GoGrant recipient Ellen Euclidean

Receiving a GoHawkeye grant for my HydraLite mono ski a few years ago really helped re-invigorate my commitment to lifelong skiing. I have been volunteering as a coach with my local adaptive program since 2016 and really love teaching others the basics of skiing. My heavy old Yeti kept me on the hill but I didn’t realize how much it was limiting my performance.  The new ski allows me to be more independent and aggressive on the hill and I’ve made the most of it! 

For nearly a decade, I have been volunteering twice a week with the adaptive program at Brandywine, near Cleveland Ohio. Although the “mountain” is certainly not known for its steeps, it is a great learning hill and the ski school is one of the busiest in the country. Three Trackers Adaptive Program is entirely volunteer run and, like most programs, only a few of the dedicated volunteers are themselves disabled. As a lifelong monoskier, I am able to provide a unique perspective to the participants. In the past few years, with my encouragement, 3 of our beginner monoskiers have decided to seek their own grants for equipment and have planned trips to bigger mountains!  Seeing others build a love for sit skiing and become confident is a feeling like no other. 

Since getting my new mono, I’ve also recommitted to challenging myself and building the skills I can share with others. In 2023 I flew to Colorado for the Adaptive Sports Center’s Ladies Session and spent 4 days skiing powder at Crested Butte.  Last year, I was accepted to the Sitbird Advanced Mono Skills camp in Utah, which really pushed me to my limits in the best way! This winter, I hope to make a trip to New England for one of the monoski festivals there. Being with other advanced adaptive athletes simply to enjoy skiing as recreation is really special and I’m so glad to be a part of this community!

Handcycling adventures

By Dayde Collins

It’s Monday, the 17th of November and today was probably the last ride of the season. On my way down the canyon this morning I passed four forest service trucks, probably on their way to flush all us humans out so they can lock the gates for the season. Not sure why they needed four separate trucks for that. Not my circus.

I’ve been riding a Maddiline Race XE handcycle since May of 2024. I received the GoHawkeye grant back in September of the previous year but it takes a little while for a custom built bike from Italy to arrive on your doorstep. Today’s ride was my 109th up the Nebo Loop, which starts at the base of the canyon just a few minutes from where I live in Payson, Utah. I’d like to share some of what I have learned and experienced on my bike after close to three thousand miles of riding.

Most of my rides are done solo. I’m counting on the goodness of the universe to help me in the event of a popped tire which I know is a lousy plan. I tell myself I’m minimizing opportunity for catastrophe by staying on paved canyon roads, but yes, it’s still a weak plan. About seven miles into my ride I’ve left behind the rolling hills with their temporary reprieves and have begun the steady, continuous incline that makes up my favorite segment of the trip. It’s here that I get into a rhythm, that flow state where each stroke of the pedals is another stroke calming the tiger within. Then again, I’ve never connected much with cats. Maybe the badger within? Regardless. It’s here during this slow four mile climb that my mind wanders from a focus on my breathing and the shifting of gears to more elevated thoughts of purpose and self.

Sometimes these thoughts become a review of my behavior and personal interactions of the previous day. How did I speak to my kids? How am I showing appreciation to my wife and others who care about me? Gradually a commitment to be better develops, one breath, one pedal at a time. On days where I’ve “been a good boy” of late my thoughts turn instead to my businesses. Just like those who have epiphanies in the shower, my creativity flourishes when I’m on my bike, alone in the mountains, steadily struggling up a hill.

And then of course there are the sunrises, the early-morning bird calls, the leaves changing their colors, the rushing water from the creek, the imposing mountain peaks, and the cows.

You didn’t think the cows would make the list, did you. Well, most of the year they don’t but there’s a few weeks in the spring when nothing comes close to the cuteness of those baby calves. I’ve also learned that as a cyclist, cows are much preferable to deer. Passing a deer going 35 MPH is an invite, nay, a command, to jump out and cross the road. Cows are different. You and I are much less interesting than their pre-chewed grass. It’s been said that reverence is one of the most elevated experiences of the soul. I feel reverence –gratitude-inspiring awe – surrounded by nature on my bike rides. While many of the standard “soul-elevating” experiences of life are unavailable to me because of my injury, reverence is one I can continue to enjoy through cycling.

