REPORT: Carrasco takes P1 at Cremona test with 1’41s lap time, Ponziani and Sanchez complete top three

The FIM Women’s Circuit Racing World Championship test at the Cremona Circuit concluded on Friday afternoon with Ana Carrasco (Evan Bros Racing Yamaha Team) leading the time sheets with a big margin over her rivals. The 2018 WorldSSP300 Champion posted the only 1’41s lap time of the test to finish seventh tenths clear of her rivals ahead of the Championship’s inaugural season starting next month at Misano.

TIMES TUMBLE ON DAY 2: finding huge gains…

Carrasco led the times at the end of Day 2, which featured a fully dry day after yesterday’s afternoon rain, but had to fight with Roberta Ponziani (Yamaha Motoxracing WCR Team) for top spot, with the pair pushing each other closer to the 1’41s. The #22 of Carrasco smashed that barrier with a 1’41.446s, which she set in the seventh and final session of the day, while Ponziani’s 1’42.121s came in the fifth session. Sara Sanchez (511 Terra&Vita Racing Team) was third and around half-a-second back from Carrasco. Times on Friday started in the 1’44s and 1’45s brackets but dropped rapidly during track action, with Carrasco finding more than four seconds as the day progressed.

NEILA STRONG, OURDENICKOVA QUICK AGAIN: an order starting to form?

With this test the first time riders were on track together for the WorldWCR, but at a circuit none of them had been on with the Yamaha R7, a pecking order might have started to form. Beatriz Neila (Ampito / Pata Prometeon Yamaha) improved consistently throughout the test to finish in fourth place, ahead of Adela Ourednickova (DafitMotoracing) in fifth. Just a tenth separated the Spaniard, who had Jonathan Rea’s (Pata Prometeon Yamaha) Crew Chief, Andrew Pitt working with her on Friday, and Ourednickova. Tayla Relph (TAYCO Motorsport) was one of several riders who used the final 10-minute session to full effect, moving up the order to claim sixth with a 1’43.571s

FOUR RIDERS, TWO TENTHS: a closely fought season in store?

Relph’s late surge meant Jessica Howden (Team Trasimeno) was demoted out of the top six and finished in seventh, ahead of Mallory Dobbs (Sekhmet Motorcycle Racing Team) who also climbed up the order. Running in 15th until the final session, the American was classified in eighth after setting a 1’43.881s in the final moments of the test. Lucy Michel (TSL-Racing) was ninth with Isis Carreno (AD78 FIM Latinoamerica by Team GP3), one of the few riders whose best times didn’t come in either of the final two sessions, finishing the day in 10th.

TOO CLOSE TO CALL: less than a second separate P11 and P15

Pakita Ruiz (PS Racing Team 46+1) finished just outside the top ten with a 1’44.147s, finishing the second day in 11th place. She was just a tenth ahead of South Africa’s Nicole Van Aswegen (Andalaft Racing) in 12th, whose best time of 1’44.213s came in the penultimate session. Ran Yochay (511 Terra&Vita Racing Team) was 13th, setting her best time in the final session, with Ornella Ongaro (Yamaha Motoxracing WCR Team) and Chun Mei Liu (WT Racing Team Taiwan) completing the top 15.

JUST MISSING OUT: the barest of margins keep Madrigal out of the top 15

Just a tenth stopped Astrid Madrigal (ITALIKA Racing FIMLA) claiming a top-15 spot, with the Mexican rider’s 1’44.986s unable to move her into the top 15 places. She did, however, have a big margin to Lena Kemmer (Bertl K. Racing Team) in 17th, with the Austrian rider around half a second back from Madrigal. Luna Hirano (Team Luna) came home in 18th, two tenths back from Kemmer, with Iryna Nadieieva (MPS.RT) and Andrea Sibaja (Deza – Box 77 Racing Team) completing the top 20. Alyssia Whitmore (Sekhmet Motorcycle Racing Team), Mia Rusthen (Rusthen Racing) and Sara Varon (ITALIKA Racing FIMLA) were the final classified riders; Varon’s day ended early with the Colombian rider’s time – a 1’48.067s – coming in the third session of the day and she did not set any times in any later sessions.

Next up for WorldWCR… the season opener at Misano! Watch every moment LIVE and UNINTERRUPTED using the WorldSBK VideoPass!

