ap

Skip to content
Three female motorcycle riders, all members of the Buffalo Soldiers California chapter in L.A., made a stop at Denver Fire Station No. 29 in Denver on their return trip after riding from California to Maryland-all to raise money and awareness of breast cancer. Local members of of the Buffalo Soldiers, firefighters, and others were on hand to meet and greet the women.
Three female motorcycle riders, all members of the Buffalo Soldiers California chapter in L.A., made a stop at Denver Fire Station No. 29 in Denver on their return trip after riding from California to Maryland-all to raise money and awareness of breast cancer. Local members of of the Buffalo Soldiers, firefighters, and others were on hand to meet and greet the women.
Author
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

Jan Emanuel fell in love with motorcycles at age 16 – the bikes’ shape, chrome and muscle – she liked it all.

“When I was young, someone said girls can’t ride bikes,” she said. “I said, ‘I can.”‘

The stereotype that a girl – and a black one at that – couldn’t ride bikes didn’t hold Emanuel back then.

And today, extreme weather conditions aren’t keeping the 46-year-old and fellow riders from zipping across the country on their bikes to raise awareness and funding for breast-cancer research.

Emanuel, a breast-cancer survivor and founder and president of Divas for a Cure, stopped for the night Monday in Denver on her way back to Los Angeles from Maryland. She, two other female riders and a two-person assistance crew have raised about $40,000 on this trip so far.

Different reasons compelled the divas to ride cross-country.

Victoria Murphy had an aunt who died of breast cancer. Aj Jemison’s mom is a 9-year survivor of breast cancer. And Emanuel herself is a 23-year breast-cancer survivor.

For Murphy, 47, motorcycles symbolize freedom and hope.

“They have power,” she said. “You don’t view the world the same on a bike.

“There are no walls to hold you back. It exposes you to new things.”

On Monday afternoon, at Denver Fire Station 29, the divas roared into town on two Harleys and a Honda.

They’ll get oil changes and brake checks before they hit the road today. They expect to arrive in Los Angeles, averaging about 450 miles a day, by Thursday.

The trio stopped at the Denver fire station for convenience – and because Lt. George Love of the department is a motorcycle buff who wanted to help a worthy cause.

The women pay their own way. Gas, lodging and food cost about $2,500 to $3,000 for the 20-day adventure, Emanuel said.

The National Breast Cancer Foundation estimates 200,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer this year, and about 40,000 will die from it.

“By the time it hurts, it’s probably too late,” Jemison said. “Make your birthday your breast day. That will always help you remember to have your mammogram.”

Despite the cost, the 115-degree weather driving through Arizona and the hundreds of miles of rainstorms, Emanuel said she wouldn’t trade one day of her trip for anything.

“We’re not just biker chicks, we’re biker divas,” she said. “Our passion has a purpose.”

Staff writer Vimal Patel can be reached at 303-954-1638 or vpatel@denverpost.com.

RevContent Feed

More in News