Ride the Beloved Country: Celebrating 10 Years of joberg2c
9 days. 900 kilometres. Four provinces. 99.5% off road, and 110% mountain biking adventure. This is joberg2c, the beloved brainchild of two farmers, one city guy and their collective imagination run wild. Now in its tenth year of existence, joberg2c attracts a fiercely loyal following of local and international riders and spectators. Most importantly, it is designed and run as a community event – relying on the support of rural schools and communities – which in turn, benefit from the vital economic stimulus that the race provides.
“It is no secret that joberg2c puts its communities first,” explains joberg2c co founder and race director Craig Wapnick. “Since its inception 10 years ago, the race has successfully uplifted every community through which it has travelled.”
Starting on the KARAN beef farm 40 km south of Johannesburg, the 9-day route traverses through Gauteng, a little bit of Mpumalanga, the Free State and KwaZulu-Natal before ending at Scottburgh on the South Coast. Testament to its slogan, Ride the Beloved Country, the joberg2c takes riders through the very heart of South Africa. The event attracts a mix of local and international riders, and in 2019, joBerg2c will welcome 233 internationals from 27 different countries.
This is the Joberg2c
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Community-driven
Each race village is run by a school that has benefited dramatically before, during and after the race has passed through their area. Also, each seconding table along the route belongs to a different charitable organization that benefits from the race in a way that ensures their support every year.
In 2018, the joberg2c paid out R4 million to schools and institutions to host the race villages and water points.
“We paid out a further R1.2 million to various suppliers directly on our route and towards our route building,” notes Wapnick. “Our partner schools vary from Model C to private schools, which all – in their own way – are keeping communities alive. In fact, the event is the biggest source of external income for most of the communities that joberg2c passes through!”
In addition to the paid beneficiaries, joberg2c also works with official charities that use the event to raise funds. The joberg2c team has partnered with a few charities that have done invaluable work, including The Nelson Mandela Library Project and Surgeons for Little Lives. The joberg2c team recently attended the latest library launch made possible by the race, which is the 13th library directly on the race route.
“We also sponsor a Soweto-based team as joberg2c: this team started out as four, and has grown to 10 talented riders,” adds Wapnick.
first published https://www.joberg2c.co.za/ride-the-beloved-country-celebrating-10-years-of-joberg2c/