The Story of Why: A Biking Journey

While the draw to cycling varies for every individual, there is no denying that bikes are a connective force to millions of people with one shared passion.

In the United States alone, nearly 50 million people ride bikes recreationally From content commuters to dedicated racers, there is something special that allures people to the sport. Life long cyclist Hunter Wilson has dedicated thousands of hours to training, the cycling community, and exploring what biking truly means to him.

“For me it’s like eating or sleeping. If I don’t do it I feel horrible… I don’t feel like myself,” explained Wilson, a third year Cal Poly Anthropology and Geography major.

Born in Reno Nevada, 21 year old Hunter Wilson was immersed in cycling at a very young age and completed his first race at eight years old. His parents Rachel and Sean Wilson created the youth development team GS Andiamo.

By the time Wilson was seventeen, he was racing against professional cyclists and eventually began coaching for GS Andiamo and other athletes. “Some weeks I would in put close to 40 hours a week between traveling, bike maintenance, training, planning,” he explained. Wilson traveled to countries such as Belgium to race against some of the top athletes in the world, however, his views on competing eventually began to shift.

“I viewed it (racing) as ‘keep moving forward in the sport’, but eventually I realized I was riding my bike for the wrong reasons,” Wilson explained. “I liked the action of riding and I liked training and being fit, but I realized didn’t need to compete.”

After taking time to rekindle his love for the sport, Hunter is able to continue training and expressing himself through the bike. On top of riding, Wilson leads skills clinics to help more people feel comfortable on bikes, works at a non profit bike shop, and spreads empowering messages via social media.

“What I’ve always enjoyed about the bike is the sense of freedom you get from it. Just training, and getting faster, and being able to ride farther—it’s very empowering and I believe everyone deserves that feeling,” said Wilson.

Photo via bikemek.com

Same Team, New Outlook

Press Play To Listen To The Article and arguably the best Queen song
Music: Bicycle e Race by Queen

With a fresh new group of officers and guidance from previous core members, the Cal Poly Cycling Team is retiring some if its’ old ways and striving to create an environment rich with inclusivity and support.

On Wednesday, April 20th, the team voted on a new officer core. For three weeks following the election, the current officers mentored the newly elected before officially passing on the responsibilities.

In previous years training took place online due to COVID-19, leaving many officers feeling unprepared and overwhelmed when fall quarter began. Luckily with the dedication and time put in by the new and old officers alike, change is already beginning to take place and people are confident the team is heading in an upward trajectory.

Pain, Suffering, Bikes, and Beer

After five flats, five crashes, and five mechanical issues, nine Cal Poly Cycling athletes completed the 2022 San Diego Belgian Waffle Ride— one of the most competitive, challenging, and well known gravel races in the nation (where each finisher ~over the age of 21~ is rewarded a bottle of beer).

The course was a total of 134 miles of road and gravel with over 10,500 feet of elevation gain.

The riders began the daunting race at 7:30am, April 30th. Finishing times ranged anywhere between six and eighteen hours— an incredibly long time to spend on a bike.

“It felt like someone took a jackhammer to my lower back for 8 hours,” said Cal Poly fourth year engineering student Zachary Colwell. “It was definitely the hardest physical thing I’ve done in my life.”

Pro cyclists from around the nation battled the daunting route, and even some of the professionals wound up with a dnf next to their name.

The Belgian Waffle Ride is held every year, and this years course has been deemed the hardest yet. With the most gravel than ever before, roughly a 50/50 split between road and dirt, finishing the brutal course is a major accomplishment in itself. 1,114 racers started the race, and 901 finished.

Two time BWR champion Peter Stetina rode with a broken wrist and was dethroned by Alexey Vermeulen.

Pro triathlete and offroad cyclist Isabel King took 6th place for the women, acquiring an injury as well.

At mile 132, Cal Poly third year and Vice President of the Cycling Club, Kenny Rapmund suffered a mechanical issue which led to a fall. Luckily with the help of his teammate Dylan Pollard, a second year Cal Poly biochemistry major, and a lot of will power—he was able to finish the race.

“I flatted once on mile 132 which caused me to crash. I was totally crushed and thought I wasn’t going to finish even though the finish was only 2 miles away. I got passed by 15 people as I tried to collect myself,” remarked Rapmund. “Thankfully, Dylan was only a few spots behind me and stopped to help me fix the flat. He was super selfless, calm, and composed while I was bonking, cramping, and delirious. It would’ve taken me at least 5 more minutes to get rolling without him. Big props to him.”

