Riding for a Reason (photo/rfar)
Tis the season for riding your trusty bicycle and enjoying being able to do so. It’s also high season for charity rides of all kinds. All kinds of organizations have been sponsoring rides to raise money for their group. Cancer research, Parkinson’s, ALS, Leukemia, MLS, Arthritis, Epilepsy, stroke and many, many others, all have a ride of some kind, probably in your area, or close enough to it for you to go.
These rides are typically just that: rides. They are not races. They are meant to bring together the bicycling community to do something for the common good, while doing something that they do all the time anyway. The rides cover a specified course, either an out and back or loop, and are designed to accommodate all kinds of riders, on all kinds of bicycles, with all ranges of abilities. Each charges an entry fee, and most come with some sort of raffle embedded in the day.
Take a look around your area and you’re bound to find one. The entry fees aren’t so high that you have to choose between it and dinner. Most have food somewhere on the course, either a breakfast table, or a lunch, provided by one of the sponsors. The sponsors will be local businesses, perhaps even your own business.
It is good to take a look at the financial statements of the group putting on the event. There should be a very small percentage going to putting on the event, with clear majority of the money going to the intended charity or research organizations. These kinds of rides are possible because of the large contingent of volunteers who come out to help make things work. You may even be one of them. If you are unable to actually ride in the event, most have a way for you to donate to the cause anyway.
One of the best examples of this kind of ride is the Ride For A Reason event, held in California. On the website of RFAR you will find all the information that you need to satisfy yourself that your hard earned dollars are going to where you want them to go. They have a pie chart that simply shows where the funds go. If you find that an event has very high overhead costs, and not much going to the organization of charity the event is being held for, find a different event. We are all old enough to have had a hitch or two in our get-a-longs, some much more serious than others. I want to know for certain that when I participate in an event that says the money is going to cancer research, that most of the money does indeed go there (American Cancer Society, Livestrong, etc).
If there isn’t a ride in your area that supports a charity or research organization, start one. You’ll find an ample amount of help from those who have started them. Partner with a national organization to get something going. It will take a bit of time and energy, but it should be worth the effort when it does happen.
We ride anyway, so it makes sense to double up on the benefits of doing so: your health and the health of other. Ride on.



Mountain bikes are an ever evolving species. Anything that stays static for too long tends to wither. The mountain biking community, and the mountain bikes they ride, are anything but static. The technological advances involve physics, and materials. Physics determines whether or not the material will stand up to the rigors of being part of a bike that is likely to take quite a bit of stress.


