Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

TOWN GETS TICKET TO RIDE

Harley-Davidson wants to teach everyone in Ryder, N.D., how to handle motorcycle­s

- RICK BARRETT

Teaching an entire town to ride motorcycle­s is an ambitious goal, but that’s what Harley-Davidson Inc. is attempting this summer in Ryder, N.D., a farm community known for its grain mill, not bikes.

On Saturday, Harley will introduce every willing Ryder resident to motorcycli­ng — with the goal of making it the first town in America where everybody has a motorcycle license.

Ryder is small, with only 85 residents, but the rural town in the middle of North Dakota has a feisty spirit that’s kept it alive through hard times, not to mention North Dakota winters, for more than a century.

In a nod to Harley’s goal, Ryder officials have changed their town’s name to “Riders” for the 2017 motorcycle season. Riding lessons, free to residents, will take place this summer.

“We are all fired up to give it a whirl,” said Mayor Jody Reinisch.

“I got everybody interested ... from ages 16 to 75,” he said.

Ryder is about 40 miles south of Minot, not far from the Missouri River. Harley-Davidson executives were smitten with the town’s name and its water tower that’s a dead ringer for one that Harley has at its Juneau Ave. headquarte­rs in Milwaukee.

The company looked at towns with names like Freedom and Independen­ce but chose Ryder for the goal of getting everybody in a town enrolled in rider training through the motorcycle group ABATE of North Dakota.

“We looked at the town and said, ‘Why don’t we turn Ryder into Riders?’ It sealed the deal when we saw their water tank,” said Anoop Prakash, Harley’s U.S. marketing director.

“We are all fired up to give it a whirl.”

JODY REINISCH,

MAYOR

Harley-Davidson has repainted Ryder’s water tower, with the company name on it now, and the town is having a street dance and motorcycle riding demonstrat­ions this weekend as part of the celebratio­n.

Harley will have a stationary motorcycle in Ryder for learning what it’s like to climb aboard a big bike and run it through the gears, without going down the road.

The last big event the town had was in 2006 during its centennial.

“Everybody’s pretty excited about this one. We

had the boys paint some of the fire hydrants HarleyDavi­dson orange,” Reinisch said.

‘A nice little town’

Ryder symbolizes rural America that hasn’t been touched by urban sprawl. The town is surrounded by farms growing wheat, canola and soybeans.

Ryder doesn’t have streetligh­ts, and some of the streets are unpaved, but it has the heart of a farm town with a grain elevator, a cafe and tavern, a gas station and a roustabout business that provides workers for oil rigs.

“We are a nice little town, a nice place to be,” said Charlotte Smette, bookkeeper at the grain elevator.

A trike, rather than a two-wheel motorcycle, caught Smette’s eye.

“I just saw a little three-wheel thing coming down the street and thought, yeah, I would be able to get on that,” she said.

Reinisch, a farmer by profession, has gone door to door to get people excited about Harley’s plans. Of all the people he’s talked with, Reinisch said, only one has strongly opposed the company coming to Ryder.

“He’s negative on everything, but I am going to work on him,” Reinisch said.

Some older residents are nervous that Harley’s efforts, and the newly painted water tower, will make their town a beacon for bikers.

They don’t want a lot of partying and noisy motorcycle­s rumbling through town.

“They’re afraid of the destructiv­e part of it. … But I know the Harley-Davidson people are very good. My cousin was one of them,” said Faye Karna, manager of the town’s museum.

Ryder once had nearly 400 residents, multiple banks, hotels, restaurant­s, machine shops and its own newspaper. Most of that was in the early 1900s when the town was on a busy rail line with passenger service.

In more recent times, people moved to Minot or Bismarck, and businesses folded.

Ryder officials are hopeful that the attention

 ??  ?? Ryder, N.D., residents gather in front of the town’s newly refurbishe­d water tower, which has become a landmark for motorcycle riders in the Dakotas. For more photos and a video, go to
Ryder, N.D., residents gather in front of the town’s newly refurbishe­d water tower, which has become a landmark for motorcycle riders in the Dakotas. For more photos and a video, go to
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 ?? NICK ROTH ?? Mayor Jody Reinisch presides over Main St. in Ryder, N.D. Harley-Davidson arrives Saturday to introduce motorcycli­ng.
NICK ROTH Mayor Jody Reinisch presides over Main St. in Ryder, N.D. Harley-Davidson arrives Saturday to introduce motorcycli­ng.

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