Black Hills Knowledge Network Sturgis Rally
People gather at the Sturgis Buffalo Chip on Aug. 6. Coronavirus cases have shot up in South Dakota since around the time of the rally.
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — Rumbles from the motorcycles and rock shows of the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally have hardly cleared from the Black Hills of South Dakota, and the reports of COVID-19 infections among rallygoers are already streaming in — 178 cases across five states, according to contact tracers.
In the three weeks since the rally kicked off, coronavirus cases in South Dakota have shot up at a startling pace — sixfold from the early days of August. While it is not clear how much rallygoers spread the virus through secondary infections, state health officials have so far reported 63 cases among South Dakota residents who attended the event.
The epicenter of the rally, Meade County, has become red-hot with new cases, reaching a per capita rate that is similar to the hardest-hit Southern states. The county reported the highest rate of cases in the state over the last two weeks, according to Johns Hopkins researchers.
The Black Hills region's largest hospital system, Monument Health, warned Friday that it has seen hospitalizations from the virus rise from five to 78 this month. The hospital was bracing for more COVID-19 patients by converting rooms to intensive care units and reassigning staff.
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Virus cases were already on the rise when the rally started, and it's difficult to measure just how much the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally is to blame in a region where local fairs, youth sports leagues and other gatherings have resumed.
However, Meade County could be a harbinger of things to come for the Upper Midwest as infections ripple from those events, said Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy.
"This coronavirus forest fire will keep burning any human wood it can find," he said. "It will find you, and it's so infectious."
Health officials in North Dakota, Wyoming, Minnesota and Wisconsin all reported cases among people who attended the rally, with North Dakota also reporting two hospitalizations. Some health officials noted people could have caught the virus elsewhere.
A team from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention determined last year's rally looked like a "superspreader event." The team said the event offered a lesson: Such large gatherings can result in "widespread transmission" of infections and attendees should follow precautions like getting vaccinated, wearing masks and social distancing.
The aftermath of this year's rally looks eerily similar to last year — when the event heralded a wave that did not subside until the winter.
But the pandemic fallout from the rally won't be seen for weeks and an exact case count will likely remain unknown, Osterholm said.
Daniel Bucheli, a spokesman for the state Department of Health, said the virus spike is following "a national trend being experienced in every state, not just South Dakota."
He also pointed out that Meade County's vaccination rate of 45% lags behind the statewide rate of 56% eligible people vaccinated.
The city of Sturgis also downplayed the virus numbers, issuing a statement that blamed the increase in positivity rate on a "significant increase in testing performed to proactively reduce the spread of COVID-19" and accusing "individuals in the national media" of mischaracterizing the event.
Despite the more contagious delta variant, this year's motorcycle rally was even bigger than last year. More than 500,000 people showed up during the 10-day rally.
The streets of Sturgis filled with rallygoers drawn to the libertarian rules of South Dakota — motorcycle helmets weren't required, minimal attire and bodypainting were welcome, and masks were often nowhere in sight. Bikers bellied up to bars and packed into rock shows.
Two bands that performed at the rally have canceled shows after musicians came down with the virus. Corey Taylor, the lead singer of Slipknot who had embarked on a solo tour, told fans he was "very, very sick" from COVID-19, though he did not say where he contracted it.
"This is the worst I've ever been sick in my life," Taylor said in a Facebook video this week. "Had I not been vaccinated, I shudder to think how bad it would have been."
PHOTOS: A look back over the years, Sturgis Motorcycle Rally
Spirit of Sturgis
Brittney Olson kicks her 1938 Indian Sport Scout to life at TROG East in 2016.
Rally racers
These nine racers participated in the first official Sturgis Black Hills Motor Classic races in 1938. Participants, their hometowns, and their motorcycles are, from the left, Smith, Rapid City, Harley- Davidson; Don Vodden, Sturgis, Indian; Miles Chandler, St. Paul, Minn., Indian; Levin, Minneapolis, Indian; Gail Gilkison, Denver, Colo., Indian; Johnnie Speiglehoff, Milwaukee, Wis., Harley-Davidson; Fred Ford, Denver, Indian; Dale Short, Sturgis, Indian; and Al Nelson, Black Hills, Indian.
