Category: Rides

Help us Fight Multiple Sclerosis

BikeMSFellow Freds,

On the weekend of October 21, my wife Donna and I will be returning to California to ride in the annual MS Bay to Bay Bike Tour. I am asking for your support. I don’t normally do this, so I hope you’ll understand how important this is to me, my family and the entire FredCast community, and consider helping out.

The MS Bay to Bay Bike Tour  supports the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, funding research for a cure while also helping people who live with MS  lead more fulfilling lives. I strongly support and believe in the work they do, and I know that your support can and will make changes in the lives of all those  affected by MS.

Our family has been participating in this event since 2003 when Donna’s diagnosis personally affected each of us every day. I began as a rider and fundraiser, became the ride’s chairman, and have been honored to ride not only with friends, but with Meghan, Emily and Donna. So  It goes without saying that one of the reasons why we’re so excited about returning to Orange County is to see so many of our friends who will riding, volunteering and staffing this amazing event. More importantly, however, we continue to ride to help create a world free from multiple sclerosis.

Donna in particular rides as just one more way to show the world what people living with MS can do. She is proof that the funds you so generously contribute are making a difference. Last year she completed two triathlons and several 5K runs, and this year she has already completed two bicycle century rides (100 miles each) and plans to ride all 150 miles of the Bay to Bay Bike Tour, including the 100 mile ride on the first day.

And while Donna continues to do well (despite occasional days of fatigue, tingling or weakness in her limbs, and other transitory symptoms), she is one of the lucky ones. More than 400,000 Americans are fighting this disease, including those we know or have met, many of whom are facing the prospect of or have already experienced permanent disabilities.

Please help by making a donation to me (or to Donna) – large or small – to make a difference in the lives of those who are living with multiple sclerosis. Or,  why not  join us  on the day of  the event? Become a participant and side by side, as teammates, so we can work together to raise the funds to make a difference.

Whatever you can give will help! I greatly appreciate your support and will keep you posted on my progress.

Gratefully and sincerely,

David Bernstein

P.S. And have you seen this video? . . .

The Time I Rode My Bike For Multiple Sclerosis from The FredCast on Vimeo.

Help The FredCast End Multiple Sclerosis

The FredCast Family Riding in Bike MS

The FredCast Family Riding in Bike MS

Please donate and help us stop MS!

– or –

Please join our team and ride with us!



During the weekend of June 26-27, my family and I will be riding in the Bike MS ‘Harmon’s Best Dam Bike Ride’ event, benefitting the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. We need your help!

Our family deals with the effects of multiple sclerosis every day. My wife, Donna, was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis seven years ago and we desperately need to find the cause and cure for this awful disease. Please help us by donating to our cause or by joining our team and riding with us. We’d love to have you participate in any way you can, no matter how big or how small.

In case you haven’t seen it, here is a video that appears on Disney Channel, highlighting my daughters and why they ride for multiple sclerosis:

For more on why I ride and why I need your help, here is the letter I’ve sent to my friends and family asking for their support:

Dear Friends and Family,

As our family prepares to participate in this year’s Bike MS event the weekend of June 26-27, I’d once again like to ask for your support. But first, I’d like to ask you a couple of questions: Where were you in May and June of 2003? What were you doing? What do you remember?

Some recall President Bush giving his famous ‘Mission Accomplished’ speech. Others recall Martha Stewart’s federal indictment, Gilberto Simoni winning the Giro d’Italia, the San Antonio Spurs winning the NBA Finals, and the theatrical releases of The Matrix Reloaded, Finding Nemo, and the Italian Job.

I don’t remember any of that.

I remember a week of sightseeing in Manhattan and how Donna found it harder to walk as the days went on. I remember Meghan and Emily’s faces as they wondered why their mom couldn’t walk downstairs to breakfast. And I remember the doctor telling Donna that she had multiple sclerosis.

That was a terrible and pivotal time in our lives, but thanks to amazing advances in medicine, as well as Donna’s incredible attitude, she continues to do well. Unfortunately, we know too many others who aren’t, and that’s why we need your help.

Today, there is no cure for multiple sclerosis, and with diagnosis occurring most frequently between the ages of 20 and 50, many individuals face a lifetime filled with unpredictability.

I’ve seen the many ways The National Multiple Sclerosis Society uses funds collected from Bike MS events to not only support research for a cure tomorrow, but also to provide programs which address the needs of people living with MS today.

I choose to fight this disease by riding a bike. You can help me by donating whatever you can afford. Any amount, great or small, helps to make a difference in the lives of people with MS.

By clicking on this donation link, you can make a secure, tax-deductible donation in any amount. You can also send a check by postal mail to the address below (just put my name in the memo field of the check so it gets credited to my team). Please also feel free to forward this email to anyone you believe might be interested in joining our movement.

Together, we will help put an end to multiple sclerosis . . . and to bad memories.

Thank you for your support.

David Bernstein

Please donate and help us stop MS!

– or –

Please join our team and ride with us!

Guest Editorial

A week-and-a-half ago, I participated in the Felt Tour de Park City, a local event that included a 170-mile USCF-sanctioned road race, and 170-, 100- and 50-mile tours of the wonderful northern Utah mountains. I originally planned to do the 170-mile tour, but my coach cautioned that this would have a negative effect on my training for the Alps. Who am I to argue with a professional coach?

I wasn’t too pleased with the planning, execution, rider/racer support or with my local newspaper’s coverage thereof. I sent an email to the race/ride organizer that went unanswered, so I sent a similar letter to the local paper. They printed it today as a guest editorial.

Give it a read and let me know what you think.

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