information

  1. What is Stomach Cancer
  2. Treatment for stomach cancer
  3. Survival for stomach cancer