Rally races
These nine racers participated in the first official Sturgis Black Hills Motor Classic races in 1938. Participants, their hometowns, and their motorcycles are, from the left, Smith, Rapid City, Harley- Davidson; Don Vodden, Sturgis, Indian; Miles Chandler, St. Paul, Minn., Indian; Levin, Minneapolis, Indian; Gail Gilkison, Denver, Colo., Indian; Johnnie Speiglehoff, Milwaukee, Wis., Harley-Davidson; Fred Ford, Denver, Indian; Dale Short, Sturgis, Indian; and Al Nelson, Black Hills, Indian.
Watch Now: The 80th Sturgis Motorcycle Rally
Sturgis Day Seven
After every performance of the Wall of Death the wall, which was built in 1938, has to be inspected and tightened. The wall is 12 feet high and 30 feet across, it is an old circle track surface that was converted to a wall track, it is only one of four still being used around the country, it at the Full Throttle Saloon on day seven of the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Thursday in Vale, South Dakota.
Sturgis Day Seven
Rotten grabs a five dollar bill from a spectator. The structure is an old circle track that was converted to the Wall of Death in 1938.
Is there room for racing among the revelry and rides?
Racers line up before the start of the Sturgis Black Hills Motor Classic races in 1938. Cycle races have waned in popularity in the modern rally, but fans of the sport are trying to revive interest by attracting more and better riders.
VIDEO: Moments from downtown Sturgis as the city preps for large rally crowd
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These nine racers participated in the first official Sturgis Black Hills Motor Classic races in 1938.
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These nine racers participated in the first official Sturgis Black Hills Motor Classic races in 1938. The races were the impetus for a motorcycle madness that would sweep over Sturgis, then the Great Plains, and eventually the entire world.
Indian Motorcycle Sturgis
The Sturgis "badge" added to motorcycles sold at Indian Motorcycle Sturgis has proven very popular.
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The Sturgis motorcycle rally has grown from the humble beginnings of a small set of races in 1938 to become the nation's quintessential motorcycle event. Now, fans of cycle racing are pushing to preserve the races and heighten interest in the events.
VIDEO: Vendors prep for 2021 Sturgis Motorcycle Rally
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These nine racers participated in the first official Sturgis Black Hills Motor Classic races in 1938. Participants, their hometowns, and their motorcycles are, from the left, Smith, Rapid City, Harley- Davidson; Don Vodden, Sturgis, Indian; Miles Chandler, St. Paul, Minn., Indian; Levin, Minneapolis, Indian; Gail Gilkison, Denver, Colo., Indian; Johnnie Speiglehoff, Milwaukee, Wis., Harley-Davidson; Fred Ford, Denver, Indian; Dale Short, Sturgis, Indian; and Al Nelson, Black Hills, Indian.
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These photos from 1938 show the 60th Anniversary Parade in September in Sturgis.
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This is an artist's drawing of what the Sturgis Motorcycle Museum could look like under a plan to help revitalize the downtown area. The 1938 Indian motorcycle jutting out of the building would reach 40 feet into the air.
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Rex Jeide on a motorcycle at 1053 Main St. in Sturgis in 1939.
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Gloria Tramontin Struck, 89, of Clifton, N.J., autographs a helmet during the Biker Belles auction at the Buffalo Chip Campground in Sturgis Tuesday. She said she has been riding since 1941.
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The early races included stunt riders like these four from 1941, who entertained the crowds who came to Sturgis to see cycles and riders in action.
Emergency landing
This B-17 made an emergency landing during a routine training mission in October 1942. The plane landed in Arnold McPherson's barley field, which was about 25 miles east of Sturgis.
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Bob Koppen of Kansas City works on his 1945 Harley-Davidson Flat Head motorcycle Tuesday during the Sturgis motorcycle rally.
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Bob Koppen of Kansas City works on his 1945 Harley-Davidson Flat Head motorcycle Tuesday during the Sturgis motorcycle rally.
Military Appreciation Day proclaimed during Sturgis Bike Week
The South Dakota National Guard's Brig. Gen. Ted Johnson, director of the Joint Staff, left, and Command Chief Master Sgt. Jim Welch, senior enlisted leader, present Ernest "Ernie" Miller, 89, of Sturgis, with a commander's coin on behalf of the Adjutant General, Maj. Gen. Tim Reisch, for his service during World War II, during the City of Sturgis' Military Appreciation Day at the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally Aug. 6, 2013. Staff Sgt. Miller served in the U.S. Army in the Pacific Theater from the spring of 1945 until the fall of 1946.
