Hey hey!
So, yes I am done my ride, but the fight never really ends. So far I have raised $5420!!!! Wicked I know. I am also in a Youth Noise blog/article if you want to check it out! And, I am on of the heroes on Kids Are Heroes website, click me.
I have surpassed my goal, and that is awesome. I always thought I could ride across BC, but never thought that I could fundraise that much money, I did both and more! So thank you very much to everybody!
I don't know if anybody is still reading this, but if you are, I hope you enjoyed reading about my journey as much I as I enjoyed doing it. (And just so you know, riding across BC was the coolest and best thing I have done in my life so far.)
I also have a personal blog, so if you ever feel like a read, click here.
Peace Like a River
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Thursday, September 3, 2009
I Made It!
I made it, I biked all the way across BC. I rode 1,227km, (I double checked that number). It is pretty cool. When I started out and thought of the idea, I never though that I would ever make it all the way across, all the way to Victoria! I did. Pam from the Canadian Cancer Society called me, and met me at "Mile Zero" with flowers and balloons from the Cancer Society. Mile Zero is where Terry Fox had hoped to end his run. I actually got lost trying to find it today and had to be rescued. My friends from school Gita, Maryann and Alicia were also there to great me and see me finish. That was great! Also a family friend Bev came and my friend Shannon's grandma, Mrs. Carlsen, came to great me to! It was pretty cool, but I am exhausted. At least Gita made me cookies and brownies...that was awesome, Gita is the best cook, I love her!
I am really glad I did this, it was really rewarding experience, difficult, but rewarding. I also get to be in Snaps magazine, which is also pretty cool. Enjoy the pictures. The journey is over, but the fight will continue. I am still accepting donations, DONATE
I am really glad I did this, it was really rewarding experience, difficult, but rewarding. I also get to be in Snaps magazine, which is also pretty cool. Enjoy the pictures. The journey is over, but the fight will continue. I am still accepting donations, DONATE
On the ferry going to Victoria
Biking from the ferry to Victoria, 38km
Alicia came to find me, I was only like 500m from the monument, but I was lost. Thanks Alicia
Woo, I made it!
My mom and I in front of "Mile Zero"
Pam, Gita, Alicia, Me, Mrs. Carlsen, and Bev
Pam and I
Maryann, Alicia, Gita and I in front of Legislature
Exhausted in front of Legislature, but happy
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
1 Day 2 Go
Whoo!
Stage 11, Hope to Mission, 77km, is done. Nothing to exciting happened today really, it was pretty much really flat and very boring. There was only one big hill, 2km at 11% and I thought a dog was going to eat me on the way up to. It came running out of the bush, and I went from 9km/h to 20km/h in a matter of seconds, thankfully the dog stopped, it did scare me though.
Tomorrow is the last day, tomorrow I will have made it, tomorrow I will be done. I am so close, I can't believe that I will actually make it. Crazy. Well, I don't really have much else for today... My total in donations is now $3,498.01!
Mission almost complete
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
"Manning" Up
They like to make things out of wood here
Stage 10, (yes, we have entered the double digits) Princeton to Hope, 135km. Today's ride went through Manning Park, but I couldn't ride all of it because a lot of it had no shoulder and single lane traffic only. Which probably would have resulted in my death or serious injury if I did ride through those sections. In total, I only rode about 65km today. But I did ride to the top of Allison Summit, 4425 ft. It feels good to be back in the mountains and out of the desert, I feel much more at home and comfortable. The air seems better here, well maybe not in Hope, but it was in Manning Park.
Riding through Manning Park
I am so close to Vancouver, which in turn means I am also really close to Victoria (only a ferry ride away)! Nothing too exciting happened today, other than the shoulder disappearing, it was a pretty solid day. Only 2 days until Victoria...yeah I never thought I would actually get this close. I also didn't think that I would make it over the Salmo-Creston pass, or the Blueberry-Paulson or to Osoyoos but I did. I'm not actually sure how I keep pedaling sometimes, because when I get off the bike for the day I could easily just go to sleep wherever I stop, or as soon as I stop I realize how hot it is and I can't believe that I was riding in that heat, but some how I always keep pedaling.
