Veteran pushes through past experiences in effort to save an injured cyclist’s life
VAntage Point
Department of Veterans Affairs
Doré Mobley is a Communications Specialist with Patient Care Services
March 16, 2018
For VA employee and Veteran Eric Detrick, Feb. 11 began as a brisk Sunday under sunny blue skies – the perfect day for a 100-mile bike ride through California’s Coachella Valley known as the Tour de Palm Springs.
However, around mile 30, events took a turn that would leave Detrick emotionally shaken.
Detrick and two fellow Veterans Tom McMillen and Raul Portal were riding with Project Hero, a national non-profit therapeutic cycling program for Veterans and first responders when they came upon an accident (pictured above) where a driver lost control of his vehicle and collided with two cyclists. The group immediately rendered aid to the more seriously injured cyclist.
An Army medic who served two tours in Afghanistan, Detrick realized one of the cyclists wasn’t getting enough air, so he created an intubation tube from the hose of another cyclist’s hydration pack. Unfortunately, the cyclist’s injuries proved to be too extensive and later died at the scene.
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Showing posts with label bike trip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bike trip. Show all posts
Friday, March 16, 2018
Saturday, October 12, 2013
Wounded veterans taking "got your back" to whole new level
Honor Ride Asheville raises money for wounded veterans
Citizen Times
Karen Chavez
Oct. 11, 2013
ASHEVILLE — This is a city that loves to ride bikes but also loves to use its bikes as a force for goodness.
Enter the Honor Ride Asheville. This inaugural event, starting at 8 a.m. Sunday in South Asheville, will bring together bicycles and their riders to raise money and awareness for Ride 2 Recovery’s Project HERO (Healing Exercise Rehabilitation Opportunity) program and to support the purchase of adaptive bikes for healing heroes.
Ride 2 Recovery is a nonprofit that helps injured veterans improve their health and wellness through individual and group cycling programs at military bases, as well as on long-distance challenge events.
The Honor Ride Asheville is a noncompetitive cycling event open to military service members, veterans and the public. There are three route options — 25, 50 or 75 miles — that all start and end at Liberty Bicycles on Hendersonville Road. There is no cost for injured veterans to ride.
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Citizen Times
Karen Chavez
Oct. 11, 2013
ASHEVILLE — This is a city that loves to ride bikes but also loves to use its bikes as a force for goodness.
Enter the Honor Ride Asheville. This inaugural event, starting at 8 a.m. Sunday in South Asheville, will bring together bicycles and their riders to raise money and awareness for Ride 2 Recovery’s Project HERO (Healing Exercise Rehabilitation Opportunity) program and to support the purchase of adaptive bikes for healing heroes.
Ride 2 Recovery is a nonprofit that helps injured veterans improve their health and wellness through individual and group cycling programs at military bases, as well as on long-distance challenge events.
The Honor Ride Asheville is a noncompetitive cycling event open to military service members, veterans and the public. There are three route options — 25, 50 or 75 miles — that all start and end at Liberty Bicycles on Hendersonville Road. There is no cost for injured veterans to ride.
read more here
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Veteran's epic bike journey cut short after bike stolen in San Diego
Veteran's epic bike journey cut short after bike stolen in San Diego
ABC News
Ashlee DeMartino
October 1, 2013
SAN DIEGO - A veteran in the middle of an epic cross-country journey on his bicycle is now in a holding pattern in San Diego after his bicycle was stolen.
Matthew Jarrett's custom-made road bike has taken him more than 6,500 miles across the country this year.
Jarrett is an Army veteran who served in Iraq and his ride across the United States and back is to raise awareness of veterans' suicide.
"Vet Ride for Life, TransAmerica Ride for Life … and I thought, why don't I put the suicide awareness message in there and through the ride, it can generate awareness of it?" he said.
He started in Virginia and has traveled through Canada, Colorado, Oregon, Montana and made his latest stop in San Diego on Friday. He never thought this stop would be his last.
read more here
ABC News
Ashlee DeMartino
October 1, 2013
SAN DIEGO - A veteran in the middle of an epic cross-country journey on his bicycle is now in a holding pattern in San Diego after his bicycle was stolen.
Matthew Jarrett's custom-made road bike has taken him more than 6,500 miles across the country this year.
Jarrett is an Army veteran who served in Iraq and his ride across the United States and back is to raise awareness of veterans' suicide.
"Vet Ride for Life, TransAmerica Ride for Life … and I thought, why don't I put the suicide awareness message in there and through the ride, it can generate awareness of it?" he said.
He started in Virginia and has traveled through Canada, Colorado, Oregon, Montana and made his latest stop in San Diego on Friday. He never thought this stop would be his last.
read more here
Friday, May 31, 2013
George W. Bush Bikes With Injured Vets
George W. Bush Bikes With Injured Vets
Reflects On White House Decisions, Life After The Presidency
Huffington Post
Jon Ward
Posted: 05/30/2013
CRAWFORD, Texas -- George W. Bush had been riding his mountain bike for almost four hours, and he was out of gas.
