Richard Schindler loved to climb onto a bike.
Several years ago, he biked 2,900 miles from the Pacific to the Atlantic Ocean. He helped found a bicycling club for students at Austin High School. Recently retired after 42 years with the Mayo Clinic, he was biking to meet a friend last Saturday. Together, they would clear grass from a new bike path west of Riverland Community College.
But Schindler was found off the trail, dying of injuries sustained in a fall, according to Austin police.
Schindler, 72, began his life in medicine in 1972, seeing the first of what would become decades of patients at Mayo Clinic Health System in Austin and Adams, Minn.
"Words can't even express the impact he had on the community," said Tammy Kritzer, operations administrator at the clinic. It's hard to say how many babies he delivered, she said, "but the number I've been hearing is 4,000."
After starting in Austin, Schindler moved his practice about 20 miles southwest to the much smaller town of Adams, Minn.
"Some patients who had been seeing him in Austin would drive down to see him in Adams, they were so loyal to him," Kritzer said. "It wouldn't surprise me if every single person in the Adams community saw him at one time or another."
True to form, Schindler often would bike between his home in Austin and the clinic in Adams, she said.