This sign was very hard to find and get to
Monday, August 31, 2009
Wine, Hills and Cheers
Stage 9, Osoyoos to Princeton, 116km is done. Sorry about the late blog post, but I had to find internet to steel. Today had its ups and downs, literally and figuratively. It was a really hilly day, not huge hills, but lots of 500m up and then 500m down kind of stuff. The last 20km was tough, really tough. It was very hot, and I had a headwind. I did get to smell fruit trees and vineyards for pretty much the whole day though!
I think what got me through today was all the cheering, waving and honking. Yesterday was the Penticton Ironman, so today the 2000 something racers had to go home. I cheered them on yesterday and today, they cheered me on! I got waves, honks, cheers and $20. This one car passed me honking and waving, then next thing you know he is pulled off the road 1km. He got out of his car and was cheering me on, then he stopped my mom when she went by and donated $20, and gave me a bag that said "Marathon Swim" on it, apparently he swam 26.2 miles for a charity and was impressed by what I was doing. I also got honked at by my first motorhome today...but I think that they were in the Ironman. Only 317km left to vancouver!!!! Yeah!
Going down from the Richter Summit, 2295ft.
I think what got me through today was all the cheering, waving and honking. Yesterday was the Penticton Ironman, so today the 2000 something racers had to go home. I cheered them on yesterday and today, they cheered me on! I got waves, honks, cheers and $20. This one car passed me honking and waving, then next thing you know he is pulled off the road 1km. He got out of his car and was cheering me on, then he stopped my mom when she went by and donated $20, and gave me a bag that said "Marathon Swim" on it, apparently he swam 26.2 miles for a charity and was impressed by what I was doing. I also got honked at by my first motorhome today...but I think that they were in the Ironman. Only 317km left to vancouver!!!! Yeah!
WOOO!
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Ironman
Stage 8 = a rest, for me at least! Today is a rest day in beautiful, hot Osoyoos. All I have done so far today is eat, sleep, swim and chill. But, I did watch my first Ironman. The Penticton Ironman rolled through Osoyoos this morning. It was a pretty cool thing to watch, and I did not know that there were so many insane people out there! Who wants to swim 3.4km, cycle 180km then run a marathon (42.2km)? Well... I do someday...but I will save that for a later date, like when I am legally old enough to do it!Other than that, I have just been hanging out with my grandma Dar, and great aunts Joyce and Ellie today who came down from Kelowna to spend sometime with us. Tomorrow I have my last pass to go over, but is a small one, only 11km up. Only 5 more days of riding left and about 430km!! Almost there!
Saturday, August 29, 2009
What Goes Up...Must Come Down
Finally
Stage 7, Grandforks - Osoyoos, 126km, and lots of ascending and descending. Today I suffered, a lot. I got a bit of heat exhaustion yesterday, so I paid for it today. I did not know that I had to climb so much today, and it rained, then it got really hot, and then I got to go down, and I mean down!
I started off today with a 10km hill going up, which I did not really enjoy, and I seemed to go up pretty much for 100km (99.96km). Not always steep up, but definitely up with the occasional tease going down which always resulted in an even bigger hill going up. I will from now on refer to uphill as "the enemy." I had many enemies today, so many. But, coming down into Osoyoos almost made up for the many enemies I conquered on the way up. Down was so fun, on the 180 degree corner that was marked 20km/h, I went 42km/h...so fun.
Today I definitely rode solely on will power, I was so done at 60km and I was only half way there and had a lot more up to go. I am glad I have a rest day again tomorrow, I need it. My knees hurt, I am sunburnt, and I am so tired. So I think I will go take a nap.
Friday, August 28, 2009
The Blueberry
Paulson Summit, summit #2, I made it! 5036ft
Stage 6, Castlegar-Grandforks is done. Today I had to climb up to the top of the Blueberry-Paulson pass, and it was not nearly as bad as I though it would be or as everybody told me it would be. It was much easier than the Samlo-Creston pass. Coming down today was wicked awesome!!! So fast and so long, I actually drafted a motor home for about 10km, but he wasn't going as fast as I would of liked. The last 21km into to Grandforks from Christina Lake was so hot, so very, very hot. Then I got a wasp in my jersey...that was fun. I managed to trap it in the fabric, but after I did that, I had to figure out away to get it out with out it stinging me. That took about 10 min.
Todays shout outs go out to Wally Bursey and the Doyle family. Wally rode up with me to the first summit, by rode I mean I sucked his wheel the whole way up. The Doyle family, Donna, Jeff and Thomas from Victoria who are fellow Aviawest team members stopped to give me a very generous donation, and say hello. Nice surprise, I haven't seen them for a while, and very unexpected! Also a shout out to Emily Brydon who sent me an encouraging, and awesome message on Facebook, that for sure just made my day so much better!