Source: WorldSBK.com

June 2024

In this issue, as part of KTM’s “30 Years of Duke,” we review three updated models: 390 Duke, 990 Duke, and 1390 Super Duke R Evo. We also review the Suzuki GSX-8R middleweight sportbike and Triumph’s smallest streetbikes: the Speed 400 and Scrambler 400 X.

Kickstarts has a first look at the Husqvarna Svartpilen 801, as well as a look at the upcoming Americade rally and the Edelweiss Grand Alps Tour. Our Summer Buyers Guide lists gear, parts, and accessories to help you get the most out of the riding season.

In our On the Road feature, Steven Goode rides scenic byways in almost every state to support a good cause. And for our Favorite Ride, Kenneth W. Dahse explores the Upper Delaware River Watershed.

Our Exhaust Note comes from Jamie Elvidge, a Rider staffer from 1985-1988, and Quinn Redeker discusses exercises to improve coordination in Motor School. Celebrating Rider’s 50th anniversary, our Rider Rewind section highlights some interesting and wacky fashion shoots from the past.

Additional stories in the June issue of Rider:

  • 2024 KTM Dukes | First Ride
  • 2024 Suzuki GSX-8R | First Ride
  • 2024 Triumph Speed 400 and Scrambler 400 X | First Ride
  • Summer Buyers Guide
  • Great American Scenic Byways Tour | On the Road
  • Upper Delaware River Watershed | Favorite Ride
  • Moto Fashion | Rider Rewind
  • And more!

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Source: RiderMagazine.com

Ponziani surges to top spot on Friday morning at Cremona, breaks into 1’42s barrier

Times rapidly fell at the Cremona Circuit on Day 2 of the FIM Women’s Circuit Racing World Championship as weather conditions improved and the 23-strong field got more mileage under their belt. Friday morning’s action was topped by Roberta Ponziani (Yamaha Motoxracing WCR Team) after she set the first 1’42s lap of the Italian venue in the fourth session of the day, with most riders finding a huge chunk of time as the day progressed.

With the sun shining in Cremona after yesterday’s rain, riders were finding plenty more time as they continued to adapt to the circuit, bike, and tyres. The majority were able to improve their team in the latter stages of the morning with more experience of the Yamaha R7 and Pirelli tyres under their belt, with the fastest time in the morning on Friday around three seconds quicker than Thursday’s fastest time.

Ponziani’s best time was a 1’42.438s, which the Italian set in the middle of the final 20-minute session of the morning action. She was the first rider throughout the test to set a time in the 1’42s bracket, finishing around six tenths clear of Ana Carrasco (Evan Bros Racing Yamaha Team) in second. Like Ponziani, Carrasco found time as the morning progressed, with her best time a 1’43.044s. Third place belonged to Czech rider Adela Ourednickova (DafitMotoracing) after she set a 1’43.374s, around three tenths behind the 2018 WorldSSP300 Champion.

German teenager Lucy Michel (TSL-Racing) put in a late lap in the fourth session to haul herself up to P4 overall, setting a 1’43.446s and demoting Sara Sanchez (511 Terra&Vita Racing Team) into fifth with just two hundredths of a second separating the pair. Beatriz Nelia (Ampito / Pata Prometeon Yamaha) completed the top six with a 1’43.847s, and she found her place in the top six under threat from Australia’s Tayla Relph (TAYCO Motorsport) with just 0.002s separating the pair.

Relph had to settle for seventh and she was around half a tenth clear of Jessica Howden (Team Trasimeno) in eighth. Her time, a 1’43.902s, was two tenths quicker than Pakita Ruiz (PS Racing Team 46+1) in ninth, with the Spaniard closing the morning with a 1’44.147s. However, her session was disrupted by a crash although she was okay and returned to the pitlane. Isis Carreno (AD78 FIM Latinoamerica by Team GP3) rounded out the top ten with a 1’44.494s.

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Source: WorldSBK.com

REPORT: Carrasco fastest on Day 1 of Cremona WorldWCR test, Mei Liu quickest in afternoon rain

The first collective track action for the FIM Women’s Circuit Racing World Championship took place at the Cremona Circuit in Italy, with Ana Carrasco (Evan Bros Racing Yamaha Team) taking advantage of dry conditions in the morning to end the day on top. With rain falling in the afternoon, times didn’t improve after the second session which allowed the Spaniard to secure P1 on Day 1 of the test. With the season starting at Misano in a month, the test will prove valuable for the grid to get accustomed to their Yamaha R7 machines and Pirelli tyres even with wet conditions impacting Day 1.

