4th Annual Jesse Doyle Memorial Run

4th Annual Jesse Doyle Memorial Run
Friday started the way it should—coffee, gear, and a cold start that lit right up. I rolled the mile of gravel from the off-grid place to the pavement, pointed the bike toward Highway 97, and let Sprague River fall behind. Chiloquin. Chemult. Just road and time.
In Chemult I bumped into two train riders—one with a guitar, both with a story. The older one had just lost his sister and was headed for Portland. I grabbed a beer, shared a minute, and let him play a few quiet bars for the people we miss. Then it was back to it—toward Oakridge, a couple of the usual stops, and a quick check-in at Crazy Bob’s before meeting up at the rest area.
The weather didn’t ask our permission. It rained most of the night and came and went all through the day, but that didn’t slow anything down. A few good friends from another club rolled in and we stretched our legs, and the A&W burgers hit the spot. By dark, the rest arrived—about fifteen strong from chapters around Oregon, a solid turnout for a 150-mile haul each way in on-again, off-again rain.
There was a citizen already unpacking at the campsite when the first four of us rolled in. He gave us the side-eye, then smiled, wished us well, and decided as the rest of the pack rolled in to find quieter ground. Fair enough.
Night came with the usual—old stories, new laughs, wet leathers steaming by the fire. Then we got to the part that matters.
Every year we gather around the picnic table and raise a glass. Someone says, “Let’s propose a toast to Jesse, Tattoo’s sister.” As the glasses lift, another voice adds, “And yes, let’s not forget these members.” That’s when the list comes out. I start with a few names, then hand it to the brother beside me. He reads a few more and passes it along. Around the table it goes, steady and respectful, each name carried by another voice. No hurry, no background noise but the rain in the trees and the fire popping. Simple, and perfect.
Morning brought cleanup, coffee, and one stubborn bike loaded onto a trailer—handled without drama, just like it should be. Then we pointed the front wheels home. Everyone made it back safe.
This is why we ride the Jesse Doyle Memorial Run. Not for miles on a patch or photos on a phone. We ride because names matter. Because sisters matter. Because remembering keeps people with us in the only way that really lasts.
Rest easy, Jesse. We’ll keep saying your name.