Meet Campbell Roy

Campbell Roy is a motorsport personality best known as a navigator and close friend of Jimmy McRae, father of the late rally legend Colin McRae. Well regarded across Scottish motorsport circles, Campbell has attended many Asset Alliance Group-sponsored Scottish Rally Championship events and has a wide network built on decades of shared passion for competition.

He is not, by his own admission, a seasoned long-distance hiker. What he is, is determined.

In His Own Words

“Having decided to undertake the formidable Scottish National Trail in 2026, I am looking for some company and support along the way.”

“The route meanders through some of the most beautiful and rugged landscapes in Scotland, from the English Border in the south-east near Kirk Yetholm to the remote far north-west at Cape Wrath. It has been described as a long-distance route that compares with the best in the world.”

“This walk is about so much more than mere miles. It’s about raising awareness, helping to provide funding for life-saving research and to support the many men and families affected by prostate cancer every year.”

“Whether you’d like to walk a single mile, a full day, or several stages of the trail, you’re warmly welcome. The only proviso is that you tap into your own network of family, friends and colleagues to help us raise as much money as possible for a condition that will affect 1 in 8 men over the course of their lifetimes.”

“It’s a journey that will test my endurance, resilience and determination. But it is nothing compared to the challenge faced by those living with prostate cancer.”

“Let’s take these steps together for health, for hope, and for those who need it most.”

Campbell Roy

The Challenge Ahead

Campbell begins in Kirk Yetholm in July and will reach Cape Wrath in late September, walking 43 stages across some of the most remote and demanding terrain in Britain. He goes largely unsupported, without a fixed crew, and will spend many nights in remote bothies far from the nearest road.

He is raising £50,000 for Prostate Cancer Research. And he would love you to walk with him.