One Bike at a Time. One Hero at a Time.

And it's Time...

TO PUT THE FIRST TWO VETERANS

OF 2026 BACK ON THE ROAD!

Introducing 2026's First Recipient: #62

Army Veteran Amber Fleitz

of Oostburg, Wisconsin

====


FINDING STRENGTH ON THE ROAD


Strength is not always loud. Sometimes, it is found in the quiet decision to keep moving forward… even when the road behind you has been anything but smooth.


Amber Fleitz grew up in the small town of Belgium, Wisconsin, raised by a single mother for most of her childhood until her step father entered her life at age 11. Amber, a quieter girl, had a strong sense of independence and resilience; and for as long as she can remember, grew up wanting to be either a police officer or a veterinarian. She enjoyed helping her grandparents, high school athletics and playing in the school band. Inspired by her grandfather’s Military Police (MP) service in the Korean War, Amber enlisted in the Army as a junior in high school to prepare her for a law enforcement career. She graduated high school in June, 2001 and left for basic training a month later, determined, focused, and ready to take on whatever challenges lay ahead. Those challenges came quickly.


Amber immediately embraced the routines, expectations and culture of her large, new environment. She quickly formed friendships and envisioned years of service ahead of her. Half way through basic training, Amber was repelling and fell from the wall, spraining her ankle. It is an injury that still plagues her today, but at the time she pushed through the pain and graduated— proving early on the strength and determination that would define her life. She then sailed through Military Police specialization, which further solidified her purpose and joy in being a Soldier.


Her first duty station brought her halfway across the world to Camp Carroll in Waegwan, South Korea where she worked as base police. It was her first time out of the country; and Amber again thrived in her new environment and role. She grew more social and comfortable amongst her new friends and within the family she trusted implicitly. Until that trust, that security and that happiness imploded, time and time again, to deteriorate every fiber of her strength, her esteem and the trust she had once had.


In early 2002, a change in leadership brought a new Infantry Captain on base and Amber found herself in an unsafe and deeply troubling environment. On multiple occasions she was cornered by the new Captain, and a few of his friends, and physically forced into unwanted sexual activity. At just 19 years old, and acutely aware and fearful of command structure, she felt helpless to do anything at the time. She did, however, go to her immediate MP Company leadership after every incident over the next several months…only to be told she was lying and that “officers wouldn’t do that”. Faced with an impossible situation, Amber was eventually given a choice: accept an early, honorable discharge or face court-martial for falsely speaking out. She chose to be discharged, believing it would be the court-martial that would destroy her life.


In late 2002, after just a year and a half of service, a bewildered Amber returned to her parent’s home in Wisconsin carrying far more than she ever should have had to. She told no one. Not one word. Not one hint of what really caused her early departure. Part defense mechanism, part denial and part protection…she pushed every ugly memory and horrific feeling down, way down, to smolder and erupt over the years to come.  


Without an outlet or resources to turn to, Amber did two things. First, she turned to alcohol and painkillers to soothe the pain and quiet the demons she refused to acknowledge. Then, still wanting to become a police officer, she attended UW-Oshkosh to pursue education in both Psychology, to better understand people, and in Criminal Justice, to better serve her community.  She worked odd jobs along the way to help pay the bills and she drank excessively to forget the past and soothe the blame she repeatedly heaped upon herself.  


In 2004, Amber met the man who would become her first husband. After a whirlwind romance without sign of concern, the two married later that year. Very shortly thereafter, the flags everyone else saw and warned her about appeared: and he became abusive. Amber had finished her degree and landed a job as a police officer within Wisconsin State Fair’s police department where she worked for a year before her husband forced her to resign and stay home. After one particularly horrific evening caused her to miscarry at 22 weeks pregnant, Amber found the strength to leave and they divorced after less than a year of marriage. Like her time following her discharge, she didn’t talk about what she’d lived through–she simply pushed it down to fester and silently dealt with one more ugly thing she believed was her fault.  


As much as she longed for a better life, finding such proved more challenging. Feeling she was a failure at prevention, she couldn’t return to law enforcement with personal credibility or zeal. With a crumbling self-esteem, and nowhere to go, Amber again moved back home to stay with her parents. She moved from job to job for the next several years, unsettled and unhappy, and continued to spiral in a sea of undiagnosed depression. Amber didn’t believe she deserved better. She didn’t trust anyone; and social situations now caused her great anxiety and panic. In response to her declining mental health, she further isolated herself and became increasingly dependent on alcohol and drugs to smooth the rough, painful scars she carried. As the weight of secret burdens further saturated her life, Amber’s depression turned into anger.  She became more explosive and, often finding herself in fights, strained the few relationships she had left, lost jobs and found herself arrested.  


In 2008, as she sobered up in a jail cell and realized her world had hit a new rock bottom, Amber vowed to be and do better. She crafted a path toward sobriety and went to both Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous. And while she gained strength and new skills to manage her vices, she continued to remove herself socially and took to video gaming for the short release from reality it offered. 


