Community Corner

Did We Mention Tour de Tonka’s This Weekend?

In addition to the annual bike ride through Lake Minnetonka communities, Minnetonka residents also may want to paddle on Minnehaha Creek or learn some self defense.

If you’re a regular Patch reader, you already know that Tour de Tonka is coming up Saturday. We’ve written about it here. And here. And even here.

Yet there’s no denying that the annual bike ride for charity is the event of the weekend.

The annual Minnetonka Community Education bike ride through Lake Minnetonka communities drew nearly 2,800 riders, and organizers expect 3,000 people this year. It’s raised more than $25,000 for ICA Food Shelf over the past eight years.

Find out what's happening in Minnetonkawith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Riders can take in beautiful scenery while biking 16-, 26-, 43-, 51-, 77- or 100-mile routes. People of all ages and abilities participate. Last year’s race drew nearly 2,800 riders, and organizers expect 3,000 people this year.

The rest stops will have refreshments and snacks—and most will have live music.

Find out what's happening in Minnetonkawith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Tour de Tonka takes place Aug. 3. All riders need to be in the bike corral by 7 a.m. The first group of riders leaves the bike corral at 7:30 a.m. Helmets are mandatory.

Click here to register. Same day registration begins at 5:30 a.m.

The event also requires hundreds of volunteers. Click here to register to volunteer.

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Other options:

  • Canoe Minnehaha Creek: Last month, the Minnehaha Creek Watershed District advised paddlers not to use Minnehaha Creek because of the heavy rains that created unsafe conditions. But the creek has since returned to prime paddling spot. The creek is 22 miles long, and it takes five to six hours to canoe the entire creek. But paddlers looking for shorter jaunts can take it in sections. Canoe maps are available as a PDF and on Google maps. Visit the watershed district’s website for more information.
  • Learn to protect yourself at The Marsh: From 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh will be offering “Al Horner’s Not Me! Safety Training” to teach women escape and attack prevention. The class, taught by a former Navy SEAL, will discuss the three components of an assault—abduct, isolate, attack—and provide practical, real-life self-defense techniques on how to respond. The class costs $79 for attendees who are 18 and older and $59 for attendees 13 to 17 years old.

 



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