Texas 4000
Texas 4000

From Texas to Alaska: student cyclists ride 4,000 miles to fight cancer

Jun 30, 2026 | 4:22 PM


PRINCE GEORGE — What would compel a group of university students to pedal nearly 4,000 miles across a continent, through changing climates, mountain passes, and long stretches of highway, all the way from Austin, Texas to Anchorage, Alaska?

For many of the riders making that journey this summer, the answer isn’t simple. In fact, even they sometimes struggle to explain it.

“I don’t know, really,” admits Saylor Black, one of the ride coordinators. “I think that’s just it. It’s a student organization at UT Austin, and it was intended to be done every year and give a new batch of students the experience every year — to spread the mission to as many people in as many communities as possible.”

That mission, however, is clear: raising money and awareness for cancer research and support services. The journey may be long and physically demanding, but its purpose is rooted in something deeply personal for many of the riders.

Each participant is tasked with a significant commitment even before they clip into their pedals.

“Each individual rider is responsible for raising $7,500 for cancer research and support services,” explains Leah Tharakan, the organization’s 2026 Community Engagement Chair. “That money goes into a pot. Once we finish the ride, we enter a grants committee, and we’re able to decide where this money is allocated and advocate on behalf of the organizations that we visit throughout the ride.”

The decentralized nature of funding gives riders a sense of ownership and connection to the cause. They are not just raising money—they are also helping determine where it will have the greatest impact. Along their route, they stop in communities, meet with local organizations, and hear stories from patients, families, and healthcare workers affected by cancer.

For Black, the cause is deeply personal.

His grandfather died of cancer at just 47 years old—long before Black was born.

“I was named after my Grandpa Eddie,” Black says. “He had this crazy adventurous spirit. He left his life, dropped everything just to go sail the world, build sailboats. And, you know, I am riding for him — and how cancer kept me from ever getting to meet him.”

That sense of loss, combined with a desire to honor family and help others, fuels him through long days in the saddle.

The ride itself is not for the faint of heart. The group sets out from Austin and travels through multiple states and provinces, including Oklahoma, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, and into Alberta, before continuing north toward Alaska. Along the way, riders face extreme weather changes, mechanical breakdowns, wildlife encounters, and the physical toll of pedaling for hours on end day after day.

Despite those challenges—or perhaps because of them—the experience has a way of forging powerful bonds.

“We have each other, and that’s it,” Black says. “We get on each other’s nerves, we lift each other up. We’ve seen each other cry. We make each other laugh. We’ve done all of it as a team. And it’s been really great. I definitely see myself being connected to these people for the rest of my life.”

The camaraderie becomes essential to the group’s success. Riders depend on one another not just for moral support, but for motivation during moments when exhaustion sets in and the destination feels impossibly far away.

Tharakan echoes that sense of shared experience. While she plays a leadership role in engagement and outreach, she’s also very much part of the team enduring the same long days and unpredictable conditions.

One of the biggest contrasts for the riders has been the environment itself. Coming from Texas, many had little experience with mountainous terrain or northern wildlife.

“Yesterday we rode through the highest part of the Canadian Rockies,” Tharakan says. “It’s very different from home.”

The scenery, while breathtaking, also brings new challenges—and surprises.

“We’ve seen quite a few bears,” she says with a laugh. “We have our bear spray with us, I promise. We’ve seen some moose, we’ve seen some deer. So that’s been exciting as well, to encounter that wildlife while on the bike.”

Encounters like these highlight just how far from home the riders venture—not just geographically, but culturally and environmentally. Trading the flat roads and heat of Texas for alpine passes and cooler northern climates requires both physical and mental adaptation.

Yet even as they push into these unfamiliar regions, the riders are united by a common thread: the communities they meet along the way.

In towns large and small, people come out to support the team—offering meals, places to stay, and words of encouragement. Many share their own stories of cancer, reinforcing the importance of the riders’ mission.

Those connections serve as a reminder that while the ride may begin in Austin and end in Anchorage, the impact stretches far beyond those two points on a map.

As of now, the group has already covered thousands of miles, but their journey is far from over. Ahead of them lies another 1,700 miles of road before they reach their final destination in Alaska.

By then, they will have crossed international borders, navigated some of the most challenging terrain in North America, and raised significant funds for a cause that touches countless lives.

But perhaps more importantly, they will have created something less tangible but equally lasting: a network of relationships, memories, and shared purpose.

For many riders, the experience is transformative.

“It’s really more than just a bike ride,” Tharakan says. “It’s about the people we meet, the stories we hear, and the impact we can create together.”

And for Black, every mile carries a deeper meaning.

“In a way, it feels like I’m getting to carry my grandpa’s spirit with me,” he says. “Like I’m part of something bigger than myself.”

As these students continue pedaling north, their journey stands as a testament to endurance, compassion, and the power of collective action. While the question of “why” may never have a simple answer, the results speak for themselves.

In every mile ridden, every dollar raised, and every story shared, these cyclists demonstrate that sometimes the most meaningful journeys are the ones that challenge us the most—and bring us closer together along the way.

With 1,700 miles still ahead, the road to Anchorage stretches long before them. But if the miles behind them are any indication, they’ll get there the same way they started: one pedal stroke at a time.