DRY RUNNING ORDER: Carrasco leads Michel and Ourednickova

The best times of the day were set in the morning as rain fell and thunder blared at around 14:00 Local Time (UTC+2), forcing everyone to swap from Pirelli’s slick tyres to the wet tyres. It meant Carrasco, the 2018 WorldSSP300 Champion, was fastest on Day 1 with a 1’45.949s, four tenths clear of 19-year-old Lucy Michel (TSL-Racing) in second. Third place belonged to Adela Ourednickova (DafitMotoracing), who set a 1’47.250s to round out the top three. However, the Czech rider was the first crasher of the test, coming down at the end of the straight in the fourth session.

NOT FAR BEHIND: impressing on debut…

Ran Yochay (511 Terra&Vita Racing Team) just missed out on a place in the top three when she set a 1’47.455s, just two tenths away from Czech rider Ourednickova ahead. It was closely-contested in the 20-minute Free Practice 1 session – the final dry session of the day – with the USA’s Mallory Dobbs (Sekhmet Motorcycle Racing Team) in fifth, a tenth behind Yochay, and Australia’s Tayla Relph (TAYCO Motorsport) in sixth. The Brisbane-born competitor was fastest in the 10-minute Warm Up session that started the day to start her campaign strongly at a circuit she was riding at for the first time.

NINE COUNTRIES IN THE TOP NINE: quick riders from all over the world

Chun Mei Liu (WT Racing Team Taiwan) secured a seventh-place finish on Day 1 after setting a 1’48.545s, finishing almost two tenths ahead of Jessica Howden (Team Trasimeno) in eighth. Just half a tenth separated Howden in P8 and Roberta Ponziani (Yamaha Motoxracing WCR Team) in ninth, with the Italian setting a 1’48.712s. Nine different nationalities were represented in the top nine on Day 1, showcasing the diversity of the inaugural WorldWCR field. Nicole Van Aswegen (Andalaft Racing) completed the top ten with a 1’50.086s, around 1.4 seconds slower than Ponziani ahead.

THE RAIN FALLS: times don’t improve in the afternoon

Despite rain falling, the WorldWCR field took advantage to test the Yamaha R7 in wet conditions. Michel was the first rider to head out in the third session, followed quickly by Ornella Ongaro (Yamaha Motoxracing WCR Team) and Nicole Van Aswegen (Andalaft Racing). The fastest time came from Chun Mei Liu (WT Racing Team Taiwan) in the fourth session as she posted a 1’54.139s, only 0.138s clear of Dobbs in second after she set a 1’54.277s. Third place went to Relph, who was a second away from Mei Liu’s time, but also almost 1.5 seconds faster than Astrid Madrigal (ITALIKA Racing FIMLA) in fourth.

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Source: WorldSBK.com

"Amazing feeling… I’m feeling good on the bike" – Michel reacts after finishing Day 1 at Cremona in P2

The two-day Cremona Circuit test for the FIM Women’s Circuit Racing World Championship gives riders the chance to get used to their Yamaha R7 machines, in both dry and wet conditions after rain fell in Italy. Lucy Michel (TSL-Racing) was one of the fastest riders on track in the dry, and one of the first to test the wet conditions, and she reviewed her day after finishing second out of the 23 riders at the test.

19-year-old Michel was second in the combined timings for the first three sessions, which was composed of a 10-minute Warm Up session to start the day and then two Free Practice sessions which lasted 20 minutes. Her best time was 1’46.349s, lapping exactly four tenths slower than pacesetter Ana Carrasco (Evan Bros Racing Yamaha Team) who lapped Cremona in 1’45.949s. In the fourth session – another 20-minute Free Practice – the German rider was eighth fastest, posting a 2’00.034s as rain began to fall.

Looking back on her first day with the Yamaha R7, the bike all competitors will ride, Michel said: “It’s an amazing feeling. The track is so nice and I’m feeling so good on the bike. The wet conditions were very difficult for me. I learnt today more feeling about the bike and in the rain. It’s my first time riding the bike in the wet conditions. The plan for tomorrow is to keep learning, tomorrow should have good weather.”

Despite her young age, Michel has a vast amount of experience to her name after competing in German championships. She raced in the IDM Supersport 300 series last year, finishing in 21st place, while she has also been a points scorer in the ADAC Junior Cup. She’s tasted podium success in the Yamaha R3 bLU cRU Cup in Germany, doing the double at Schleizer Dreieck in 2022 as a guest rider.