Despite the setback, Rapmund accomplished his goals and surpassed his expectations in the process.

“My goal was to finish in under 9 hours and I finished in just over 8 hours, including the flat/crash. The last 1/3 of the race was the most mentally difficult thing I’ve ever gone through,” Rapmund said. “Everything hurt and I had so little energy left, but I wanted to hold my pace. It’s amazing how much more you’re capable of when you just put your head down and grind it out. I still can’t believe I pushed through it.”

First year Cal Poly biomedical engineering major, Trinity Mak sustained a notable crash as well, but was able to get back on her bike and take second place for the U23 category.

The race pushed the limits of every single athlete, testing their strength, determination, and willpower. The ten Cal Poly athletes proudly represented CP cycling and left everything out on the course.

Triathlon House Break-in

Theft has reached new levels at California Polytechnic University. 

On the night of March 30th, the Cal Poly Triathlon Team House was broken into and roughly $20,000 worth of bikes and household items were stolen. All of the bikes were recovered from Cuesta River and homeless encampments, yet many of the other items were broken or not found. The thieves have been identified, yet no arrests have been made for this robbery and home invasion. 

“The homeless in Slo have very expensive tastes in bikes,” said Triathlon House resident and Cal Poly Senior Alex MacLean. 

Eight bikes ranging in value from $100 to $10,000, a safe containing important documents and checks, a computer, an iPad, dumbbells (which were left at the bottom of the driveway), and a camera were some of the items taken from the house. 

“It’s ridiculous,” said fourth year environmental engineering major and Triathlon House resident Mason Johnson. “Clearly they came in, grabbed the dumbbells, carried them outside and then realized that they were too heavy to steal, which is absolutely ridiculous. 

All seven members of the triathlon house had belongings taken, however only Alex MacLean,  Abraham Muldrow and their two girlfriends were in the house when the event took place. Remaining residents Mason Johnson, Jacob Krynock, Max Stapel-Kalat, Sean Moran, and Sam Blakewell were away in Georgia competing in the Collegiate Triathlon National Championships. 

“All of the cars were out of the driveway, so the thieves must have thought we all weren’t home,” said fourth year business major Sam Blakewell. “We are lucky no one got hurt.” 

On the morning after the robbery, MacLean left the house to get coffee without realizing anything out of the ordinary. Later in the morning, Muldrow woke to go to a meeting on campus and discovered he couldn’t find his backpack. 

Assuming he left his backpack at his girlfriend Avery Ancell’s house, Muldrow went downstairs to grab his bike. 

“I ran up and down the stairs multiple times and then I was like, fine, I can’t find my backpack. I just need to grab my bike to go to Avery’s,” said Muldrow. “I looked in the transition room (the room where all of the bikes are kept) and one of Alex’s plants was knocked over and all the bikes were missing.”

Muldrow’s first impulse was that someone hid the bikes as a prank, however, after continuing to look around the house and outside, he came to a dark realization.

“I think the moment when I finally realized they were stolen is when I saw a pink highlighter from my backpack down the street at the end of the driveway.”

Startled and confused, Muldrow called MacLean. 

“I called him and said ‘hey, all the bikes are gone, I think we got robbed’,” remarked Muldrow. “I sent him a picture and he didn’t believe me. I was like, Alex, it’s the 31st. It’s not April fools. We’re not getting pranked.”

After receiving the phone call, MacLean returned from coffee and ran down the road to Cuesta River and Park, a popular place for the homeless. Ancell (who had stayed at the house that night) called the cops and Abe went to Cuesta as well to help Alex. 

“I went to the river and saw Abe’s backpack and laptop laying in the water,” explained MacLean. “I ran further down to find more of our possessions just spewed out in the creek.”

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is IMG_1274-1-768x1024.jpg
Photo of belongings tossed in the water. Taken by Alex MacLean at Cuesta River

Unlike typical thefts which are planned and carefully executed, the robbery seemed unmethodical and haphazard. The majority of stolen items were thrown in Cuesta River. 

“There was an assortment of  random stuff spewed around, my like vaccine card was just kind laying on the side of the tunnel,” said Muldrow. “I saw the safe, and then my computer in the water, and a bunch of other things I didn’t realize were stolen.”

Mason Johnson, who’s room is closest to the front door, had the most amount of personal items stolen along with his bike. 

