Crossing the finish line, a community celebrates
Whether alone, among friends or in teams, riders rode one of four Obliteride courses, traveling from the Hutch campus as far south as Tacoma, in circuits of 25 to 150 miles. They rolled in to Gas Works Park throughout Sunday afternoon, sometimes in clusters of 10 team members or more, sometimes in a long single-file train.
The research funded by these riders has touched many of them personally.
One family was riding for Sylvia Bauman, of Snohomish, Washington. In treatment for multiple myeloma at Fred Hutch’s clinical care partner Seattle Cancer Care Alliance for three years, she started with chemotherapy, went on to an autologous blood stem cell transplant, and then had a second transplant with donor cells from her biological sister from Costa Rica.
Unable to ride herself, Sylvia basked at a table at Gas Works Park and greeted family members as they completed 25-mile rides. “My 20-year-old son Max, who has autism, saw a booth for Obliteride during a fundraiser for multiple myeloma,” she said. “He has always worried about me, and asked Grandma Carol if she would do this ride. She took off with the idea, and here we are.”
Sylvia’s mother, Carol Sullivan, is team captain of weride4sylvia, which has raised $8,210 so far for Fred Hutch. “She has gotten her treatment at SCCA, and has definitely benefitted from research and treatments developed at Fred Hutch,” Sullivan said.
One of the first riders from any route to reach the finish line on Sunday was Justin LaFord, from Lynnwood. His wife, Haley Neff-LaFord, and children Karlyn and Michael, cheered him as he arrived, speeding down the narrow chute with two other companion riders less than four hours after leaving Tacoma on the second day of the two-day, 150-mile loop. “He rides for his mom, a breast cancer survivor,” said Neff-LaFord.
Among those who came in a little later was team Lucy Strong, riding for the girl whose name they’d written in chalk. Lucy’s mother, Nicole, was battling pleurisy, a lung inflammation that causes chest pain with every deep breath. But she was determined to complete her 25-mile loop with the rest of her family, all of them riding for her daughter.
“As I crossed that finishing line, it was very emotional for me,” she said, her eyes pooling up again. “When I thought of all that my little girl has gone through, I was going to make it.”
Fred Hutch Obliteride thanks founding sponsors University Village and Sloan Foundation for their support.
Didn’t get to ride? You can still help cure cancer faster! Donate to Obliteride through Sept. 15, 2017.