TRAVIS A. WITTWER / Monday, November 24, 2008 06:34 PM
Part of
any tradition is recognizing the history of the tradition. Cranksgiving is not
an event native to Portland, where I attended. However, it fits nicely into Portlandy style and
was embraced by a variety of bike enthusiasts this year. Cranksgiving isn't just a ride. There is a
message. The message is of hope and help.
And this
message was originally brought by some unlikely heroes--bike messengers.
Cranksgiving
started in New York city in 1999 by Antonio Rodrigues, was run under his
leadership for 8 years, and continues on as a tradition within the New York
bike community. It is a charity food drive with bike messenger flair. Originally participants raced to multiple stops at grocery stores, taking any route they wished, and met at the selected charity for the finish. The idea is to replicate the day of a bike messenger while collecting
food for donation at the same time. With some planning, you can create your own Cranksgiving next year.
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