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In March of 2024, I will be joining a group of international cyclists in the desert of Sonora, Mexico for Ruta del Jefe and its going to be awesome. 

Ruta del Jefe is a unique cycling event that aims to connect a community of like-minded individuals through a greater sense of understanding of the places they ride, raise money for local organizations, and create life-long advocates for the borderlands. Ruta del Jefe seeks to raise awareness around the beauty and biodiversity of the borderlands, their native peoples, and the border wall's impact on animal and human migration.

These goals are close to my heart and home as I grew up riding my bike around the deserts and mountains of New Mexico, just over 330 miles away from where Ruta del Jefe will take place this year. Riding my bike in such an incredible landscape resulted in a deep curiosity about the land, reverence for the stewards of such a phenomenal place, and care for communities along the border. Riding my bike also gave me a sense of empowerment, adventure, and joy that was unrivaled then and in many ways still is. Needless to say, I am beyond excited to be joining this event and supporting the organizations listed below. The groups are actively promoting the beauty and biodiversity of the U.S-Mexico borderlands, conserving the heritage of their native peoples, and supporting migrants and refugees at the U.S border wall and throughout Mexico. 

Deserts are rich with life and I hope that you will join me in celebrating and protecting that life.

I am looking to raise at least $700, which will be distributed amongst the following organizations, meaning that each organization will receive $150.

  • Cuenca Los Ojos - Cuenca Los Ojos, meaning “Watershed of the Springs”, is a 121,000-acre (49,000-ha) protected area in the Sky Islands of Sonora, Mexico. Located directly along the United States-Mexico border, CLO stewards the unique desert wetlands, open grasslands, and soaring mountains of the Madrean Archipelago. They are restoring and rewilding these once-degraded ranch lands by repairing waterways and reviving the natural processes of herbivory, predation, pollination, fire, carbon sequestration, and nutrient cycling. Today, CLO is home again to jaguars, ocelots, black bears, beavers, and other threatened and endangered species.
  • N'dee/N'nee/Ndé Nation- The N'dee/N'nee/Ndé Nation are a group of people with their own ethnic identity, customs, traditions, language, beliefs and religion, and that like every living society, has adapted to the context of their time and space. Those of whom form the N'dee/N'nee/Ndé Nation live in the states of Sonora, Chihuahua and Coahuila de Zaragoza under organized communities, which have representatives named “nant’an”. In each community and in an organized way, the N'dee/N'nee/Ndé Nation fights for being included in the list of the nation’s indigenous peoples, which has been achieved so far in Sonora and Coahuila de Zaragoza; their nation is constantly working to revive their language, dressing, traditions, ceremonies, songs, and dances, that were lost as a consequence of the persecution that their ethnic group faced in the n'dee bikeyaa/n'nee bikiyaa/ndé miikeyaa, which is the southern portion of our territory and that nowadays is the north of Mexico.
  • Por La Defensa el Rio de Casas Grande- Por la Densa del Rio Casas Grandes is a collective of activists fighting against the construction of a dam in the Casas Grandes River, which feeds a big part of agricultural and natural land in northwestern Chihuahua, near where Cuenca Los Ojos is located. It’s formed by citizens who are concerned about the way this project has been approved and promoted, and the effects the dam would have on the natural environment and human settlements.
  • Frontera de Cristo - Frontera de Cristo seeks to build relationships that demonstrate God’s will and build bridges rather than walls. So many people are migrating, seeking refuge, and fleeing extreme poverty and violence. Frontera de Cristo’s goal is to address their immediate needs and the root causes of mass migration, creating safe and prosperous opportunities that allow people to stay in the land they call home if they so choose. Through the building of community-driven partnerships with ministries and secular organizations in Douglas and Agua Prieta, Frontera de Cristo offers shelter, resources, education, emotional support, medical care, and new solutions.
  • Borderlands Restoration Network - Borderlands Restoration Networks' mission is to partner to grow a restorative economy by rebuilding healthy ecosystems, restoring habitat for plants and wildlife, and reconnecting our border communities to the land through shared learning. We envision connected borderlands where rivers flow, plants, wildlife, and cultures thrive, and communities develop an inclusive restorative economy where a sense of place inspires a sense of purpose.

 

I'm attending this event with RAR Bay Area. RAR is a movement towards gender inclusivity and racial equity in cycling and the outdoors. RAR Bay Area is currently led by non-binary and femme folks with Brazilian, Chinese, Mexican, Filipina, Honduran, and Salvadoran heritage, with intersections of LGBTQIA, masculine/femme, and cis-gender identities. We are here for two things: to decolonize and to live in joy.

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