Gypsies racing
Racers Bill Tuman and Joe Bisman at the Sturgis rally and races in 1946.
VIDEO: New Sturgis rally logo unveiled
Roy Taboade
Roy Taboade of Millbrea, Calif., shows off his 1948 Harley-Davidson WR, vintage factory flat track racer during Monday's Spirit of Sturgis Vintage Motorcycle festival at the Sturgis Fairgrounds.
Troy Cade
Troy Cade of Newcastle, Wyo., sits on his 1948 Indian Chieftain parked along Junction Avenue in Sturgis earlier this week. Cade said finding parts for vintage motorcycles is getting easier thanks to the internet.
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The Sturgis Motorcycle Rally has long been a draw for visitors, dating back to even this crowd lined up to catch a glimpse of bikes in 1950.
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As the rally grew, tours around the Black Hills became more popular like this one leaving from Main Street in Sturgis in 1950.
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One of the top AMA dirt track racers in the 1950s, Everett won the first AMA National held in Sturgis in August of 1952.
2016 Sturgis Rally
John Crandall, 70, rides everywhere in the Black Hills with a giant teddy bear given to him by a girl he dated back in the 1960s, before he went to war in Vietnam. He was on the scene in Sturgis on Monday.
Sturigs Race
Motorcycle riders round the corner of a track at the Hoyle Ranch outside of Sturgis in this photo from the 1960s.
WATCH NOW: Wrap-up of the 80th annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally
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Indian and Harley-Davidson have long been rivals in the motorcycle world. This image was taken at the short track in Sturgis around 1960.
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Gene Olson of Morristown, Minn., watches bikers ride past on Main Street during the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Sunday. Olson has been coming to the rally since the 1960s.
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Scott Von Minden, then 8, sits on the back of a 1964 Honda Dream 300 with his dad Merle in the driver's seat on their journey to the Sturgis rally 50 years ago. Scott and his wife and friends are making a special trip this year to remember the 50th anniversary of that trip.
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Tribby's Sturgis Motors as seen in 1964.
One Hot Ride
Barry Edwards, 67, of River Falls, Wis., gave his 1965 Harley-Davidson motorcycle with a 1956 sidecar to his wife as a wedding present in 1979, and he has brought it to many Sturgis rallies over the past 45 years. Now retired, Edwards said he's been to too many rallies to count since the early 1970s. The bike he brought this year is fairly stock, he said, as most of it is original except for some newer sheet metal. The bike had to be brought in on a trailer, seeing as the last time he rode it it broke down while at a hotel and needed about $700 worth of repairs. And, he added, "it's getting harder to find part for it." Edwards bought the bike many years ago because he had two older models, but he really wanted the 1965 model.
Rally go-ers catch up on the past
Cheyenne Miller, right, has been attending the Sturgis Motorcyle Rally since 1979, visiting her friend Ruth Smith of Vale (center). Denise Langley of Oregon, left, is attending her first rally.
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Hail piles up on Main Street in Sturgis during one of the rallies in the 1980s.
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John Marshall, 55, of Las Vegas, stands on the sidewalk near Sturgis' Main Street on Tuesday, July 31, 2012. " I started riding Harley's in '77 and never wanted a rice burner. So the Harley was the bike I got and I've had 10 of them," said Marshall. Marshall sports a Harley-Davidson tattoo on his right arm, which he got in 1980.
Rally Regulars
Craig Smith is a professional pumpkin carver, rock painter, wood carver and artist in Shelton, Conn. Smith started out carving figures up to eight inches, and has now made 23 figures, including luge and bobsled athletes carved in metal. He has been coming to the Sturgis motorcycle rally for 10 years, and this year brought with him a carving of Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper from the film Easy Rider. His work is now on display at the Sturgis Chamber of Commerce. The Journal chatted with him on Friday.
How long does it take to carve a piece? From concept to fabrication, it takes about a year and a half. That's getting the idea, sketching it out and getting all of the supplies ready. The actually fabrication and carving take about a month and a half. Everything is done with knives and chisels.
