They all remember the thrill of their first bicycles — the pure joy and freedom it represented.
"I was so thrilled to get it; I remember going no hands," said Dale Hartje, smiling as he recalled his father's warning: "No hands, no teeth."
Dick Cleveland's first boyhood bike was a Coast to Coast Rocket.
"I still have a picture of mine. I cherish that," chimed in Lowell Kutches.
Sixty years after they felt the exhilaration of owning their first bicycles, this group of retired Anoka County men is helping a new generation understand that rush. They're part of Bikes4Kids — the Robert & Wilma Burbach Bike Foundation.
The all-volunteer Anoka County nonprofit was formed in 2011. The organization collects broken-down bicycles often destined for the dump, fixes them up and then gives them to people who otherwise cannot afford them. They've partnered with other local nonprofits, including the YMCA, local Christmas charities and Hope 4 Youth center for homeless youth, to distribute the bicycles.
"A bike means, 'I get to do something on my own.' It gives them some freedom," said Kutches, the charity's president.
Most of the Bikes4Kids volunteers come from either the Coon Rapids Kiwanis Club or the Faith Lutheran Church FROGS (Faith Retired Old Guys). Church member Robert Burbach planted the seed for the charity years ago. An avid cyclist, Burbach used to collect old bikes, disassemble them and ship them overseas, so the group named the nonprofit to honor him.