I said most of my rides have been solo, but not all of them. When a neighbor noticed me returning from rides in the morning he asked if he could join once a week. So it was that oneof my most prized friendships began. Kam (that’s his name) and I are in similar stages of life. We have a lot of the same ambitions and share several beliefs and viewpoints, from a shared theology to a belief that single adult men with no children who complain that their life is hard don’t know the meaning of suffering. At ninety-five minutes to the top, there’s ample room for discussion. While many of our conversations have been flippant, many others have made masons of us both as tongues like chisels chip away barriers made loose through trust, uncovering our deeper doubts and concerns. As we return to our respective garages after a responsive ride, I consider that the only difference between exercise with a friend and a productive chat with a professional therapist is the hefty bill that comes in the mail afterwards.

How grateful I am for my bike! Through this adaptive outlet I have practiced mindfulness and recommitted to those I love. I have made some of my best business decisions and had some of my most clever ideas. My soul has taken on the brightness of sunrises and soared with mourning doves. With friends new and old I’ve made memories, shared laughs, and unpacked angst made for ears placed atop broad shoulders. Truthfully, I am in a better place in all ways measurable because of my handcycle. I thank those at the GoHawkeye Foundation who have made this possible.

$4k grant recipient Jayden Chapman

Thanks so much for a grant that made it possible for me to purchase a Top End Force RX handcycle! This bike has opened up doors to races and events I had long dreamed of doing, as well as some I would never have considered otherwise.

Some of the most exciting things I’ve done since getting my Force RX are finishing my first 70.3 triathlon at the Michigan Titanium Triathlon, riding 100k at the Hotter ‘N Hell Hundred, and doing a 12 hour bike race at 24 hours in the Canyon. I have a lot more on the horizon too! My first 12 hour race was so much fun that I am currently training for a 24 hour race, and I am looking forward to riding 200 miles with my family in the Seattle to Portland bike ride next year.

I have also been able to be more involved in the local cycling and triathlon community, participating in weekly group rides through the summer and setting a new PR in our local Rose City Triathlon this past September.

Adaptive sports have been an integral part of my life since very early on after my spinal cord injury, allowing me to push myself physically, to make connections to others in the adaptive sports community, and build and maintain connections in the endurance sports community. The specialized equipment required for these sports can be very expensive, and I am very grateful to organizations like Go Hawkeye that make it attainable.

Featured photo above. Jayden Chapman at the start line of the Tour de Tomato. Courtesy photo.

Jayden on the race course at the inaugural Para Endurance Adaptive Triathlon! Courtesy photo.

2026 Summer Fundraiser

Pack Rafting the Grand Mesa

Hawkeye’s eleven day pack rafting adventure begins August 9 on Colorado’s Grand Mesa. He plans to hike to and fish twelve different lakes and reservoirs connected by trail or bushwhack on a route he devised.

Towering 6,000 feet over Grand Junction, “The Mesa” contains over 300 lakes and is part of the 656 thousand acre Grand Mesa National Forest.

Hawkeye’s string of lakes features some of the state’s best fly fishing. He will begin at Vela Reservoir and proceed westerly hiking, paddling ,fishing and camping to the Granby Lakes area with a stop at the Island Lake group campground on August 15/16 for “Fish Camp” a gathering of GoHawkeye volunteers and supporters.

This is Hawkeye’s summer fundraiser to help adaptive athletes with equipment and experiences. This is the GoHawkeye Foundation’s twelfth year helping 155 athletes and 12 adaptive organizations with over $450,000 in grants.

We need your help to keep it going! 

Getting back to nature is something we all need to do on a regular basis.

•DONATE HERE•

All donations go to fund equipment and experience grants for adaptive athletes. Gohawkeye is a registered 501(c)3 non profit , completely staffed with volunteers, and is tax deductible where applicable with the IRS. We need your support so please donate now!

Help GoHawkeye Meet Our $25k Summer Fundraising Goal

Any amount helps to fund grants for adaptive athletes.