How did it all start? I started carving hiking sticks and other things in the Boy Scouts of America in 1960 at camps. Then it started with simple signs. Then I did a piece of the HMS Rose Ship to endorse saving a lighthouse in Connecticut. Now I'm with the Easy Rider Show.
How many Sturgis visits for you? I started coming to Stugis in 2003, and this is my 10th year at the rally, but the wood carvings have been here 11 years. That first year I shipped it through UPS to be out here for the rally. The spirit is here.
Why do you love carving? It's just plain fun to talk to people and to meet all the people I've met over the years. I don't sell any of my work, I usually end up donating it all. The market is monstrous, so people are making money off this, but that's not the spirit of it.
What's your favorite piece? In 1979 I was making trophy putters for the U.S Open, then in 1980 I was making sculptures for the Olympics. That was pretty historic for me.
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Errol Thayer, 68, from Florida has been coming to Sturgis for the rally since 1981. "It's the best rally there is," Thayer said. "I keep coming back for the pretty girls."
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First Annual Buffalo Chip Picnic, 1982
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TATTOO OF THE DAY
Bill Vee of Michigan sports a spider web tattoo on his elbow at the Sturgis motorcycle rally. Vee got the tattoo in 1982 and had it reworked in 1992.
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An attendee to a Sturgis Alcoholics Anonymous meeting wears a patch on this leather jacket that reads Sober for Your Safety. The man said he had been to Sturgis before in 1983 but did not remember it because he was drunk the entire time.
IMAGES OF THE PAST
Amy Dawn Adamson was crowed the new Sturgis Junior Miss in 1983. Kim Schroeder was the outgoing Junior Miss.
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Women at the Lutheran Church in 1984 cleaning up after Sturgis motorcycle rally breakfast.
VIDEO: Buffalo Chip honors memories of fallen soldiers
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A woman folds T-shirts for sale during the 50th Sturgis motorcycle rally in 1990.
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A man lounges on his pick on Main Street in Sturgis during the motorcycle rally in 1990.
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Former Sturgis mayor Maury LaRue leads the pack during the annual Mayor's Ride at the 2007 motorcycle rally.
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Dusty Beer of Columbus, Mont. catches some air as he sails up the course during a hill climb event at the Sturgis motorcycle rally in 2009.
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Al Pearson of Kansas City, Mo., waits for the Mayor's Ride to pass near Mount Rushmore on Monday, August 3, 2009. Pearson said it was his first time in the Black Hills area for the Sturgis motorcycle rally. Pearson said he had already seen Devils Tower on his trip and that he was headed to Custer State Park.
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Motorcycles fill Sturgis Main Street during the 2009 Sturgis motorcycle rally.
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Rally-goers walk and ride down Main Street during the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally on Aug. 12, 2010.
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Bikers fill Main Street just after the taking of the official picture on Monday, August 9, 2010, at the Sturgis motorcycle rally. (Ryan Soderlin/Journal staff) RALLY DAILY
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Lindsay Chapman, a performer with Axiom entertainment company from Nevada, twirls flames at the Full Throttle Saloon during the 2010 Sturgis motorcycle rally.
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Motorcycle trapesists perform at the Buffalo Chip in Sturgis on Sunday, August 8, 2010. (Aaron Rosenblatt/Journal staff) RALLY DAILY
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Motorcycle riders gather for the start of the ZZ Top concert at the Buffalo Chip Campground during the 2010 Sturgis motorcycle rally. The rally is known for its hard-rock side, but country music is making its presence known this year.
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Lo Tulga, Nevada, helps customers at an M & J Distributing booth on Main Street in downtown Sturgis during the 2010 motorcycle rally.
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Concertgoers pack into the Full Throttle Saloon patio area to see Ted Nugent perform during the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally in 2011.
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Bike and pedestrian traffic filled up the intersection at Main and 4th streets in downtown Sturgis during the 2012 Sturgis motorcycle rally.
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Tom Broadbent checks the front fender of his motorcycle after a pickup truck hit his bike on Wednesday, August 1, 2012. The Sturgis motorcycle rally will have higher numbers of law enforcement officers to deal with motorcycle safety this year.
