Bicyclers pedal and party their way through state
NewsReview
Roseburg, Oregon
September 10, 2007
By ADAM PEARSON
Cycle Oregon is a nearly 500-mile, weeklong bicycle trip
that climbs and dips over the Cascades and back around again, but as strenuous
as it may seem, some insist it’s more like a party than an endurance test.
| Lesa Potter,
left, and Clivonne Corbett, both of
Roseburg, are on their eighth consecutive Cycle Oregon ride together,
Courtesy
photo |
 |
“We’re on vacation, so we want it to be fun,” said Lesa Potter, who arrives at
Diamond Lake today from La Pine with her riding partner, Clivonne Corbett,
during the second day of Cycle Oregon 2007.
“It’s sort of like a traveling circus,” Corbett said. “They entertain us and
they carry our stuff.”
“They make it really easy for us,” Potter said. “We just have to ride to our
next destination, take our showers and go to the beer and wine garden!”
“To be entertained!” Corbett said.
It’s safe to assume Corbett, 57, and Potter, 48, both of Roseburg, are riding
side-by-side by day and finishing each other’s thoughts by evening. The pair are
on their eighth consecutive Cycle Oregon ride together, sticking to one another
like sisters or members of a national bicycle team, right down to their
coordinated outfits and matching road bikes.
The two call themselves recreational riders who pedal about 3,000 miles a year,
mainly in the summer, to stay fit and prepare for big events like Cycle Oregon.
“You have to ride quite a bit in the summer in order to get ready for Cycle
Oregon to make it pleasurable,” Potter said.
By night they dance to live music and visit old friends among the 2,000 or so
participants, some of whom they only see during the summer road trip and who
have traveled from as far as Alaska or Vermont for the event.
|
If you go ... |
WHAT: Cycle Oregon 2007
WHEN: From Sunday, Sept. 9 to Saturday, Sept. 15
WHERE: From Sisters to La Pine, 64.5 miles; La Pine to
Diamond Lake, 92.5 miles; the Crater Lake option, with a 25.8-
or 59.8-mile loop back to Diamond Lake; Diamond Lake to Dorena
Lake, 88 or 100 miles; Dorena Lake to Oakridge, 55.5 miles;
Oakridge to Rainbow, 65 miles; Rainbow to Sisters, 43.3 miles.
Cycle Oregon rolls to Diamond Lake today, circles Crater Lake
Tuesday, and heads to Dorena Lake Wednesday via Highway 138 East
and Canton Creek and Sharps Creek roads.
The U.S. Forest Service encourages the public to use other
traveling routes away from the event. |
|
“There’s these groups of people, Team Vagabond and the
Crabs, and they wear these crab hats, and there’s these old people, and they
ride all day and they dance all night. It’s crazy,” Potter said.
Some participants are in the greatest of shape, Potter said, but she and Corbett
never see them because they ride too fast and rise too early.
“The only pressure is to be out by 8 or 9, because the trucks will leave,”
Potter said.
“We’ve been known to almost be the last people out of camp,” Corbett said with a
laugh.
Camp can be a city of tents that occupy entire campgrounds, like Broken Arrow
Campground at Diamond Lake, where spacing is minimal for its occupants.
Known to have called themselves the Silly Spin Sisters, or better known as Team
Patchouli, Potter and Corbett now team themselves with a group of local riders
who call themselves the North River Ramblers.
“People appreciate the patchouli,” Potter said, pointing out the reason she and
her partner earned the former nickname.
“Right. Because everybody stinks and you want to put that on, because it smells
better than sweat,” Corbett said with another laugh.
Potter and Corbett also participate in other riding events, like the Chico
Wildflower, Blackberry Ramble and Tour de Fronds, to stay in shape. And when
they’re not riding together, they’re usually not far from one another. They both
work at the Veteran Affairs hospital in Roseburg, where Potter is a medical
technician and Corbett is a nurse.
Friends for 17 years now, the two haven’t always been road bikers. They started
out mountain biking together, a natural progression from aerobicizing with Jane
Fonda, Potter said.
“We’re evolving, you see,” Corbett said. “Now we’re roadies.”
Potter said they moved away from mountain biking because sometimes it can be too
tough.
Corbett added the other main reason they enjoy Cycle Oregon: the support it
gives local communities.
“It’s a total moving circus,” she said.
You can reach reporter Adam Pearson at 957-4213 or by e-mail at apearson@newsreview.info.