Dick Voss' chosen family pedaled on after their beloved cyclist's journey ended.
In Arizona, a group embarked Dec. 12 to memorialize the late Voss, a tireless advocate for AIDS awareness and enthusiast for red high heels.
"Dick Voss pulled into the ride finish point," longtime friend Jeff Ramberg wrote metaphorically in a Twin Cities Bicycling Club blog post. "It was a long, tough ride fraught with hills, headwinds, stormy weather and maybe even a flat or two. Did I mention wrong turns?"
Voss died on Dec. 5 at age 77 after an eight-month battle with brain cancer. He'd most recently lived in Minneapolis and spent winters in Arizona. He's survived by 15 siblings.
Voss knew how to lean into the power of a group. He grew up on a farm in the tiny southwest Minnesota town of Avoca as one of 21 siblings, and once he turned 18, he bid good riddance to the rural lifestyle. After graduating from Slayton High School he enlisted in the U.S. Navy, where he spent eight years on active duty. Voss then worked jobs with federal immigration services in St. Paul, the U.S. Post Office and Lunds and Byerlys.
Voss was a member of the Twin Cities Bicycling Club and St. Joan of Arc's Catholic Church. He hung out at Sister Sludge coffee shop, where they called him "Snippy," a testament to his whip-smart sarcasm and sense of humor.
"He was a man who didn't sit around regretting anything," said friend and neighbor Mark Scannell, with whom Voss organized Sunday worship services. "He stepped out and lived his life to the full in all the things he did."
Time was not to waste, for Voss, and best spent in company of others.