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Chris Rayburn of Florida, performs on his XP9R Buell bike for a large crowd at the Black Hills Harley-Davidson Pre-Rally Rollout on Saturday, July 28, 2012. The local Harley-Davidson store near Deadwood Ave. is expanding operations for this year's Sturgis motorcycle rally, adding acres of asphalt, hiring hundreds of temporary employees and adding retail space in Deadwood and Wall. "We expect 5,000 or 6,000 people for Pre-Rally. We're going to give away a Sportster on tomorrow. Our rally starts on Wednesday, August 1," said Terry Rymer, General Manager of Black Hills Harley-Davidson.
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Darcy Voehl of Prior Lake, Minn., left, is served sausages from Ben Davis during the Nemo Volunteer Fire Department pancake breakfast fundraiser at the community center in Nemo on Friday, Aug. 10, 2012. Every year, the Nemo Volunteer Fire Department holds the pancake breakfast fundraiser during the week of the Sturgis motorcycle rally.
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Connor McCaskey, 16, right, and Jeremy Guttierez, 16, both of Sturgis, check out the scene on Main Street during the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Sunday, Aug. 5, 2012.
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A man shelters himself from hail at the Full Throttle Saloon during the Sturgis motorcycle rally in 2013.
2014 Biker Belles
The Biker Belles gathering at the Lodge in Deadwood during the 2014 Sturgis motorcycle rally.
Rally On! Sturgis celebrates 74th year
Rallygoers gather for the official Main Street photo at noon on Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2014.
Sturgis Rally
Lance Armstrong, right, leads a group of motorcyclists outside of Sturgis, S.D. for the Annual Mayor's Ride during the 74th Annual Motorcycle Rally, on Monday, Aug. 4, 2014. Organizers expect attendance at this week's Sturgis Motorcycle Rally to top the estimated 466,000 who made the annual trek last year. The 74th rally starts Monday and runs through Sunday. (AP Photo/Toby Brusseau)
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Motorcycles sit idle on Main Street in Sturgis during the 2016 rally, when an estimated 460,000 people arrived in the region. Estimates for this year's rally are comparable to 2016, but unlikely to touch the record crowd of 740,000 for the 75th rally in 2015.
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A biker drives through Custer State Park on the Wildlife Loop in 2015. Thousands of bikers make the loop each year during the annual Sturgis motorcycle rally.
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A biker pulls over to take photos of bison on Wildlife Loop Road at Custer State Park in 2015. Thousands of bikers have made the popular drive through the state park during the Sturgis motorcycle rally.
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Bikers make their way through town Tuesday afternoon during the 75th Sturgis motorcycle rally. Though nothing is official yet, early estimates point to record attendance in 2015.
Ripping up the 2015 Sturgis rally
Spectators at the Jackpine Gypsies Motorcycle Club cheer on Mitchell Coleman as he powers up the hill climb course Monday morning, the first official day of the Sturgis motorcycle rally. Perhaps as many as 1 million people will attend the festivities to watch, cheer, celebrate or gasp as bikers show off.
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A storm cloud builds behind a biker on Fort Meade Way during the 2016 Sturgis Motorcycle Rally.
Dakota Thunder Run, military vets recognized during Sturgis Rally
Marty Shade, wife of a retired Air Force member and motorcycle enthusiast from Blackhawk S.D., polishes her motorcycle prior to the start of the 16th Annual Dakota Thunder Run on the flight line at Ellsworth Air Force Base, S.D., Aug. 9, 2016. Shade, along with her two sisters, has participated in the ride for six consecutive years and shared that this is her favorite event of the year.
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A pair of bikers of different generations ride along Main Street in Sturgis at the 2017 Sturgis motorcycle rally. The first Sturgis Post Rally Summit was held Wednesday at the Sturgis Community Center. The summit will continue today.
Sturgis Motorcycle Rally
Dana Bowman, of the Coalition to Salute America's Heroes, parachutes from an airplane with a giant U.S. flag Friday during the opening ceremony for the 78th annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally. Bowman lost both his legs while serving as a member of the U.S. Army's elite parachute team in 1994. For more on the 2018 Sturgis Rally, please see page C1.
Kid Rock
Kid Rock performs at the Buffalo Chip in 2018 during the 78th annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally. Rock will return to the Buffalo Chip's Wolfman Jack Stage Aug. 8, 2021, for the 81st annual Rally and the 40th anniversary of the campground.