The Cremona test gave her the opportunity to try the Yamaha R7 bike that she’ll race with in 2024 as she competes in the first season of WorldWCR. It’s been a strong start for the teenager so far despite tricky conditions and limited running, but Michel will feel positive heading into Day 2 after securing a top-three spot so soon into her WorldWCR career.

Follow every moment from the inaugural WorldWCR season in style using the WorldSBK VideoPass!

Source: WorldSBK.com

Relph: “If I can convince one more woman to get involved in this sport, that’s a World Championship to me”

Tayla Relph (TAYCO Motorsport) made a small bit of FIM Women’s Circuit Racing World Championship history on Thursday at Cremona as the Australian topped the first-ever session in the new Championship. She was quickest in Warm Up which started the two-day test in Italy and finished the day inside the top six at a track she hadn’t competed at before. After the action concluded, she spoke about her first day on track and explained why she’s competing in WorldWCR this season.

The first action started with a 10-minute Warm Up session which Relph topped, setting a 1’50.113s to write her name in the history books as the first rider to top a WorldWCR session. Although unable to keep her place at the top during the next session – a 20-minute Free Practice 2 outing – the Australian was able to secure sixth place with a 1’47.631s, lapping 1.6 seconds slower than pacesetter Ana Carrasco (Evan Bros Racing Yamaha Team).

Reflecting on her strong day and small bit of history, Relph said: “In my first session here, I definitely didn’t expect to be topping the timesheets. I’ve never ridden here before, never ridden the bike in Europe before and we only came here last week. To top the very first session for the history-making WorldWCR is a little bit of a dream come true. I didn’t even think about that! I’m loving this bike, feeling right at home in this paddock and you can tell it’s such a family environment.”

Relph, who has also competed in her native Australia in the Supersport 300 Championship, also went on to explain what her plan was for the second and final day of action on Friday. The 27-year-old also expressed how she hopes her participation in the Championship will help grow the sport for women, explaining that she didn’t have many role models growing up and how she would feel if just one more woman got involved in motorsport thanks to her competing on the world stage.

The rider from Warrnambool said: “The plan for tomorrow is to learn a bit more. I wish we had one more session in the dry. But when it rains it means you can work on the technical parts of the circuit. We’ve shown the pace in the dry and in the wet so now it’s time to put it all together for tomorrow. There’s not enough representation in Australia, we race against the men. I didn’t have a lot of role models in racing growing up, so if I can just convince one more woman to get involved in this sport in Australia, that’s a World Championship to me.”

Follow the inaugural WorldWCR season in style throughout 2024 using the WorldSBK VideoPass!

Source: WorldSBK.com

FIRST LOOK: the WorldWCR field hit Cremona for the Championship’s track debut!

2024 marks the start of the FIM Women’s Circuit Racing World Championship and the first glimpse of the field came at the recently renovated Cremona Circuit in northern Italy. 23 riders gathered at the circuit to mark WorldWCR’s track debut, with action kicking off on Thursday at midday local time (UTC+2). Check out the first images from the WorldWCR field’s first track outing in the gallery at the top of this page!

Watch every moment from WorldWCR throughout 2024 in style using the WorldSBK VideoPass!

Source: WorldSBK.com

Will Mallory Dobbs be a Championship contender in WorldWCR? “We’ve got a lot of goals”

The inaugural season of the FIM Women’s Circuit Racing World Championship is just readying to get underway next month at Misano but there’s plenty of track action to look forward to until then. 30-year-old American Mallory Dobbs (Sekhmet Motorcycle Racing Team) has been racing in MotoAmerica’s Supersport category but this year will join plenty more in taking part in the first-ever WorldWCR season.

“IT’S SO MUCH OF AN HONOUR” – Dobbs set for world stage debut

Speaking about being a part of the Championship, Dobbs stated: “It’s so much of an honour; I didn’t think I’d be doing it! I am so stoked, I’ve been talking about it since the end of January even though some people were saying I didn’t seem that excited! I’m ready to go and ride like every racer is. We’ve been training on and off track, doing as much riding as possible. Obviously, the gym as well with running and other cardio. We haven’t been able to train much on the R7. We’ve been trying to acquire a testing bike in America which is obviously a bit of a hard thing. I wish we could be riding more but I’m excited.”

