Allie Dorsey was basically born on a dirt bike. As an infant, she would nap while coasting across desert hills, strapped to her father’s back.
According to her dad, Larry Dorsey, it was a foolproof tactic for nap time.
But by the time she was five, Dorsey — now 28 — got her first bike, and the lullaby soon became Dorsey’s alarm clock: the reason she woke up every morning.
Soon enough, Dorsey was placing in the top three in desert and dirt biking events, like the Tennessee Knockout, Reno EnduroCross and many other 200- to 500-mile desert races.
“In a way, you’re chasing that want to be better,” Dorsey said. “You’re always pushing to beat yourself and whoever’s in front of you.”
“Dirt biking takes you to the most beautiful scenery in the whole world,” she added. “Having the Book Cliffs and Moab so close, I’ve seen a lot of things as a kid and an adult that people don’t get to experience because of being on two wheels. It’s taken me a lot of different places, and it’s shaped me into the person that I am.”
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