2025 was another fun year for the Troyer/Leistikow household.
Corrine retired in March after 35 years of working at the Tanana Valley Clinic as a family physician. She is ready for the next stage of her life although she isn’t sure yet what that will look like. She has enjoyed not having a schedule and has had more time for exercise, quilting, reading, and wasting time on YouTube! And, of course, she has continued to do bikepack adventures and races.
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| All the quilts Corrine made in 2025 - they are not to scale |
Eric has had to adjust to having Corrine around the house an extra 40 hours/week! He continues to be very busy with volunteering. His personal mission statement is to get more people exercising outdoors. He does this by being president of the Fairbanks Cycle Club, and volunteering for the Nordic Ski Club of Fairbanks and Running Club North’s Snowshoe Race series. He also writes monthly trails newsletters and advocates for trails on an as-needed basis. There is never enough time for all that he wants to accomplish.
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| Eric leads a cycle club meeting |
Both Eric and Corrine continue to challenge themselves physically with skiing, biking, hiking, and running. We bought a 2020 Toyota Tacoma and ordered a pop-up camper/topper that we had installed in Bend, Oregon, while Outside for close to three months this summer. We crossed the country twice – on different routes – exploring new places and camping along the way.
Our kids are now in other states living their adult lives. We visit them periodically and sometimes they visit us. We are fortunate that live in areas we love to explore!
Riley and his wife Sam live in Albuquerque, where Riley works at Space Dynamics Lab as a physicist. He spent ten days in August at Summit Station on the Greenland ice sheet setting up equipment for a project. Sam teaches high school science. This year has been challenging since she is teaching AP Physics and had to brush up on all the difficult math that goes along with that. They love backpacking and exploring New Mexico.
Montana lives in Missoula, working several part time jobs including a new one this summer and fall selling solar panels door to door. She spends her free time songwriting, working out at the gym (where she can do ten pull-ups!), and hanging out with friends. Her musician persona is Aeyre. You should follow her on YouTube, Spotify or Apple Music to hear her music! See her website here:
Here is a month-by-month synopsis of our year.
JANUARY
We headed to the Big Island of Hawaii for one last paid-for medical conference and to get some warmth in the winter. We found some new places to explore and met up with other Fairbanks friends who were there at the same time as us. Eric also traveled to Arizona to visit his 92-year-old determinedly independent mom. He helped her with some house chores and talked a bit to her about considering moving to an assisted living place at some point.
FEBRUARY
Fourth time’s a charm! We finally made it to Hayward, Wisconsin, – along with Riley – for the American Birkebeiner. Prior to the 50-km ski marathon, we raced in the Giant Ski Race (6 people on one large pair of skis) where Team Alaska almost got disqualified for (accidentally) checking the other team into the fence lining the street! The announcer likened us to the Exxon Valdez. It was a lot of fun. (BTW, the other team beat us!) Two days later we all finished the 50K race with respectable-for-us times and loved getting cheered on by all the fans, including hundreds still screaming at the finish. It was quite the event with around 10,000 skiers between all the races.
MARCH
Corrine retired in March and we celebrated with a fat bike trip to Tangle Lakes Lodge on the Denali Highway (a trail in winter) with Erica Betts and Nikki P. Corrine then did a 3-day, mostly solo trip in the White Mountains while Eric stayed home so he could ski race the 27-mile Chena River to Ridge (CR2R).
| Biking the Denali Road to Tangle Lakes Lodge |
He has been on a quest to do all the Endurance North Races in every distance and category of human-powered travel. (Except running the longer versions. He’s too slow for that.) He only has the 27-mile CR2R bike and the 45-mile Tanana River Challenge bike left to do in 2026. Go Eric! It’s a different type of challenge and he is probably the only one to try and accomplish this goofy goal. He also raced the 50-kilometer Sonot Kkaazoot ski race, coming in dead last, but finishing – probably his last 50k ski race.
Corrine finished the month by going on an overnight birthday fatbike to Crowberry Cabin in the White Mountains with Erica Blake and Nikki P. On their bike out, they got to cheer on all the White Mountains 100 racers.
APRIL
Corrine made a quick trip to Colorado to see her friend, Betsy, who died this past summer from glioblastoma (an aggressive brain tumor). While there, Corrine visited with friends Jill and Beat and ordered a new titanium hardtail mountain bike from Corvid Cycles in Boulder. The bike has a Pinion-Gates transmission with a belt drive. Corrine had also brought her gravel bike and did some training around Boulder for a few days. Eric worked on a new discount card program for the cycle club and helped plan a dedication for a new bike path in Fairbanks.
| Visiting with Jill and Beat |
MAY
| Biking to Anchorage |
Once again Eric spearheaded the Fairbanks Cycle Club bike swap just before we left for several months. Mid-month Corrine biked from Fairbanks to Anchorage over 3.5 days (387 miles) for a couple of specialist doctor appointments. Eric drove the Tacoma to pick her up in Anchorage and then they spent two weeks driving through Canada to Oregon, exploring and visiting friends along the way and getting their new Oru Bruin camper-topper in Bend. Then they headed to Astoria, for the start of the Bike Nonstop US bike race.