Wally and I on top of summit #1 and in the park named after the legendary Nancy Greene
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Rest Day
We found the Canadian Cancer Society in Trail, BC
Rest day today!!! Yay! I still rode, but only 15km. It is hot in Castlegar!!! Really, really hot. We played tourist and went to go check out the shops in near by Trail and Rossland and had lunch at BP with the Burseys.
Its is good because I got to see some old friends that I haven't seen since I was 11, and I have a riding partner for the Blueberry Paulson tomorrow...well half of it anyway. I am hoping that he will pull me up and I can just wheel suck for 26km.
Be sure to check back tomorrow to see if I made it over the Blueberry Paulson...only time or my legs will tell.
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Rest time
hello Castlegar
Stage 4, I was done by 10:30 today, and I started at 8:50. Salmo - Castlegar is actually 0nly 40km, not 80km...bit of a miss calculation, but in a good way. The hill was kinda, well more than a hill and after yesterdays summit ride, it hurt a bit...quite a bit. As always, the downhill was really fun, and there was about 25km of it at an average speed of 56km.
My new best friend
Tomorrow is a rest day, a rest day before the big Blueberry Paulson climb...its really big I'm told. I hope what I have been told is an overestimate... well at least I don't have to ride tomorrow! I was really stoked that Castlegar had a pool, it is closed for maintenance until September 18th. That was not great news.
"1, 2, 3" and jump in the freezing cold Kootenay River...sure
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
The Climb
Stage 3!
Stage 3 is complete, Creston - Salmo, 86km. Yes, that may seem like it is much shorter than the past two days, but really it felt much further. Creston to Salmo is a mountain pass, meaning I rode 41km up, and I mean up. I have never ridden up a hill, or mountain that big before. The last kilometer before the summit, I was only going 9.5km/hr. I had to stop about half a kilometer from the summit because the white line on the side of the road was moving...it wasn't actually moving. Today was a hard day, really hard, but I rode the whole thing.
Going down, well that is a different story. That was so much fun, I have never gone down a hill that long before, it was fast. I had to switch to my mountain bike because the shoulders on the way down are not always so road bike friendly, but I still went about 55-65km/hr the whole way down.
Today's shout-outs go out to: the guy who stopped me on the way up to the summit to donate $10, the semis and cars that gave me encouraging honks, the other cyclist I shared the shoulder with that I managed to pass twice on the way up (he was slow, but carrying about 50lbs of gear on his bike) and obviously my mom!
"Good morning Baltimore," no wait, this is Creston...
I had a 'mooing' competition with the cows, pretty safe to say that I won.
Stage 3 is complete, Creston - Salmo, 86km. Yes, that may seem like it is much shorter than the past two days, but really it felt much further. Creston to Salmo is a mountain pass, meaning I rode 41km up, and I mean up. I have never ridden up a hill, or mountain that big before. The last kilometer before the summit, I was only going 9.5km/hr. I had to stop about half a kilometer from the summit because the white line on the side of the road was moving...it wasn't actually moving. Today was a hard day, really hard, but I rode the whole thing.
Going down, well that is a different story. That was so much fun, I have never gone down a hill that long before, it was fast. I had to switch to my mountain bike because the shoulders on the way down are not always so road bike friendly, but I still went about 55-65km/hr the whole way down.
Today's shout-outs go out to: the guy who stopped me on the way up to the summit to donate $10, the semis and cars that gave me encouraging honks, the other cyclist I shared the shoulder with that I managed to pass twice on the way up (he was slow, but carrying about 50lbs of gear on his bike) and obviously my mom!
Yay!
Monday, August 24, 2009
The rolling hills
Stage 2, 106km, Cranbrook - Creston is done. Today felt a lot harder than yesterday, it may have been 34km shorter, but it felt 30km further. It was a day of gradual ups, and then gradual downs. My legs were tired at the start, and are definitely tired now.
I did learn somethings today though:
1. Stretching is important
2. Stretching is really important
3. Everybody is affected by cancer.
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Stage 1
Stage 1, complete. Today I rode 140km from Sparwood to Cranbrook, (Ft. Steal actually). It was a pretty fun day, not too bad at all. The last 6 km almost killed me, but I survived the last climb.
