rolling thunder

This weekend I put the Bonneville on the back of my truck and took it up to my sisters place in northern Virginia. Did a lot of riding with my dad and brother-in-law. About 350 miles in total.

On Sunday, we rode in the Rolling Thunder rally/protest/march. The primary goal is raise awareness of POW/MIA issues. The secondary goal is to get tens of thousands of bikers together.

My dad is a vietnam vet and has been riding every year for a few years, so I went up to ride with him this year. There were a lot of bikes there. I estimated about 10,000-12,000 bikes rode in the parade from the Pentagon, through downtown, and to the Mall. Depending on who you ask, there were between 50,000 and 500,000 bikes downtown in total[1].


The sea of bikes in the Pentagon parking lot.

The ride out of D.C was interesting. If you consider being stuck in traffic on I-95 for an hour interesting.

Most of the rest of the riding that weekend was spent on windy back roads in Caroline county in Virginia. Thats some fun riding.

[1] The event has more than a few political overtones[1], so no surprise the attendance estimates vary greatly.
[2] Not all of which I agree with…

One thought on “rolling thunder

  1. You definitly have no clue what you are talking about. 2005 was slammed full in the parking lot which holds more than 40,000 bikes. A grand total estimation from the National Park Service concluded that more than 250,0000 bikes in DC that day.
    Really, stay home, you’re using up an American’s good air.

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