Sat Nov 12, 8:00 AM - Sat Nov 12, 4:00 PM

3500 Pinellas Bayway S

3500 Pinellas Bayway South, Tierra Verde, FL 33715

Community: St Petersburg

Description

The Veterans Day Bike Ride will be held on Saturday 12 November 2022 to honor our military. The event starts and ends in Fort DeSoto Park.

Event Details

2021 Veterans Day Bike Ride: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F4bteVoB-jA

2021 Veterans Day Bike Ride: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rD1r0KZwwNQ

The Veterans Day Bike Ride will be held on Saturday 12 November 2022 to honor our military. The event starts and ends in Fort DeSoto Park in St. Petersburg and offers three different distance options of 10, 32 and 55 miles. All rest stops will be fully stocked with nutrition and hydration products to keep you fueled. Register at this LINK - https://veteransdaybikeride.raceroster.com/

You'll enjoy a full steak lunch when you return after your ride that you can enjoy at one of the shelter tables or on the beach! Your registration includes a Long Walk Home t-shirt. There is also a 50/50 raffle. Purchase your tickets during registration checkout!

Your Registration Includes:

Three distance options

T-Shirt

Fully supported rest stops

Steak BBQ Lunch (With Takeout option)

The Long Walk Home is hosting its fifth annual Veterans Day Bike Ride on Sat, 12 November, 2021, which raises funds to help Veterans transition from military to civilian life. This bike ride is a casual ride with beautiful scenery. It has a bit of everything, from beaches to city parks, bike lanes on roads to paved bike trails, and is guaranteed to be one of the best bike routes you have been on. It has a couple Support and Gear (SAG) Stops which provide snacks and water/Gatorade to fuel you along the ride. You can choose between 55, 32, or 10 mile routes, all which start and finish in Fort Desoto Park. There is a $5.00 entry fee per vehicle to enter the park and a few tolls along the entrance route. The ride includes a t-shirt, a steak lunch, live music, a beautiful beach to swim in, and much more. To register, visit: https://veteransdaybikeride.raceroster.com/

Often, when Veterans get out of the service, they find themselves lost and without a purpose. This is especially true if they are discharged prematurely, for example a military member being involuntarily sent home due to medical reasons or military downsizing. Sometimes, this sudden shift results in feelings of loss, sorrow, and aimlessness. Due to a lack of support and resources, Veterans will often self-medicate to numb their pain, which can make the situation worse. The Long Walk Home (TLWH), a non-profit headquarted in Venice, FL, has recognized this problem and is determined to solve it. Through its Founder, Ron Zaleski, TLWH is working day-and-night to support and inspire Veterans in a non-judgmental way. This is done through a holistic approach and has already seen successes through saving several Veterans’ lives.

Ron Zaleski, a Marine Veteran, founded TLWH in 2006. He started out by walking the Appalachian Trail barefoot in 2006 as a personal challenge to find himself and to raise awareness for Veterans experiencing PTSD. In 2010, he upped the stakes and walked barefoot across America, from Massachusetts to California, wearing a sandwich board that said “18 Vets A Day Commit Suicide”. When the VA released new figures during his walk, this number was crossed out and replaced with “22”. Every day, family members of Veterans who suicided pulled their car over and stopped him. They tearfully told him stories of loved ones they lost and the guilt they felt, which touched Ron and strengthened his resolve. After completing his coast-to-coast journey, he went to speak on Capitol Hill about the need for mandatory counseling for Veterans returning home.

TLWH has launched its Mentorship Program, which pairs Veterans in need with one of its Mentors. The Mentors act as an ear as well as a resource guide. The Mentors will always have the Veteran’s back⁠—a sentiment of comradery that is crucial in the military. The mantra, “Leave no one behind!” rings true even after a Veteran takes off their uniform.

In the Mentorship Program Mentorship Program, a series of 10 Life-Changing Challenges, the ‘10 Challenges to Service’, are given in order to address, and perhaps change, the Veteran’s way of thinking in a positive and constructive manner. This came about from Ron’s experience opening and running a homeless shelter in the Florida Keys for two years. There, he encountered many Veterans seeking help as a crutch, which turned into enabling their destructive behaviors.. Ron realized that to create lasting change, he had to change his approach. The Mentorship Program is built upon the lessons that Ron learned. As he states, “The ‘10 Challenges to Service’ are designed to help us continue our mission to serve and protect. “How?” you might ask. We do it by being the person we want our children to become one day, a person who leads by example. The more we can learn and take the time to work on ourselves, the more value we can add to the lives of those around us.” Take the first challenge, for example: Write down what you are grateful for when you go to sleep at night and what you are grateful for as you wake up each morning.

Money raised from events like the Veterans Day Bike Ride, which is our main fundraising event, is used to fund workshops and classes like the Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST) workshops. From the Living Works website (creators of ASIST), ASIST is an intensive, interactive, and practice-dominated course designed to help caregivers recognize and review risk, and intervene to prevent the immediate risk of suicide. It is by far the most widely used, acclaimed, and researched suicide intervention training workshop in the world. All Mentors of TLWH will attend this workshop and be prepared to listen and aid in any crisis their assigned Veteran has.

Another use of the funds goes toward assisting Veterans in need of either a gift or a loan, allowing them to stay above the ‘waterline’ after an unexpected expense. Sometimes Veterans live on meager wages, which is what they draw in disability, and perhaps social security, if they rate it. When “life happens” as they say, a

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