“The thieves rummaged through my room, and went through my closet and desk area. I ended up loosing all of my camera equipment, and my iPad that I used for school was thrown in the river wrapped in a towel,” Johnson remarked. “They also took my pencil case, which was incredibly frustrating because I realized as I was going to class that morning that I had no writing utensils.”

Muldrow and MacLean ventured further down the river to find four of the seven stolen bikes submerged in the water.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is IMG_1265-768x1024.jpg
Photo of the four bikes found in the creek. Taken by Alex MacLean at Questa River..

The police arrived on scene and helped them search in the river for remaining bikes, however the other three bikes (an S-Works Crux, Canyon Ultimate CF SL, and a Giant Mountain bike) remained unfound. Officer Brandon Tyler of San Louis Police Department took their statements and was in charge of the case.

Generally, victims of bike theft have the highest probability of success if they take matters into their own hands and actively search for their belongings. An article by Mustang News reported that students have overwhelmingly low faith in the police to get their bikes back, and a report found that out of 223 stolen bike reports to San Luis Police Department in 2020, only 29 were recovered. 

Muldrow and MacLean continued to search the river and homeless encampments around San Luis Obispo. When the other Triathlon House Residents returned from competing in Georgia a few days after the theft, they helped as well. 

One day while searching the camps—Johnson, MacLean, and Krynock met a kind individual that lives in Cuesta Park and goes by Jerry Monopoly. 

Monopoly stated that he had seen the thieves move through the camp and confirmed this by knowing the make and model of the stolen bikes.

“He actually had his items stolen by the same group of people that morning we spoke with him,” said Johnson. “We know it was the same group of people because he was able to visually confirm the identity of two of the bikes that were taken.”

Monopoly informed Johnson that the thieves were three homeless men that lived in the far end of Questa Park, one an alcoholic and the others addicted to meth.

With insight from Monopoly, the members of Triathlon House searched more camps around SLO. 

“There were a bunch of stolen bikes, but none of them were ours,” said MacLean.

Unlike Monopoly, the majority of encampment residents were not cooperative or kind when asked questions, yet MacLean still managed to get some valuable information.

“They were sort of hostile, definitely didn’t really wanna talk to me, but they did say that the police had come by the day before and taken a bunch bikes, which was a good sign for us,” MacLean remarked. 

Typically police raids are very uncommon in San Luis but due to the rapid increase in theft, police have started entering encampments. 

“I have four coworkers, three of whom have had thefts in the last two weeks,” said Johnson. “It’s frustrating given the fact that I’m pretty sure they went into the camp to get our bikes, but made no arrests.”

Many bike theft victims express frustration on how it is all handled. It seems as if the police have no intention of punishing the criminals, which is probably why bike theft in SLO continues to rise. Thieves most likely have realized that recovery rate is slim and probability of punishment is unlikely, which is incentive to continue. 

On April 8th, Muldrow got a call from the police informing him that their bikes had been recovered and were being processed. On Monday, April 11th, they were able to pickup the three bikes from the station. 

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is IMG_1313-1024x768.jpg
Photo taken by Abe Muldrow of Jacob Krynock with the bikes outside of the police station.

“It was like a sigh of relief,” said third year Jacob Krynock who owns the S-Works Crux.

It turns out the bikes were recovered from a homeless encampment the day after the theft took place and were in police storage waiting to be processed. 

“When I picked up the bikes, the cops said that having the serial number helped me get them back and I probably wouldn’t have gotten them back if I didn’t give them the serial number,” said Muldrow. “It would’ve have taken months to process and match descriptions to reports, or they wouldn’t have gotten around to giving me the bike back because they have so many bikes in storage.”

Reconnecting recovered bikes to their owners is a big issue, and it is highly advised that all cyclists know their serial numbers. 

Most bikes don’t get returned, and the residents of the Triathlon House are very lucky to have all the bikes back. 

Since the incident, they have upped security and pinned notes on the door for potential intruders. While they are thankful for the police’s help, many of the residents believe that policy around theft needs to be changed. 

“I have nothing wrong with the way that some people either find themselves living their lives or choose to live their lives, but I think that breaking into someone’s house and stealing their stuff shouldn’t just go unpunished,” said Johnson. “The people are still out there, which is really frustrating and also scary. I don’t want that to happen to someone else. I don’t want them to have to go through what we went through.”