In 2009, life began to positively shift after she encountered Jesse, her spouse of 15 years now. The two connected in an unlikely way— playing Call of Duty online–with roughly 1,800 miles between them. What started first as merciless attacks on his Operator, turned into a friendship and then, as they talked, something much more. After deciding to meet, and then traveling back and forth between Wisconsin and Arizona, Amber and Jesse knew they’d both found their person. Amber moved to Phoenix, where they married in 2011 and welcomed their daughter, Audrey.  


Amber found work in a veterinary clinic and, after reconnecting with a childhood dream, she decided to become a Veterinary Technician. She completed the two year program certification and landed her first job in 2015, a perfect role that encompasses her love of animals and their gentle gift of affection in return.  After several years of expensive living in Arizona, the family returned home to Wisconsin in 2017, settling in Oostburg to be near family. Amber found work as a Veterinary Technician and, once they could buy their first home, promptly expanded their household with three cats, two dogs and a bearded dragon to further fill their hearts.  With love and support Amber continued to work hard, focused on raising their daughter and…still silently battled the effects of her past. Jesse knew very little about her past traumas, and trauma wasn’t even an acknowledged presence yet by Amber.  But the volatility and emotional lability found a seat at their table and strained their relationship.  As they rode the waves of marriage together, Amber and Jesse discovered something that would become an important part of their lives, and her healing— riding.  


Amber had grown up riding dirt bikes but was never in a position to have a motorcycle as she’d dreamed of. Jesse, too, had always wanted to ride, but Phoenix was not the place to learn. In 2021 the couple took the riding class together and purchased a 2013 H-D Heritage from which they each learned to ride on. They rode separately, and then together, building their skills and joy, and reconnecting with each other. When they could finally afford to get Jesse his own motorcycle, Amber claimed the Softail all to herself and, with a little more practice, began taking their daughter on rides.  She found peace and freedom on the road, and quickly learned to release her struggles in the wind. In 2024 they were introduced to the Military Veterans Motorcycle Association (MVMA) and that is where Amber found a brotherhood that she could connect with. As she learned to socialize more, she cautiously learned to trust again. And through this new source of Veteran support, she was encouraged to seek out the VA and obtain the medical benefits she’d earned and the resources she needed. In 2025, after being diagnosed with PTSD from her Military Sexual Trauma (MST), Amber connected with a therapist, began counseling and talk therapy. After 25 years of believing the assaults and harassment were all her fault, she’s realized the validating truth that they were not. And after 25 years of hiding her injuries and deep emotional pain, she has felt incremental release as she finally begins to share her story.  


The road to this point hasn’t been easy—but family love, riding, and supportive resources have helped propel Amber forward. On her final ride of 2025, her Softail’s engine seized… along with her heart. Although she’s attempted to fix it, the bike remains an unreliable ride with repairs likely to be more than the bike is worth. Hogs For Heroes heard the damaging pain of her story and equally the impactful change that riding and treatment have provided her.  Our Advisory Board decided to keep Amber on the healing road she’s created for herself by giving her the tool that will continue to support her release and growth.  


We took Amber shopping for her perfect fit: and after realizing the Road Glide was it, she fell head over heels for the 2025 H-D Road Glide in Mystic Shift–a deep, ever-changing purple– just sitting on Suburban Motors Harley-Davidson’s showroom floor. Unique to Amber’s bike, it has been fully sponsored by the fundraising efforts of Tavern League of Wisconsin members across the state.  Amber’s Presentation of Keys Ceremony will be on Sunday, May 17, 2026 at Curve In Bar in Kewaskum, WI at 12:30 pm.  Not only is this a cool biker-loving bar, they have been ginormous supporters of ours, spearheading a Scag Mower raffle for the Fond du Lac County Tavern League that raised $20,000 for us this year!  We will be hanging out from

11 am - 3 pm and look forward to kicking off 2026’s season with you at our side! And...hot tip, showing off our new shirts!  


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Meet Veteran Recipient #63:

Army Sergeant First Class Seth Walls

of Cleveland, Wisconsin


“Since I found motorcycling last year, I don’t know how to go without it.  It was like I was awake again. I haven’t felt that alive since I deployed.  I wish I had known the lifestyle years ago when I was at my worst, it might have saved me from making a lot of mistakes.”


---a quote from Seth's application

====


Growing up in Columbus, Ohio, Seth Walls faced a difficult and unstable childhood. With an abusive father at the helm, Seth was shifted around family members for safe-keeping and raising. He quickly learned to navigate strained relationships and what kind of man he wanted to be when he grew up. Seth was a kid who liked to build forts, play soldier with sticks and participate in sports. In high school he took up wrestling until, at just 16 years old, Seth became a father himself. He dropped out of high school to find work and begin providing for his young family.  