PCT 2000-The Locked Door

By Hawkeye Johnson

Hawkeye on the Pacific Crest Trail.
Pack, Tarptent and Chair
PCT Southern Terminus
Amigo and Tyedie

This was my first thru-hike over 500 miles. I had completed the Appalachian Trail in 1998 by sections over an 18 year period, then I hiked the Colorado Trail in 1999. I began the PCT on April 28, 2000 with the intent to thru-hike to Canada and camped at Hauser Creek the first night. The next day I hiked into the PCT Kickoff at Lake Moreno with Tripod, Dawn, Monte and Luke. On the way I found a soccer shirt printed with “Yo Soy amigo de Lucas” which is a grocery store in Mexico. I washed and dried it and presented to Luke and gave him the trail name “Amigo”. The Kickoff was a big event hosted by Meadow Ed and friends and past hikers of the trail and trail angles. I met lots of starting pct hikers including SMD founder Ron Moak and even entered my homemade tent in the gear contest. There was lots of food and drink, Ed’s famous talk on water sources, and a great night around the campfire. The next day I hiked with many new friends and we camped in Fred Canyon thinking there was safety in numbers from any illegal aliens.


It was May 1 and I hiked most of the day with Amigo. We saw our first rattlesnake and made it to the post office at Mount Laguna where we hung out at the store and grabbed a shower. We decided to camp somewhere down the trail and stopped at the Desert View Picnic Grounds to rest and get some water. We were at a picnic table and I went up to the flush bathroom to get some water. I went inside to fill my container as the door closed behind me. When I turned to leave the door would not open. It was locked and wouldn’t open from the inside. I started to panic and kicked on the door but it was no use. I started banging on the door and yelling hoping to get Amigo’s attention but was he even still there? The bathroom was a concrete fortress with high thick plexiglass windows that I wasn’t going to break with a plastic water bottle.


I kept banging and yelling and luckily Amigo, who was preparing to leave, heard me and came up and tried to open the door but it wouldn’t open from the outside either.. We were at a loss of how to get me out and there was nobody in the picnic grounds or the parking lot. I asked Amigo if there was any way to jimmy the lock? He replied that the base plate around the lock was loose. I told him where there was a piece of wire in my backpack. It was about 6 inches long and flexible.

Amigo returned with the wire and began probing behind the base plate. He was able to pry it open a little with his knife and kept pushing and probing with the wire. There was nothing I could do from inside except twist the door knob and encourage him to keep going. After more than a half hour of frustrating effort, the door finally opened! What a relief and I was going to continue on my third day to Canada. We found an old wire hanger in the picnic area and wired the lock and door knobs so it couldn’t be used. We didn’t want this to happen to anyone else!

 What a frightening experience! What if Amigo wasn’t there? The picnic grounds didn’t look very popular. How long until another hiker or somebody came around? What if this was the end of my PCT adventure? Thank goodness my friend Amigo has the skills to “McGuyver” it open!
To this day and many trail miles later, I still carry a piece of wire in my backpack and I will always owe Amigo a beer!


From Amigo’s trail journal:
May 5, 20 9:19 AM Warner Springs hitchhike Road with 110 miles hiked. Wow! What a day. What an adventure. Almost 7 days exactly since I left the border and I’m feeling wonderful both mentally and physically. I’ve passed the 100 mile mark and I’m ready to do 1600 more! Very few complaints. So well, I sit here in the shade, killing time, I figured I may as well catch you up. From Fred Canyon, we mosey North ( Hawkeye and I ), at a very leisurely pace. It soon became hot in the desert climb, and we took many, many breaks in the shade. We caught up with old Willy Color for a rest just a few minutes past four and rolled into the town of Mount Laguna just a few minutes after that. I resupplied and got a meal at the little, little town and took a shower in Peacefrog and Time to Fly’s room. Then I mosey on out and up the trail with Hawkeye again. At our water break, Hawkeye decided to use the bathroom and got stuck in it. I thought he was trying to vandalize the place with all the kicks and wiggling I heard coming from the bathroom 50 yards away until I heard “Amigo! Help!” 45 minutes later, after dental floss, quarters, knives, credit cards and coat hangers. I got him out. He was relieved! To make it even more frustrating/humorous, the door worked just fine after the 6000 jiggles I did to try to make it open