Cruising
A big thanks today to everybody who rode through the "Rock Cuts" with me. That made 32km of today much more fun and safer. So a big thank you Jen, Dwight, Heather, Neil, Debby, Drew and of course my mom and dad. (Sorry if I misspelled your names, I am way better at cycling than I am at spelling.)My crew for the "rock cuts"
A big thanks today to everybody who rode through the "Rock Cuts" with me. That made 32km of today much more fun and safer. So a big thank you Jen, Dwight, Heather, Neil, Debby, Drew and of course my mom and dad. (Sorry if I misspelled your names, I am way better at cycling than I am at spelling.)My crew for the "rock cuts"
Stage 1, is done.
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Let it Begin
Tomorrow is big. Tomorrow is the first day. Tomorrow I will ride. Tomorrow it Begins. Cadence 4 A Cure starts tomorrow morning at 6:30 am, Mt. time. This is it. This is my ride. This is the ride.
My legs are really sore already, and I am totally exhausted. Why? Because I raced in the Alberta Provincial Time Trail Championships today. I think I came 1st or 2nd. I don't really know, I left as soon as I finished. Its not really that important to me, and I had other things to do. Hopefully if I win, they will mail the medal to me...that would be nice.
Today I may have won a medal for my efforts, but tomorrow's challenge doesn't come with bling, or a title. It comes with a much more important and fulfilling reward, but this one I can not display on a wall. In my heart it will be the greatest award that I could ever achieve.
Tomorrow I begin.
http://tiny.cc/C4AC
My legs are really sore already, and I am totally exhausted. Why? Because I raced in the Alberta Provincial Time Trail Championships today. I think I came 1st or 2nd. I don't really know, I left as soon as I finished. Its not really that important to me, and I had other things to do. Hopefully if I win, they will mail the medal to me...that would be nice.
Today I may have won a medal for my efforts, but tomorrow's challenge doesn't come with bling, or a title. It comes with a much more important and fulfilling reward, but this one I can not display on a wall. In my heart it will be the greatest award that I could ever achieve.
Tomorrow I begin.
http://tiny.cc/C4AC
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Almost time
It is almost time to begin. 3 days and 17.5 hours until I join the race. The race to end cancer, the race to find a cure.
I think my legs, lungs and heart are ready. To date this may be one of the hardest things I will have attempted, but it is nothing at all compared to those who face, and battle and conquer cancer. I am a bit scared, I am nervous, and I hope I make it because I am the type of person who will go until I literally fall of my bike. But that is what life about right, "Never, never, never give up," so I won't, if I give up just riding my bike, I could never look somebody with cancer in the eyes.
So far I have raised $3, 943.01 which is more money than I have ever had, let alone raised in my life. My goal is $5,000, I think that I will make it, I hope that I will. To donate please click here or here.
Cheers,
KP
Thursday, July 9, 2009
In the beginning
In the beginning, man had legs, which I would have to say where created for cycling. More specifically, they were created to cycle for cancer.
So, here I am, fund raising to ride my bike for 15 days across the province of British Columbia. Across more than 3 mountain passes, through the Rocky Mountains, through semi-desert, through orchards and vineyards, through marsh, through farmlands and finally a ferry.
You may wonder why I am doing this. My answer, is why not, because we can, because we should. Why are you not? I personally experienced time a as a patient in a children's hospital as a teenager, and saw what it was like for teens going through cancer who were constantly surrounded by young children. It is not easy, it is my goal to make that easier.
A teen riding for teens, nobody should have to suffer through cancer, help make it history.
Go online to donate to Cadence 4 A Cure, the epic ride across BC.
http://bit.ly/OyDT9
So, here I am, fund raising to ride my bike for 15 days across the province of British Columbia. Across more than 3 mountain passes, through the Rocky Mountains, through semi-desert, through orchards and vineyards, through marsh, through farmlands and finally a ferry.
You may wonder why I am doing this. My answer, is why not, because we can, because we should. Why are you not? I personally experienced time a as a patient in a children's hospital as a teenager, and saw what it was like for teens going through cancer who were constantly surrounded by young children. It is not easy, it is my goal to make that easier.
A teen riding for teens, nobody should have to suffer through cancer, help make it history.
Go online to donate to Cadence 4 A Cure, the epic ride across BC.
http://bit.ly/OyDT9
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