You might be able to find a MeetUp Group or Touring Cyclist  style group , 
neither tend to be competitive. Randonneur clubs often have a Populaire 
which is typically a full day style 100km (60mile) ride and every type of 
rider shows up to those, even parent/child tandem riders and it is a lot of 
fun.

If there is no MeetUp Group on your area or nothing that is what you are 
looking for, there is an opportunity to start one and see how it goes. When 
I lived in Vancouver, I started group riding with a MeetUp Group on 
Saturdays and it was fun for a while. Then I found the BC Randonneurs and 
that was fantastic until I rode off to Tierra del Fuego. Distance riding 
got under my skin!

IanA (back north in) Alberta Canada 

On Monday, January 17, 2022 at 7:31:09 AM UTC-7 Bicycle Belle Ding Ding! 
wrote:

> [image: 0168267B-AB4E-4252-B2D2-09FC827BCB73.jpeg]We recently moved to SW 
> Michigan. I was a total Lone Wolf (borrowing from Eben Weiss, The Bike 
> Snob) in Vegas but I dream of having Real Life Bike Friends here. This List 
> has really been a gift to me, but it has also made me want more: I want 
>  REAL people and REAL experiences with them. I have found a shop that hosts 
> rides of various kinds 9 months out of the year. There is hope!
>
> The trouble is: I don’t know what I am, and neither does anyone else. 
>
> I have never done a group ride. I don’t know how fast or slow I am, and I 
> don’t know how far I can go. I don’t know etiquette or what would tick off 
> other riders in the group. (My “group rides” were with my 2 sons on the way 
> to school. And it’s true that you learn a rhythm that works for your group 
> and on the rare occasion my husband got included, he made us all nervous.) 
> I would like to have a good first experience and not be a drag for a group. 
> I think failure would send me right back into Lone Wolfdom. I suppose I 
> will just have to risk it.
>
> When I say I ride, everyone thinks Roadie, and then they think of their 
> friend who is also a Roadie and want to plan a meeting for us. Now, I doubt 
> I’m going to keep up with a group of road bikes on my Platypus. When I say 
> I don’t have a road bike, the person will say, “Oh, you like to mountain 
> bike!” When I try to explain, try to say what it is that I ride, I don’t 
> have words. If I admit I don’t have a road bike or mountain bike people 
> assume hybrid bike from big box store = not a serious rider. I don’t know 
> what I am. I don’t know what “we” are. Where do bikes like ours fit? Who do 
> we ride with?
>
> In looking at local events online, it seems there are Roadies and there 
> are Gravel Kings (my own term). If I roll up on my fendered, raspberry 
> sparkle Platypus, both groups will be uncomfortable. 
>
> My shop did mention some community rides, and those I will try, though I 
> suspect they might be short and slow for my taste. There are some very 
> exciting events state-wide here, but they do seem to be geared to road 
> bikers. I admit that I know very little about bike culture here, and 
> talking to real people might open up a lot of possibilities. Where are 
> these people I can talk to?!
>
> The locals tell me spring will be here in March. I’ve got 2 months to 
> figure out where I fit, Rivsters. 
>
> Who can relate? Who has words of wisdom? Who just wants to commiserate? 
> Are we the outcasts of bike culture or are we unicorns? Where are we in the 
> Velotaxonomy? How do we make the cool people take us seriously? Should I 
> buy Lycra? 
>
> What I wouldn’t give for a couple of RivSisters living locally…
> Leah
>

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