ÍáÍáÂþ»­

Sponsored By
An organization or individual has paid for the creation of this work but did not approve or review it.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Horse riders advocate for organ donation in Minnesota, ND

WILLMAR, Minn. - Trails4Transplants, an organ donation advocacy group, is in the midst of a horse ride across North Dakota and Minnesota to raise money and promote awareness for eye, tissue and organ donation.Riders have arrived in western Minnes...

Trails4Transplants, an organ donation advocacy group, is in the midst of an horse ride across North Dakota and Minnesota to raise money and promote awareness for eye, tissue and organ donation. A stop in Appleton, Minn., is shown Wednesday, May 31. Photo courtesy Trails4Transplants
Trails4Transplants, an organ donation advocacy group, is in the midst of an horse ride across North Dakota and Minnesota to raise money and promote awareness for eye, tissue and organ donation. A stop in Appleton, Minn., is shown Wednesday, May 31. Photo courtesy Trails4Transplants

WILLMAR, Minn. - Trails4Transplants, an organ donation advocacy group, is in the midst of a horse ride across North Dakota and Minnesota to raise money and promote awareness for eye, tissue and organ donation.

Riders have arrived in western Minnesota, and overnight stops are planned Thursday, June 1, near Granite Falls and Friday, June 2, in Renville.

ADVERTISEMENT

Their finale celebration will begin at 6 p.m. Saturday, June 3, at the Renville County Fairgrounds in Bird Island, the final stop of what was expected to be a 320-mile ride.

"A lot of people will ride for two days or one week or a weekend or something like that," said Roger Hille, a rider with the group who spoke to the Forum News Service from the back of his horse. "We have people coming and going along the trail all the time."

At each stop, they camp for the night and go to events where they promote awareness for eye, organ and tissue donation, as well as collect monetary donations to support the cause.

An estimated 124,000 people need organs, tissue or eyes, including children, according to the group. Dozens die every day because they do not receive donations in time.

"(We're) a group of very, very committed folks that want to make sure that people understand that registering to be a donor is so much easier when you're healthy than if you got caught up in a car accident or something, and you've got your family around and they're not sure what your wishes are," Hille said. "That's probably our biggest thing is to raise awareness so that if you have organs that are transplantable and your family doesn't know about it, all the sudden you don't have that gift of life."

The ride is in its fifth year of a six-year trek to cover 2,000 miles. Each year the riders do a two-week ride covering about 330 miles. This year's ride started in Edgeley, N.D.

The celebration event to end the ride Saturday in Bird Island will include food vendors, bouncy houses, horse rides, helicopter tours and beer gardens. Admission is a free-will donation.

ADVERTISEMENT

The riders' progress can be followed on the Trails4Transplants Facebook page.

What To Read Next
Get Local

ADVERTISEMENT