| Hyder, AK on our way to Astoria |
JUNE
Corrine spent June racing the Bike Nonstop, a 3600-mile mixed surface bike race from Astoria to Washington, D.C. She averaged over 120 miles/day. Every. Single. Day. She met her goals of finishing in under 30 days and not being last. She made friends with several other bike racers along the way that were traveling about the same speed. It was challenging, as half of the time she was under a heat dome with temperatures above 100 many days. Eric, meanwhile, drove the Tacoma across the country staying within a couple of days of Corrine, just in case. He somewhat kept up with his volunteer work, but it was challenging for him, too. The race ended at the Lincoln Memorial. Corrine’s good friends, Elisa and Steve, who live nearby, came out and joined Eric to ride the final miles with Corrine. Afterwards we spent several days recovering at their house before heading back west.
JULY
We spent the month of July working our way back to Bellingham, Washington, where we had a reservation for the Alaska Ferry. Along the way, we explored new-to-us public lands. We hiked, biked, kayaked, and camped in places such as Cuyahoga National Park, Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, Teddy Roosevelt National Park, and Kokanee Glacier Provincial Park (Canada). We also visited: Corrine’s sister, Cindy, in Akron, Ohio; Eric’s sister, Teresa, and her husband Mark in McCall, Idaho; Montana in Missoula; and friends Linda, and Craig and Mary Kay in Helena. We also spent a couple of days camping with friends, Mike and Annie, in the Elkhorn Mountains in eastern Oregon. It was a great trip, and we saw some amazing places, but we were glad to get home in early August.
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| Friends and family we saw coming back across the country From L to R- Cindy, Craig and Mary Kay, Linda, Montana, Mark and Teresa, Mike and Annie |
AUGUST
We finished up our trip Outside by taking the Alaska Ferry from Bellingham to Haines, a delightful trip and better than driving the whole Alaska Highway again. From Haines, we were home in just two days. After almost 3 months away, we were happy to spend August getting caught up on life and chores, especially preparing for winter like doing brushing and splitting and stacking firewood.
SEPTEMBER
Even though Corrine was sure she was done with bikepack racing after her long summer race, she signed up for the East Idaho Epic out of Idaho Falls, Idaho. So, to keep in shape she decided to do a two-day 200-mile bike on the Top of the World Highway from just north of Chicken, Alaska, to Dawson City, Yukon, and back. It was a challenging ride with many hills, but the scenery made up for how hard it was. Two weeks later Corrine raced the 430-mile Idaho race but dropped down to the 280-mile distance when the race was slower and more challenging than expected. She ended up riding with Nan P. and enjoyed having a buddy out there for a change. After the race, she again stated she was done with bikepack racing.
Eric was busy with his volunteer work, especially helping shepherd a big project to improve a mountain bike trail system in Fairbanks and doing advocacy for several biking and trails projects.
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| Eric tries out one of the new features on the Ester Dome single track |
OCTOBER
Eric made a second trip to Arizona to visit his 93-year-old mother. He continued to gently nudge her to consider moving to an assisted living place in the future. This time LuRue was more receptive, admitting that she was finally “feeling her age.” Less than a month after Eric got home, LuRue said she had found an assisted living place that she liked and that she would be moving in around Christmas. Wow, when LuRue makes up her mind, she doesn’t lollygag!
NOVEMBER
Corrine headed back to Colorado to pick up her new bike and met up with Montana for three fun days there. In November we had less snow than usual, so it was difficult to get out on any adventures, but we did manage to do a bike trip to Yeager’s Cabin in the White Mountains with friends Nikki and Mike over Thanksgiving weekend. Mike came by snowmachine, so we had more luxuries than we usually do on cabin trips. It was another fun little get away.
| New Corvid Sojourner hardtail mountain bike |
DECEMBER
The week after Thanksgiving, the temperature bottomed out and the in-town temperatures hovered between -20F and -45F for most of the month with no end in sight as we write this. It’s been said that it’s the coldest December since 1980. Luckily, we have had a bit of inversion most days, so we have been about 20 degrees warmer on the hillside where we live.
Riley came to visit for the holidays to get in a lot of skiing (he and Corrine are headed back to the Birkie in February). We managed to get some skiing in, even with the cold temperatures, but there wasn’t a lot of glide. But at least he was on snow!
Our friends, Jill and Beat, also made their yearly Christmas visit to train for their winter ultra races. At first, they were giddy about the cold temperatures and spent four nights out in the White Mountains Recreation Area with the thermometer not showing much above -40F. They did a second trip, though shortened due to cold and an unbroken, snowed in trail. They are planning a third trip over New Year’s, but even they are getting worn down by the relentless cold. Riley and us– being either less tough or smarter – did not join them on any of these trips!
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| Photo from Jill's sled on their White Mountain adventure - that's cold! |
As the year comes to an end, we have been happy that we are healthy and able to continue to go on adventures both big and small. We have several fun things planned for 2026, but you will have to wait and follow along on our blog to see what those will be! Happy New Year’s to all our friends and family out there!















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