“WE’VE GOT A LOT OF GOALS” – can American star rise to the top?

Embarking on European soil for the first time also has its attraction: “I’ve actually never been to Europe; I’ve left the USA twice in my life and went to Mexico! It’s really exciting to go to Europe and see the places but also race on some iconic race tracks. Cremona is new but Misano, Portimao and all the places you see on TV; I get to go and ride them.”

Targetting strong showings from the start, will she be able to fight at the front? “We’ve got a lot of goals and set our sights pretty high. I raced in MotoAmerica last year for a full year on a Supersport bike, so I have expectations for myself. There’s not a lot of people who know about me and my expectations as I’ve never raced with any of these girls. My expectations are high for me personally but I don’t know. We’ll see when we get on the race track and start doing times.”

FIRST WorldWCR ACTION AWAITS: watch all from 2024 and beyond with the WorldSBK VideoPass!

Source: WorldSBK.com

WorldSBK classics bring more tantalising action in Volume 3!

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Source: WorldSBK.com

Steed Rides Again for Veteran Suicide – This Time with a Crew

Ride for Light veteran suicide
L-R: Perry Steed, Jason Conyers, and Bruce Knobloch getting in some practice miles before their Ride for Light to raise awareness of veteran suicide.

Just because his first mission is complete doesn’t mean the battle is over for Perry Steed. In May 2022, the former Army paratrooper set out on his first Ride for Light, hitting 48 states on his BMW R 1200 GS and carrying the ashes of two brothers in arms. His goal was to raise awareness for the issue of veteran suicide. Two years later, Steed is taking a second Ride for Light, but this time, he’s kicking it up a notch, taking the show on the road – or more appropriately, making the road into a show.

Related: Veteran Takes a 15,000-mile ‘Ride for Light’

The 2024 Ride for Light will still be under the banner of Operation: Purpose, the 501(c)(3) that Steed set up to foster and nurture a community of veterans in Wilmington, North Carolina, which has a large military population. However, the ride itself is more about the larger epidemic of veteran suicide. And this time, Steed won’t be riding alone.

“We’re a blended crew this year,” he told me. “I’ve got my battle buddy who I actually grew up with. He and I joined the Army within a couple of days of each other. We had the same job, went through basic training and AIT (advanced individual training) together, and were at Fort Bragg together.”

Ride for Light veteran suicide
L-R: Perry Steed, Bruce Knobloch, and Jason Conyers.

Steed said Bruce Knobloch came to see him the night Steed’s oldest child was born, but after that the two men lost track of each other for almost 19 years until reconnecting this past summer.

Knobloch has been a motorcycle enthusiast for 20 years. When the two met up after all those years and the 2022 Ride for Light came up in conversation, Knobloch told Steed that he would’ve gone along if he had known about it.

“I told him, ‘Well, I’m doing it again.’”

The other addition to the crew is cinematographer Jason Conyers.

“When I got back from my 2022 ride, I joined the American Legion and became a Legion Rider because they really showed up and supported me,” Steed said, adding that one of the Legion Riders he met was Conyers, who was out of the Navy and had a film studies degree. “I was telling him what I was wanting to do, and he’s like, ‘Well, I’ll go with you, and I’ll document the whole thing.’”

Steed tapped some of his other resources, including a film studies professor at the University of Colorado and an art director for North Carolina PBS, who told him that once a documentary gets on one PBS station, the other states will pick it up.

“Of course, I gotta be censored a little bit,” Steed said. “I can’t just let it fly, but that’s fine.”

The 2024 Ride for Light began taking shape. There was just one glitch. On the 2022 Ride for Light, Steed had taken several opportunities to ride his GS off-road. This was something he wanted to do even more for the 2024 ride. When it came to Knobloch, Steed said if there was anyone in the high school yearbook with the caption “Least likely to own a Harley-Davidson,” it would’ve been Knobloch, yet that’s all he had owned since. He recently traded a CVO Street Glide for a Pan America. 

However, Conyers had a Low Rider.

“I told him, ‘You ain’t going with me on that bike.’”

Unsure what to do, Steed got on a call with a guy he met through some restoration work Steed had done on a 1961 BMW R50S. He told Steed “consider me a friend” and offered up business advice.

Ride for Light veteran suicide
1961 BMW R50S restored by Perry Steed.