I was 12 riders behind the former president as we cycled, single file, along a winding trail cut through Bush's 1,500-acre ranch. We had been riding almost nonstop, in 90-degree heat, for 30 miles, over terrain that was at times technical, challenging and potentially hazardous. Rocky sections delivered a pounding to both bike and rider. Roots threatened to upend us. At one point, a narrow path along a ridge line dropped off steeply to the right, 50 to 75 feet to the gorge below. Bush had called the section "hairy."
It was the second day of Bush's third annual Warrior 100K, a three-day mountain bike ride that he has hosted at different locations since leaving the White House, to which he invites military veterans, many of whom had been seriously wounded in the wars he initiated. It's a ritual of thanks and bonding that might seem fraught from the outside, but that everyone who takes part seems to enjoy.
This year, 75 riders participated in the event over Memorial Day weekend, 13 of them veterans wounded physically or psychologically, or both. The rest of the peloton was made up of a few guests of the veterans, Secret Service agents, mechanics, medics, an assortment of people who have ridden with Bush over the past several years, and a few odds and ends, like me, the only reporter along for the entire ride.
Reflects On White House Decisions, Life After The Presidency
Huffington Post
Jon Ward
Posted: 05/30/2013
CRAWFORD, Texas -- George W. Bush had been riding his mountain bike for almost four hours, and he was out of gas.
I was 12 riders behind the former president as we cycled, single file, along a winding trail cut through Bush's 1,500-acre ranch. We had been riding almost nonstop, in 90-degree heat, for 30 miles, over terrain that was at times technical, challenging and potentially hazardous. Rocky sections delivered a pounding to both bike and rider. Roots threatened to upend us. At one point, a narrow path along a ridge line dropped off steeply to the right, 50 to 75 feet to the gorge below. Bush had called the section "hairy."
It was the second day of Bush's third annual Warrior 100K, a three-day mountain bike ride that he has hosted at different locations since leaving the White House, to which he invites military veterans, many of whom had been seriously wounded in the wars he initiated. It's a ritual of thanks and bonding that might seem fraught from the outside, but that everyone who takes part seems to enjoy.
This year, 75 riders participated in the event over Memorial Day weekend, 13 of them veterans wounded physically or psychologically, or both. The rest of the peloton was made up of a few guests of the veterans, Secret Service agents, mechanics, medics, an assortment of people who have ridden with Bush over the past several years, and a few odds and ends, like me, the only reporter along for the entire ride.
Bush is aiming to push veterans aid efforts away from a focus solely on sending money to those in pain, toward a goal of helping as many as possible stand on their own two feet, be they flesh or metal.
An undercurrent flowing through remarks by Bush and others during the three days was a concern that returning veterans not be turned into charity cases, whether injured in the body or the spirit. During a press conference, the former president said the Bush Institute's "first focus is on helping vets find jobs."
"I mean, after all, these men and women have shown incredible courage, they've understood what it means to accomplish a task, and they'll be great employees," Bush said, the 13 wounded warriors standing on either side of him. "And so that's what we're doing at the Bush Center. It's all aiming to make sure that the outpouring of support that is pretty predominant in our country is channeled in a way that is effective."
I asked him about that comment the next day when we spoke.
"Yeah, see here, one of my concerns at the Bush Institute is that the outpouring of support for our vets, while impressive, could be misguided," he said.
He talked for a moment about making sure that financial donations go to organizations that are spending money on veterans, not overhead, and that are having a real impact. Then he talked about post-traumatic stress disorder.
"If you talk to some of these vets, if they level with ya, they'll say one of our biggest concerns is that PTSD is viewed as a disability and employers don't want to hire a disabled person. So one of the things we're going to try to do is help destigmatize the injury," Bush told me.
Of the 13 veterans invited to the ride, only four of them had visible wounds (Gade, who also rode last year, was not one of the designated veteran riders for 2013). A number of others listed PTSD as an official diagnosis.
Army Sgt. 1st Class Manuel Colon, 39, was out on patrol with an Afghan Army unit in Lwara, Afghanistan, in 2004 when improvised explosive devices injured several of the Afghan soldiers.
"When you're talking about coming back and trying to figure out body parts to specific people that are still alive, they're yelling and all this stuff, and putting them all down and trying to figure out what was going on. The burning of the skin, the smell, the blood," Colon said. "That one specific thing just kind of sticks to my mind over and over again."
"Can PTSD be treated? I believe possibly," Colon said. "I'm not a doctor. But it all depends on the individual themselves … How much did they endure? How much was implanted in their mind that just can't be erased? And some of us are dealing with it better, and some of us are not dealing with it that well."
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Friday, April 20, 2012
Injured Vets Heal With Ride 2 Recovery
Injured Vets Heal With Ride 2 Recovery
Posted: Apr 19, 2012
By Amanda Kenney
What's red, white, blue and travels from San Antonio to Arlington? Try, the Ride 2 Recovery. It's a huge road cycling event that raises rehab money for military veterans and on Thursday they stopped at Lakewood Elementary in Belton for lunch.
It's a journey most might find difficult to make. But these cyclists are on the Ride 2 Recovery and are living proof that anything is possible.
