Mr Bayley described the Women's Tour as a "brilliant showcase of talent" and he hoped to showcase the dedication of the riders in his pieces.
Washing clothes by hand and preparing meals with my aunt made me appreciate the effort needed.Food, like everything in Ghana, required patience. There were no microwaves, no fast-food runs.
Making the traditional dough-like dish fufu, for example, is laborious and involves pounding cooked yams or cassava into a paste with a mortar.At the time, it felt like punishment. Looking back, it was building resilience.Initially, my uncles considered placing me in high-end schools like the Ghana International School or SOS-Hermann Gmeiner International College.
But they were smart. They knew I might just form a new crew to cause chaos and mischief.Instead, I received private tuition at Accra Academy, a state secondary school that my late father had attended. It meant I was often taught on my own or in small groups.
Lessons were in English, but out of school those around me were often speaking local languages and I found it easy to pick them up perhaps because it was such an immersive experience.
Back home in London, I used to love to learn swear words in my mother's Fante language - but was far from fluent.Ms Hall, who met with the family in July to discuss their concerns, said: "Our staff and officers remain committed to doing everything we can to find Jack and we do not underestimate what a distressing time this has been, and continues to be, for his family.
"When I look at missing persons investigations [in Avon and Somerset] over the last year, we've had around 5,500."Missing people are somebody's loved ones, they're somebody's family, and we don't close the door on that."
Further searches are planned following information and advice received from other law enforcement agencies.Police say they will update Jack’s family when their handling of the complaint is finalised, and are once again renewing their appeal for any witnesses from Saturday 2 March to come forward.