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    breach, bang, clear: Warfighters getting long in the tooth? Support them especially!

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    Veterans Charity Ride takes veterans on a motorcycle therapy journey to Sturgis, SD for the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally and it does wonders for the veterans. We’ve supported them for a couple years now – here’s another story from 2019.

    Headed to the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally: Therapy on the Road Veterans Charity Ride 2019

    by Sara Liberte

    This was my fourth year supporting Veterans Charity Ride as a photographer/videographer. Every year I’m blessed to experience a host of friendships with some of the greatest men and women our country has to offer. When you spend longer than 2 weeks on the road with people, (most of the time) you end up with a really strong bond. I’m eternally grateful for the friendships I have gained over the years.
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    Mountain jackpot news: National Veterans Charity Ride Makes Stop In Teller County

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    ~ by Trevor Phipps ~
    Last week, the Veterans Charity Ride (VCR), a national group of veteran motorcyclists, traveled unchartered territory as they trekked through Teller County and make a key stop in Crystola for the first time ever.
    Making a trip into Teller isn’t too surprising, as the local area has become a growing hub for veteran organizations.  After all, this is the home of the Salute to American Veterans Rally and the Eric Dickson Memorial (which pays homage to the sole casualty of the Vietnam War from Woodland Park). In the last few years, the region has featured many veteran-oriented ceremonies.
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    moab times: Veterans charity ride goes to Sturgis

    Castle Valley-based nonprofit uses motorcycle therapy to reach wounded veterans

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    A bagpiper and his dog lead a group of motorcycle-riding veterans July 25 at Swanny Park, where the annual Veterans Charity Ride to the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally started.Photo by Doug McMurdo

    By Doug McMurdo

    The Veterans Charity Ride to Sturgis began with a ceremony at Swanny Park July 25. The patriotic event featured bagpipes, a color guard from the American Legion in Moab, and the Utah Patriot Guard.
    The guests of honor included 104-year-old Moab resident and World War II veteran Kate Thomson, who gamely rode in the sidecar of an Indian motorcycle, and men and women who were wounded in war. Some of the injuries they suffered were obvious. Amputees are hard to miss. Others were not visible at first glance – but those in attendance honored all of them.
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    the gazette: Wounded veterans stop in Colorado Springs on cross-country 'motorcycle therapy' ride

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    When Keith Helfrich retired from Fort Carson’s 10th Special Forces Group in 2013, he was struggling to deal with post-traumatic stress disorder and the effects of a traumatic brain injury.
    “I was at place in my life where I didn’t want to go anywhere, didn’t want to do anything, didn’t want to get out of the house,” said Helfrich, 50, who retired as a sergeant major. During his 26 years in the Army, he deployed to Iraq four times and earned a Bronze Star Medal.
    Then Helfrich was invited to go on the 2016 Veterans Charity Ride to Sturgis, S.D., a multiday ride for amputees and wounded veterans. He wasn’t sure he wanted to go, but the ride’s founder flew out to Texas, where Helfrich lives, to persuade him.