The Columbus Dispatch

Brothers reconnect on 300-mile bike trip — ‘Mama would’ve loved this’

- Quinlan Bentley

Brothers John and Jeff Kinney recently returned from a more than 300mile trek by bicycle between Pennsylvan­ia and Maryland.

Why would two men over 60 brave such an arduous journey? To honor their mother, 87-year-old Beverly Kinney, who was supposed to make the trip herself before she was tragically killed.

It all started with a PBS program titled “The Great Ride: Landmarks Along the Trail,” an hourlong special highlighti­ng the 150-mile Great Allegheny Passage running between Pittsburgh and Cumberland, Maryland.

John Kinney said he was discussing the program with his mom, who also viewed it, and the pair decided they had to go.

“It wasn’t that much of a surprise for her to say, ‘Let’s do it,’ despite the fact that she’s 87 years old,” John Kinney said, noting that she took up long-distance cycling after retiring from teaching, even taking bike trips in Europe with her husband.

However, Beverly Kinney never got to see the trail in person. She was killed by the driver of a Metro bus Jan. 11, while walking in a marked crosswalk with the right of way near the border of Evanston and Hyde Park.

The driver is facing misdemeano­r vehicular homicide charges in Hamilton County Municipal Court and the family is suing the Southwest Ohio Regional Transit Authority, asking it to complete an audit of how Metro hires and trains drivers and release it to the public.

Jeff Kinney, who lives in Connecticu­t, decided to take his mom’s place on the trip so he and his younger brother could complete the journey in her honor.

“I’ve always loved the outdoors. I think she probably loved it more than I did,” Jeff Kinney said. “I feel it’s just one more way for us to let her know how much we loved her.”

The brothers departed from Pittsburgh on June 3 and pedaled through woods, over rivers and past scenic countrysid­e before they arrived in Cumberland several days and roughly 150 miles later. Then, they turned around and did it all again.

“It was very reminiscen­t of camping when we were children,” John Kinney said. “We both said multiple times a day, ‘Mama would’ve loved this.’”

The trail provided the brothers with plenty of other reminders of their late mom. All along the bike trail grew a plant called jewelweed, John Kinney said, which his mother would use as a remedy whenever he would break out in a rash from poison ivy.

Jeff Kinney said he heard a “cacophony of bird songs” while on the trail that reminded him of his mother and how she could identify birds solely by their tune.

“It was just beautiful,” he said. However, the trip was more than just a fun excursion outdoors or a chance to reminisce on fond childhood memories. It was also an opportunit­y for the brothers to reconnect and find meaning in their shared loss.

“I’m constantly looking for signs of goodness to come out of this tragedy and this would be pretty high on that list in terms of positive outcomes,” Jeff Kinney said.

“We haven’t spent time together like this in a long time,” John Kinney added. “It’s cool at 61 years old to still look up to your older brother.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY JOHN KINNEY ?? John and Jeff Kinney on the Great Allegheny Passage. The brothers took a more than 300-mile bike trip between Pennsylvan­ia and Maryland in honor of their mom, 87-year-old Beverly Kinney, who was struck and killed by the driver of a Metro bus.
PROVIDED BY JOHN KINNEY John and Jeff Kinney on the Great Allegheny Passage. The brothers took a more than 300-mile bike trip between Pennsylvan­ia and Maryland in honor of their mom, 87-year-old Beverly Kinney, who was struck and killed by the driver of a Metro bus.

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