Thursday, June 18 VOL. 132 No. 6
Welcome Rockies Riders!
Westcliffe rolling out the red carpet Saturday for hundreds of pedal pushers
Ride the Rockies, an international cyclist event, is this weekend. The long-awaited ride ends on Saturday, June 20 in Westcliffe. An estimated 2,000 bicyclists are going to enter the county from Canon City via Highways 115 and 67, and coming up Hardscrabble Canyon on Highway 96. As the “finish-line town,” Westcliffe officials welcome Ride the Rockies organizers and participants. The bicyclists, who traveled to Colorado from all 50 states and several foreign countries, started their ride last Sunday, June 14. The 464-mile route is taking the cyclists through some of the state’s most scenic regions, with overnight stops scheduled at Hotchkiss, Gunnison, Crested Butte, Salida and Canon City before concluding the ride in Westcliffe this Saturday. Community leaders here welcome the contingency of bicyclists and their families and friends. “I welcome all of you,” said Westcliffe town trustee, Brian Clince. “We are very excited to have you. We are very excited to meet everybody involved in this endeavor, and if there is anything this town can do just holler.” Main Street will be closed to all vehicle traffic from 3rd Street to Adams Boulevard. The bulk of the bicyclists will arrive between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. The finish line is located at the end of Main Street and Adams Boulevard, where 30 vendors will be set up. “We have over 2,500 meals planned,” said community meals coordinator, Anne Marie Donohoe. “All of the proceeds are going to nonprofits here in the Valley. Right
now the Amish are growing 50 heads of cabbage for the coleslaw, and they are making 100 gallons of ice cream.” To keep track of how many of the cyclists buy meals from the vendors, ticket stubs are being handed out. When a bicyclist gets food, they will stick the stub into a box to be counted later. A drawing will be held before the closing ceremony for a free two-night stay in town. “We are counting on the community to come down, celebrate and eat with us,” Donohoe said. “Everybody has worked hard for this day.” As part of the celebration, a check in the amount of $5,000 will be presented to the local Club America swimming pool and fitness complex. The Denver Post Foundation, which helps sponsor Ride the Rockies, presents a grant to a non-profit organization in each of the Ride’s host communities. The day’s schedule is as follows: •10 a.m. to 5 p.m. – Entertainment/Beer Garden and Finish Line Expo •10 a.m. to 12 p.m. – Deja Blues Band •12 p.m. to 12:30 p.m. – Second Street Dance Team •12:30 p.m. to 12:45 p.m. – Bike give-away. Get tickets at the Silver Cliff booth •1 p.m. to 3 p.m. – Flash Cadillac concert •3 p.m. – Bike give-a-way #2, check presentation to Club America •3 p.m. to 4 p.m. – Closing Ceremony at the Bluff. Remarks from tour director, Chandler Smith, and Custer County Chamber of Commerce president, Donna Hood.; The crowds are invited to stay for a
chance to win a Bianchi bicycle and a set of Profile Design wheels. Participants must be present to win. “I’m excited for Saturday because the weather looks like it’s going to be good,” said Chamber of Commerce president, Donna Hood, adding that the Chamber’s liquor license goes till 7 p.m. that day, well after the closing ceremony. “The party’s not over when the ceremo-
ny’s over,” she said. “We just want everybody to come out, be at that finish line, and enjoy the day.” “I’m very honored that they chose our community to be a host town for Ride the Rockies,” Clince said. “I know that coming to a new town for them must be pretty difficult, so I am overjoyed that they were willing to go out on a limb for this little town.” – J.E. Ward
Mark Dembosky of Westcliffe, right, pedals between Hotchkiss and Gunnison during Tuesday’s segment of the seven-day Ride the Rockies event. Dembosky is one of seven members of the Westcliffe riding team. --Photo courtesy Doris Dembosky
Sheriff reminds motorists to be mindful of bicyclists Ride the Rockies began on Sunday, June 14, sending two thousand bicyclists onto highwayoulders. To remind
drivers how to accommodate bicyclists, the Tribune sat down with Custer County sheriff, Shannon Byerly.
Machines and Their Muscles
“People just need to remember that bicyclists have just as much right to the road as vehicles do,”
he said. “So people need to drive with due regard. The last thing we want is a vehicle versus bicycle traffic
The Arkansas Valley Flywheelers sponsored the annual tractor pull this past on Saturday and Sunday, June 13 and 14, at the Silver Cliff town park. Scores of spectators showed up for the popular competition. – Trib photo by J.E. Ward
accident. Those aren’t usually very pretty.” Though bicyclists have rights to the road as well, Sheriff Byerly acknowledged that it can be frustrating for drivers to slow down and move over to pass a cyclist. “The roads aren’t built or designed for bicycle traffic,” Sheriff Byerly said, “and so we have narrow shoulders. Bicycles travel at a much slower speed too, and those are the dynamics to today’s world and the roadways we have. People have to understand that just because they’re frustrated and have to hurry, they have to provide room for bicyclists to ride.” Sheriff Byerly instructed drivers to slow down for Ride the Rockies participants, or any bicyclist on the road, and give them plenty of room so there aren’t any incidents. State Patrol will have motorcycle escorts and patrol vehicles following and surrounding the bicyclists on the route to Westcliffe,
Custer County Sheriff Shannon Byerly. the finish line town. “State Patrol will have very low tolerance for anyone driving unsafely in the close vicinity to the bicyclists,” Sheriff Byerly said, “just as we would. “Understand this is a big event coming to our community,” he added, “and it is going to bring a lot of outside folks who have never been in Westcliffe or Custer County before. Hopefully we can be accommodating and welcoming.” – J.E. Ward