“I needed someone who was not close to me that I could run some of this shit by, because everything I say, people are like ‘Yeah, man, that’s a great idea.’ I know not all my ideas are great, and I need someone who will tell me, ‘That’s freakin’ stupid.’”

During the phone call with Sean Slovenski, Steed explained Operation: Purpose and the Ride for Light, and in a stroke of good fortune, Slovenski donated two bikes: a 2010 BMW R 1200 GS with just 15,000 miles on it and a 2009 BMW R 1200 RT.

“He said, ‘Do whatever you want with the bikes,’” Steed said, adding that Slovenski recognized that the RT didn’t necessarily fit with the trip. Slovenski told Steed he could sell it to help fund the trip and that Conyers could ride the GS.

Related: Perry Steed | Ep. 52 Rider Magazine Insider Podcast

With the bikes lined up, the trio set a launch date for May 18 from Beaufort, South Carolina, after they attend an event with Operation Patriots FOB, a veterans and first responders support group.

Ride for Light veteran suicide
Working with Bruce on his bike, adding Denali D7 lights and a few other parts before the trip.

Steed told me the plans for the ride with a mix of excitement and reverence for the places they’ll be riding and visiting.

They’ll start with the South Carolina Adventure Route – or SCAR.

“We’re gonna ride part of that from Beaufort up to Suches, Georgia, and then we’ll head backcountry through Tennessee and Kentucky to get up to Louisville,” he said, adding that the good thing about the SCAR for someone without a lot of off-road riding experience like Conyers is that it’s mostly just two-lane road. “There’s some dirt and gravel, but nothing crazy.”

However, he said the real exciting part will be the BLM land out West.

Ride for Light veteran suicide
Jason’s BMW GS in a little deeper than expected.

“You know, really getting off the beaten path, out to where there’s no lights, no light pollution, and it’s just us out there. Three guys, talking smack and eating and sleeping under the stars.”

As for their on-road plans, Steed said they intend to visit a variety of places, from veterans cemeteries to a speaking engagement at an American Legion nursing home in Minnesota to the location of a large parcel of land that is being turned into a veterans retreat by a family who lost their son to suicide.

As with the first trip, they’ll be carrying the ashes of veterans.

“There’s a really horrible statistic that I want to lay on you that will blow your mind,” Steed told me. “There’s over 3,000 unclaimed veteran remains every year. A lot of these guys – very often Vietnam vets – through whatever happens, when they die, no one is able to locate the next of kin.”

Steed said there is a nonprofit organization in Wilmington called Veterans Memorial Reef that takes ashes and inters them in an artificial reef 5 miles offshore.

“I told them I would pick up whatever I can carry along the ride. So I’m leaving room on my bike for that.”

But as Steed said in 2022, this isn’t a trip about death. It’s a trip about life, so along the way, they’ll make “buddy checks” with as many other veterans as possible, spreading hope, love, and camaraderie.  

That’s the most important aspect of the ride, and Steed said even if they don’t end up making a documentary, he just wants to get these two other guys out on road.

When I first connected with Steed in 2022, he was already a couple months into his ride and had stopped in Mexican Hat, a small town in southeastern Utah that was a favorite place of his father-in-law, an important figure in Steed’s life.

When I called him this time around to talk about Ride for Light 2024, he said that just the night before, he had been replaying in his head that conversation we had almost two years ago.

“I was thinking about where I was at. I see constant reminders when I’m in my office, these little mementos from my trip, and I remember exactly where I was.”

Steed said that Conyers has been fortunate in that he’s done a few cross-country trips – but not Knobloch.

“Every veteran needs to see and experience what they fought to preserve,” he said. “I need to get these guys out on the road…and get myself back out there too.”

To learn more about the Ride for Light 2024 or to donate to the cause, visit the Operation: Purpose website or follow on Facebook.

Resources:

If you or someone you know is in danger because of suicidal thoughts or actions, call 911 immediately. Suicide is an emergency that requires help by trained medical professionals and should always be treated seriously.

Nationwide suicide hotlines, 1-800-SUICIDE (1-800-784-2433) and 1-800-273-TALK (8255), have counselors available 24/7. Other resources include Suicide.org, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, and the American Association of Suicidology. All provide comprehensive information and help on the issue of suicide, from prevention to treatment to coping with loss.

The post Steed Rides Again for Veteran Suicide – This Time with a Crew appeared first on Rider Magazine.

Source: RiderMagazine.com