.
Feedback

'Ride at Devil's Slide' to Benefit Peninsula Charity

Inaugural "Giro di Pacifica" benefits Burlingame-based Parca, a group that aids San Mateo County residents living with developmental disabilities. Keynote Systems, a San Mateo tech firm, is co-sponsoring the event.

A Peninsula-based technology company is partnering with a longtime area non-profit group to put on Pacifica charity bike ride benefitting those with developmental disabilities.

Keynote Systems, a San Mateo-based firm specializing in the testing and monitoring of cloud technology, is putting on the ride in support of Burlingame-based Parca, a group that has been providing support and promoting independent living for people in San Mateo County living with developmental disabilities for 60 years.

The inaugural "Giro di Pacifica" will be held on a white-knuckle course featuring some of the Bay Area's most perilous roads, with a portion of the ride along the steep hills and hairpin turns of the notoriously challenging Devil's Slide south of Pacifica. Organizers have nicknamed the July 28 event "The Ride at Devil's Slide."

This year's event is an offshoot of the "Giro di Peninsula," which ran from the mid-1990’s through 2010.

“We chose Pacifica for both its spectacular coastline, and its friendly and welcoming community,” Parca CEO Diana Conti said in a prepared statement.

The event features courses for riders of all levels, with 100-mile (century) and 63-mile (metric century) routes that travel down the coast through the Devil’s Slide and back through ancient groves of redwoods for the most advanced riders, a 33-mile and 16-mile routes up the Pacifica coastline to the north for intermediate to advanced riders and a flatter three-mile "family ride" open to all levels and abilities.

All distance rides offer full support, with crewed rest stops and support vehicles patrolling the routes.

“We can offer experienced cyclists world-class routes and breath-taking scenery, while people with developmental disabilities and local families with small children will be able to take part, too," Conti said.

"Many of our incredible clients, who benefit from the programs funded by the Giro, have even signed up to volunteer for the event.”

The ride features an Italian meal provided by , a popular coastside eatery.

Rides start and end at the Park Mall in Pacifica. Fees for Distance Riders are $35 with a fundraising commitment, or $55 without fundraising if paid in advance. Those who register on the day of the event will pay $65.

"Family ride" participant  fees are $15 for riders 16 and older and $5 for those under 16.


Highway 1 will be closed to southbound traffic on the day of the ride starting at 7 a.m. for about a half hour or however long it takes the cyclists to get through, organizers say.

For more information, details and route maps, or to volunteer, visit the event website at www.girodipacifica.org.

Follow us on Twitter | Like us on Facebook |Sign up for our daily newsletter Blog for us

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Pacifica Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Loading comments ...
Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Janet Arline Barker May 17, 2013 at 11:18 am
Awesome! Next Tuesday, Thursday or Friday are open. Name a time and place. I used to write 3Read More different columns for San Bruno, Millbrae, and Burlingame Patch. I am ready to write for Pacifica Patch & blog too. Here's my personal blog...I do sporadically. Www.art-Janet.blogspot.com My art studio is at Sanchez Art Center #11
Christa Bigue (Editor) May 17, 2013 at 11:05 am
When can we meet for coffee Janet? Since you're the first one to post in our biz update section youRead More get to have coffee and chat with your local Patch editor! Email me at christa.bigue@patch.com and we'll find a date and place.
Anon. April 14, 2013 at 01:43 am
I can start with the comments on the Theravance drug, fluticasone fluroate - the active moiety inRead More this compound is the same, fluticasone (proprionate) that has been marketed by GSK for the same indication for approximately 25 years. Indeed, that patent is so old, and the drug has such a proven track record for safety and efficacy, that the patent has expired and there are generic versions available. There is also in implicit assumption by the author that the only reason that the FDA will approve medications in a short time span is because they are for 'life-or-limb' or unmet serious medical need. This is just not the case - regulators in many countries, including the FDA in the USA, may give accelerated approval to a product, where the safety and tolerability of a product is equivalent to a similar active agent which has already been approved. I suspect this is the case for fluticasone fluroate - but I am not privy to the details of the regulatory filing. I note that none of the companies mentioned here, nor the FDA, has provided input to this article. The journalism in this article smacks of someone trying to make a name for themselves quickly by scaring uneducated and/or anxious people. The science is just plain flawed.
Pacificat April 12, 2013 at 12:49 pm
Please tell us in what ways it is ill-informed
Anon. April 11, 2013 at 08:22 pm
Ill-informed, sensationalist rubbish.
Deb Wong March 26, 2013 at 06:09 pm
Thanks, Stacie!
Stacie Chan (Editor) March 26, 2013 at 02:51 pm
Absolutely stunning photos, Deb! Thanks for sharing. I really feel like I was there by just perusingRead More your photo gallery.
Donna Fentanes March 26, 2013 at 09:49 am
Thanks, Deb, for the videos. Now we all can take one last ride. :)
Jim Clifford March 25, 2013 at 01:08 pm
Each column gets better. I look for "The Shoe."
Deb Wong March 25, 2013 at 11:19 am
I think many of us can relate! 10 kids, huh? I was the oldest of 9, so sort of understand. MyRead More family grew up in Pacifica, & we rode over the slide every weekend when we went to the HMB airport to tend to my father's airplanes. I drove on it once, during driver's ed in high school, scary! I have an old home movie clip from 1966, going over the slide. Very overexposed, but you can still see parts of the slide in it. More recently, took 2 videos of our drive over the slide, North & south views. Going North: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kb8NKnu9Gvw Going South: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-rlN_g2LeE8