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Even in heat, pedaling across Iowa beats political polarization

RAGBRAI riders seem to have mostly put differences aside during their trek

Riders roll July 28 into Chelsea, their first stop during day six of RAGBRAI. Temperatures reaching about 100 degrees made the 80.6 mile journey from the overnight stops of Tama-Toledo to Coralville a challenge for riders. (Geoff Stellfox/The Gazette)
Riders roll July 28 into Chelsea, their first stop during day six of RAGBRAI. Temperatures reaching about 100 degrees made the 80.6 mile journey from the overnight stops of Tama-Toledo to Coralville a challenge for riders. (Geoff Stellfox/The Gazette)

WEST LIBERTY — Bob Molsberry was a college student when he first watched the recreational bike ride that organizers say is now the country's longest, largest and oldest. That was in 1973, and there were just a few hundred riders in RAGBRAI.

The following year, he and his wife joined in, starting what has become a family tradition. This July, the Register’s Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa celebrated its 50th anniversary, with anywhere from 30,000 to 60,000 riders taking part on any given day.

Molsberry, a retired United Church of Christ minister who was paralyzed when he was hit by a car while riding 26 years ago, loves meeting people from all walks of life on the annual trek across Iowa. The camaraderie built over seven days and some 500 miles, often through painfully rolling hills and withering late-summer heat, feels irreplaceable.

RAGBRAI participants fill the concourse July 29 to visit with their teammates and take photos at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City. This year’s route cut through Iowa City as riders left the overnight stop of Coralville on the last day to Davenport. (Savannah Blake/The Gazette)
RAGBRAI participants fill the concourse July 29 to visit with their teammates and take photos at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City. This year’s route cut through Iowa City as riders left the overnight stop of Coralville on the last day to Davenport. (Savannah Blake/The Gazette)

He also likes that thousands of cyclists in a deeply divided nation can leave their attitudes, beliefs and pent-up angst at home, and prove that folks sharing a common interest like cycling can still get along regardless.

“A few years ago, I was riding with the Adaptive Sports team and a couple of other guys in handcycles,” he said. “We got to the last day and we were pulling into Burlington, and I dropped some kind of comment about President Trump, and it wasn’t favorable. And this guy on his handcycle — I’d been riding with him all week — he turns and says, ‘We’ve been riding all week and now you bring up politics?’

“When you're riding together,” Molsberry said, "well, you put that stuff aside for a while. During the year, I still find it hard to understand, and I don’t really feel comfortable associating with them, people that have such different understandings. But for one week in July, I’m still ready to throw my lot in with them.”

The polarization that has racked America may be at its deepest in decades. And those divides are especially evident now in Iowa, where the first-in-the-nation caucuses will be held in about five months — the GOP and possibly the Democrats will meet on Jan. 15.

Except none of that was apparent on RAGBRAI, where discord seemed to disappear.

If a rider punctured a tire, someone would inevitably stop to help change it. If someone fell, total strangers would pause their ride to provide first aid or wait for an ambulance. As temperatures climbed, church groups and fire departments and even local political parties were there to hand out water to all riders.

There was one “Let's Go Brandon” sign spotted hanging from a group's tent at a campground in Sioux City, but most people walked by without giving it a second thought. Another group's bus carried a rainbow flag in support of the LGBTQ community, but it was so small that it was almost unnoticeable.

Chances are members of those two groups came together at some point during the ride, perhaps over a beer or turkey leg or an ear of Iowa sweet corn.

“There’s a lot of people here and not a single iota of divisiveness,” said Kyle Campbell, a project manager for a biotech company, midway through the ride.

“There’s an implicit agreement that everyone made a sacrifice to be here and everyone wants to have a good time," he said. “And instantly, there is something everyone has in common, which is bicycling, versus I’m a Hawkeyes fan or I’m a Cyclones fan, or a Republican or Democrat.”

People would rather talk about the frameset on their bike or what seat is most comfortable for eight-hour days in the saddle.

“I think it's because we're all face-to-face, you know? The divisiveness comes from the fact that we're all in our houses, and on computers and social media, and we're not in person," said Beth M. Howard, an author and documentary filmmaker who was working on a movie about Iowans' curious affinity for pie.

With so many riders passing through small towns, cellphone towers were often overwhelmed. It was not until riders reached larger towns that they could send messages or catch up on the news.

In the meantime, they were mostly forced to talk, and usually it was about the next craft beer tent, or the ice cream around the bend, or the spaghetti dinner that was awaiting them at a church or VFW or community center that evening.

“I feel a lot more negative when I'm working at home day after day,” Howard said. “Then someone does a random act of kindness, you're like, ‘Oh, the world is still a good place.’"

The author, Dave Skretta of Kansas City, grew up in Iowa and has ridden RAGBRAI many times, including this year’s ride.

Cyclists ride past a cornfield on a county highway July 25 while riding in the Register's Annual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa near Scranton. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
Cyclists ride past a cornfield on a county highway July 25 while riding in the Register's Annual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa near Scranton. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
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