This August I will participate in the Mt. Washington Auto Road Bicycle Hillclimb for the third time. The Mt. Washington Hillclimb is a bike race up the auto road, which is 7.6 miles in length and averages 12% grade. I participated in the hillclimb for the first time in 2010, when I was 15, and really enjoyed it. I raced it again last year, improving my time and coming within 52 seconds of making the Top Notch Elite group. I set the record for my age group again and won the family competition with my Dad. This year, my goal is to break 1:20 and make it into the top notch group. I am very passionate about biking and spend months training for the hillclimb.
The past two years I have been eligible for the Jr. Scholarship program that cuts my pledges requirement in half. The pledges for the race go to the Tin Mountain Conservation Center, which has provided environmental education to over 75,000 students, campers and individuals throughout schools and communities in Northern New Hampshire and western Maine for over 32 years.
Tin Mountain Conservation Center is a 501(c)(3) non-profit providing education programs that foster greater awareness and understanding of the natural environment for school children, adults, and families. Since it was founded in 1980 by Barbara Rockwell Henry and David Henry in Jackson, NH, the Center has offered hands-on programs in the schools, at summer camps, and within communities throughout northern New Hampshire and western Maine. Each year Tin Mountain works with over 5,000 in public and private school, in addition to its homeschool programs. To see a sample of our work with students, click here.