Cycle of Hope 2019: Winnipeg father-son combo ride for Habitat for Humanity - Action News
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Manitoba

Cycle of Hope 2019: Winnipeg father-son combo ride for Habitat for Humanity

A Winnipeg father and his teenage son are buckling up their helmets to hit the road to cycle almost 1,300 kilometres over10 days for a good cause.

28 Winnipeggers will clock 1,254 kilometres to raise funds for affordable housing

John Loewen marks his 24th year involved with Habitat for Humanity's Cycle of Hope fundraiser, a 10-day ride across three U.S. states. This year, his 15-year-old son Sam will be joining him for the first time. (Dana Hatherly/CBC)

A Winnipeg father and his teenage son are halfway through cycling almost1,300 kilometres over10 days for a good cause.

On Saturday, John Loewen and Sam, 15, will take their first rest day since beginning the 1,254 kilometre bike trek across three U.S. states aspart of the Cycle of Hope fundraiser for Habitat for Humanity to collect cashfor affordable housing.

"I'm excited to do the ride," Sam said in an interview before the two hit the road.

Sam told the CBCManitobaWeekend Morning Show his dad was the key motivating factor behind getting him involved in the sport.

"[My dad]was always the type of person to go out and cycle all the time and he brought me along with him," Sam said.

The father-son combo will join 26other Winnipeggers as they weave apath from Oregonto Wyoming in their efforts to gather enough money for the non-governmental organization to build a home for a Winnipeg family.

The cyclists are on trackto averagemore than 100kilometres per day on two wheels, Loewen said.

Father-son combo cross 3 states on 2 wheels

The two-week journey involves10 days in the saddle, fourtravel days, and one rest day.

After the two flewsouth from Winnipeg to Baker City, Ore., the plan for the gaggle of cyclists was to head north on their bikes along the Payette National Forest in Idaho, continuingnortheastto theLochsa River before hitting the longest gradual ascent on the TransAmerica trail. The group will pass through Lolo National Forest into Montana, then concludethe tripin Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming.

Over the course of the adventure, the cyclists will grind out an elevation gain of 10,658 metres, according to the Habitat website.

Loewensaid hehas been involved for the past 24 out of 26 years since the fundraiser began. Loewen said he wasproud of his son and the personal reward of clocking hundreds of kilometres in less than two weeks.

"Not everybody is inclined or interested in volunteering on the build site," the father said.

"Not everybody is in a position to sponsor a house. But, for the cyclists in us, we have this event that allows a significant personal challenge of cycling for over a thousand kilometres in two weeks... to raise money to to help transform the lives of habitat families," Loewen said.

He said the cycling initiative brings inmore than $175,000annually for Habitat, which is an international non-profit that works with volunteers, donors and homeowners to build homes from scratch and fix up existing decent and affordablesingle-family houses and multi-unit developments, according to itswebsite.

The full Cycle of Hope journey comes to an end with a parade through Winnipeg.

With files from Nadia Kidwai