"I was one of the Fort Hood shooting victims," said Matthew Cooke. He was shot four time that November day. He's riding in a portion of the 350 mile ride, as part of his rehabilitation.
"It's good comradery for all of us to share what happened to us and then compare to most of the people out here," said Cooke.
More than 200 cyclists, including injured Vets and their supporters ride for seven days from San Antonio to Arlington.
read more here
Posted: Apr 19, 2012
By Amanda Kenney
What's red, white, blue and travels from San Antonio to Arlington? Try, the Ride 2 Recovery. It's a huge road cycling event that raises rehab money for military veterans and on Thursday they stopped at Lakewood Elementary in Belton for lunch.
It's a journey most might find difficult to make. But these cyclists are on the Ride 2 Recovery and are living proof that anything is possible.
"I was one of the Fort Hood shooting victims," said Matthew Cooke. He was shot four time that November day. He's riding in a portion of the 350 mile ride, as part of his rehabilitation.
"It's good comradery for all of us to share what happened to us and then compare to most of the people out here," said Cooke.
More than 200 cyclists, including injured Vets and their supporters ride for seven days from San Antonio to Arlington.
read more here
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Bicycle trek helps veterans down road to recovery
Bicycle trek helps veterans down road to recovery
By EloĂsa Ruano GonzĂ¡lez, Orlando Sentinel
7:11 p.m. EDT, October 29, 2011
The group stopped this weekend in Orlando. They had dinner at the American Legion Post 286 on Friday and rode 44 miles to Winter Haven on Saturday. They plan to end their trek today in Tampa.
"Yes, we're injured and gave up part of our life. But we're still living our lives to the fullest," said Army Sgt. Nathan Hunt before setting off Saturday from the Sheraton Safari Hotel near Walt Disney World.
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By EloĂsa Ruano GonzĂ¡lez, Orlando Sentinel
7:11 p.m. EDT, October 29, 2011
Photo: Veterans' bicycle rideMore than 200 cyclists, mostly injured military veterans, set out to cross Florida coast to coast in seven days. They took part in the 350-mile Ride 2 Recovery Florida Challenge from Jacksonville to Tampa to raise money for veteran rehabilitation programs across the country.
( TIFFINI JONES VANDERWYST, RIDE 2 / October 29, 2011 )
Cyclists make their way to Winter Haven from Orlando during the Ride 2 Recovery Florida Challenge. More than 200 cyclists, mostly injured veterans from across the country, took part in the 350-mile seven-day trip from Jacksonville to Tampa.
The group stopped this weekend in Orlando. They had dinner at the American Legion Post 286 on Friday and rode 44 miles to Winter Haven on Saturday. They plan to end their trek today in Tampa.
"Yes, we're injured and gave up part of our life. But we're still living our lives to the fullest," said Army Sgt. Nathan Hunt before setting off Saturday from the Sheraton Safari Hotel near Walt Disney World.
read more here
Tuesday, September 4, 2007
Bike trip from Seattle to Gloucester to raise awareness of PTSD
Vacation Spent Helping Veterans
Cyclist Rides Across Country
By LORETTA WALDMAN | Courant Staff Writer
September 5, 2007
SIMSBURY - In mid-June, 53-year-old Tariffville resident Wayne Coste began a 4,200-mile coast-to-coast bicycle trip.
The 64-day journey, which took him and 25 other cyclists through 13 states and a Canadian province, began in Seattle and ended Aug. 18 in Gloucester, Mass.
That may seem less than relaxing as vacations go, but Coste wasn't looking to kick back.
He was on a mission to raise awareness about the plight of returning military personnel suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, an invisible but devastating psychological wound affecting one in five veterans returning from Iraq.
Coste, an engineer with ISO New England, is not a veteran, nor is he close to anyone diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. His interest in the condition, he said, began with reading articles about how difficult it can be for veterans to get treatment. It solidified in October when he attended a presentation by Dr. Edward Tick, director of Soldier's Heart, an Albany, N.Y.-based nonprofit that promotes community-based efforts helping service personnel and their families heal from the effects of war.
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Cyclist Rides Across Country
By LORETTA WALDMAN | Courant Staff Writer
September 5, 2007
SIMSBURY - In mid-June, 53-year-old Tariffville resident Wayne Coste began a 4,200-mile coast-to-coast bicycle trip.
The 64-day journey, which took him and 25 other cyclists through 13 states and a Canadian province, began in Seattle and ended Aug. 18 in Gloucester, Mass.
That may seem less than relaxing as vacations go, but Coste wasn't looking to kick back.
He was on a mission to raise awareness about the plight of returning military personnel suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, an invisible but devastating psychological wound affecting one in five veterans returning from Iraq.
Coste, an engineer with ISO New England, is not a veteran, nor is he close to anyone diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. His interest in the condition, he said, began with reading articles about how difficult it can be for veterans to get treatment. It solidified in October when he attended a presentation by Dr. Edward Tick, director of Soldier's Heart, an Albany, N.Y.-based nonprofit that promotes community-based efforts helping service personnel and their families heal from the effects of war.
click post title for the rest
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