Sturgis Day Five
Sandra "Nash Montana" sits on her patriotic bike in front of the Freedom Field on Veterans Appreciation Day on day five of the 2019 Sturgis motorcycle rally.
Sturgis Day One
Cole Freeman amps up the crowd before he jumps over Main at the 2019 Opening Ceremonies at the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally.
Budweiser Clydesdales coming 2021
The Budweiser Clydesdales walk through downtown Rapid City in this July 2019 file photo. The famed horses are returning to the Black Hills for the 81st annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally.
Sturgis Day Five
The sun sets behind the Fallen Soldier Battle Cross in the Freedom Field at The Sturgis Buffalo Chip on Veterans Appreciation Day on day five of the 2019 Sturgis motorcycle rally.
Sturgis Day Five
Midget Bowling at The Sturgis Buffalo Chip on Veterans Appreciation Day on day five of the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Tuesday in Sturgis.
Sturgis Day Five
Daymon Woodruff rides a mini bike through a wall of beer at The Sturgis Buffalo Chip's Camp Zero on Veterans Appreciation Day on day five of the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Tuesday in Sturgis.
Sturgis Day Six
A man with his girlfriend in his lap competr in the 42nd Annual Sundance Burnout in Sundance, Wyo., on day six of the Sturgis motorcycle rally.
Sturgis Day Two
This man and many other colorful visitors were among the estimated 490,000 people who attended the 79th annual Sturgis motorcycle rally in August.
Sturgis Day Three
The Colorado Captain begins to ride away in the evening of day three of the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Sunday in Sturgis.
PHOTOS: Sturgis Motorcycle Rally Continues Wednesday
The crowd cheers after an arm wrestling defeat at the MicroMania Midget Wrestling event at the Knuckle Saloon on Wednesday.
PHOTOS: Sturgis Motorcycle Rally Continues Wednesday
Tiffany Pain (right) pushes Chris Blanton during the MicroMania Midget Wrestling event at the Knuckle Saloon on Wednesday.
PHOTOS: Sturgis Motorcycle Rally Continues Wednesday
Chris Blanton addresses the crowd before the MicroMania Midget Wrestling event at the Knuckle Saloon in Sturgis on Wednesday.
Sturgis Motorcycle Rally attendees in Downtown Rapid City
Dale Minton of Kansas City, Missouri, stands in downtown Rapid City on Main Street. Minton made his helmet from several animals including a mule deer, a coyote and a mule.
Legend's Ride Festivities Kick Off
The Legend's Ride festivities kick off the week in Deadwood during the 80th Annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally on Monday.
Legend's Ride Festivities Kick Off
Dr. Tammy Perry stands during at the Legend's Ride festivities in Deadwood during the 80th Annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally on Monday.
Linda Moore
Linda Moore of Stanwood, Washington, talks to another rally attendee while wearing a decorative helmet in downtown Sturgis on Wednesday. Moore drove over 1200 miles to get to the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally this year.
Mike Price
Mike Price of Stanwood, Washington, rests on his Harley Davidson Ultra Classic in downtown Sturgis on Wednesday. Price drove 1200 miles to get to the rally where he has attended for the past ten years.
Marilyn Larson in Sturgis
Marilyn Larson of Kansas City, Missouri, takes a break Monday in Sturgis from riding on her motorcycle. Larson said this is her 10th year visiting the rally.
Sturgis Day Seven
Rhett Giordano, or Rhett Rotten, amps up the crowd at his Wall of Death show at the Full Throttle Saloon on day seven of the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Thursday in Vale, South Dakota.
Sturgis Day Eight
A bison bike on day eight of the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Friday in Sturgis.
Sturgis Day Eight
Main Street on day eight of the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Friday in Sturgis.
Sturgis Day Eight
A vendor takes a moments rest on day eight of the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Friday in Sturgis.
Sturgis Day Eight
hoping for the hole shot the riders wait for the green lite before pulling away from the start line during the minibike drag race at the Iron Horse Saloon on day eight of the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Friday in Sturgis.
Sturgis Day Eight
Crossing the midway point during the mini bike drag race at the Iron Horse Saloon on day eight of the Sturgis motorcycle rally on Friday in Sturgis.
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Black Hills Knowledge Network Sturgis Rally
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