Outside the senior home, Sister Rosalind Gefre ditched her walker for a bicycle ride — without having to pedal at all.
At 89, the nun can't bike like she used to, but a new program is helping her and other older adults with limited mobility experience again the thrill of bicycling around St. Paul and Minneapolis.
Wearing a sweater over her black and white habit, Gefre sat in the passenger seat of a trishaw, an electric-assisted bike similar to a pedicab, as she chatted and laughed nonstop with 86-year-old Sister Susan Smith. While Anthony Desnick, 65, of St. Paul pedaled behind them, the women reminisced about life in the convent and marveled at the stately homes along the Mississippi River and the gushing Minnehaha Falls.
"Your whole attitude changes," said Gefre, who saw parts of St. Paul she had never visited before on the hourlong ride. "You see the world."
This year, more nursing homes, assisted living and other senior care buildings across Minnesota — from Rochester to Fergus Falls — are starting the program, Cycling Without Age. Since it began in 2012 in the bike-centric city of Copenhagen, the program has spread to more than 40 countries.
It's more than just a free bike ride, though. The program is touted as a way to make a difference for older adults, alleviating the epidemic of loneliness through a social outing outdoors.
"Everybody gets the joy of riding a bicycle," said Desnick, who began the nonprofit Cycling Without Age Twin Cities this year, with bike rides at two St. Paul senior homes. "The movement has grown care center by care center."
Another 24 facilities will be starting or expanding Cycling Without Age programs after the state Department of Human Services notified them in early August that they will each receive $6,000 grants — half the cost to buy a Danish trishaw. The grants are backed by a fund from nursing home fines, not taxpayers. Dan Pollock, the assistant commissioner for the department's Continuing Care for Older Adults, said Cycling Without Age is a "promising," innovative program that can improve people's quality of life.