Seth bounced between odd jobs, learned responsibility in real time, and carried the weight of parenthood while still a kid himself. He’d always dreamed of being a soldier, but it wasn’t until he accompanied a childhood friend to the Recruiter’s office that he realized the possibility and job security it could provide. Seth then earned his GED to assure eligibility and future growth. And when he turned 17, he did two things to solidify his responsibility: he married his sweetheart and mother of his child, and he enlisted in the Army. In October, 2001, the friends headed off to boot camp followed by specialization training as a Combat Engineer for Seth. It would be the beginning of more than two decades of service with five deployments,  four of which to Iraq, that would earn him two Bronze Star Medals and one Meritorious Service Medal.


Seth's first duty station took him to Baumholder Army Base in western Germany. It took six long months before his young wife and daughter could join him; and no sooner did they arrive did he receive his first deployment orders to Iraq.   


Seth landed in Baghdad in May, 2003 with our Country’s invasion already underway. He drove an M113, a tracked personnel carrier, from which they moved about manning check points and guard posts, removing dangerous threats and conducting surveillance. Although he notes it as his “easiest deployment”, the city was volatile and chaotic with our advancement, and small arms and indirect fire were a constant threat. Communications home were minimal, and by mail, though an occasional satellite phone would be possible for $20 a minute. In a rare phone exchange with his wife, Seth learned the buddy he’d enlisted with had been killed by an RPG in Baghdad. It hurt; and like all the other difficult experiences he’d experienced thus far, Seth pushed it down and focused on his job. Twelve months in, as his Engineer Company was preparing for departure, an uptick in insurgent activity forced a three month extension to maximize force with overlapping arrivals. They unloaded, turned around and went back at it with a mere weekend break at a tent complex in Qatar to decompress.


In June, 2004, the soldier returned to his family in Germany. Though unrecognized at the time, Seth had changed in war; and readjustment was both awkward and strained. His wife had become unfamiliar, his daughter didn’t know him and even base life felt different without the constant presence of his Brothers. The young couple did their best to acclimate, just in time to transfer to Fort Bliss, Texas, where their journey strained even further. While Seth trained daily for combat in their new city, they welcomed their second daughter in 2005…followed by orders to spend another year in Baghdad. It was a fate that prompted the couple to divorce: and she left with his two girls shortly after he left for war. 


As an Army Combat Engineer, Seth specialized in clearing obstacles, or creating them, to enable the movement or protection of our forces. In November, 2006 Seth found himself in all too familiar territory, and during the deadliest year in the war’s history. Tasked as a Dismount Team Leader, it was his job to lead his team out of the truck to assess and intervene where needed. Still feeling the angst of divorce, Seth transferred that energy into his role’s demand for risk-taking. He cleared buildings, kicked in doors and readily moved amongst deadly people. He built barriers, guard towers and checkpoints within the metropolis and dismantled enemy equipment and fire power. Additionally, Seth worked route clearance facing hidden, deadly threats head on; and after just three months in, he lost track of the number of times he was directly attacked with an explosive device after reaching 34. This exposure, combined with the frequent small arms fire he engaged in, would eventually result in a Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) diagnosis nearly twenty years later. Its unrecognized symptoms would, nonetheless, affect him all his years before that, and well into his future.  


Seth returned to Fort Bliss in late 2007–exhausted, alone and spinning from what he’d just been through and done. As he again sought his new normal, the ugly seeds of PTSD began to grow alongside the troublesome symptoms of his TBI. Military culture at the time didn’t support “talking about it” or seeking help: there was only the risk of mockery and separation if one was perceived as weak. So Seth shut his mind down, focused on his training, and began drinking.  


One night Seth went to a friend’s party for the diversion he needed, not looking for anything but a cold beer, when he met Crystal. The two talked most of the night, about music and the hard divorce path they shared, then coincidentally met again the next day. They quickly developed a supportive friendship that turned into love. When Seth was reassigned to Fort Campbell, Kentucky, Crystal and her son moved with him and the couple welcomed their first of many children together. It wasn’t long after the new foursome settled in that Seth received his third set of orders to head back to Iraq.  


In January, 2009, Seth landed in Mosul, the most dangerous city in Iraq and a key stronghold for Al-Qaeda. And he arrived angry. As a Squad Leader they again found themselves on stressful route-clearing missions. With a demanding hypervigilance and improved equipment, Seth estimates discovering “hundreds” of IEDs during their year. They blew up the smaller devices on site, but the homemade versions and larger devices required skilled Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD) personnel. Their missions again required movement through congested city dynamics amongst mixed crowds of suspicious civilians and seething insurgents. Rules of engagement at the time supported more direct response to any perceived threats; and with hostile gunfire and rocket attacks a daily part of life, Seth had more than his share of involvement. Not caring any longer if he lived or died, the emboldened Staff Sergeant took more personal risks than ever, looking hard for those threats and reacting quickly to stop those threats, and subsequently earning his first Bronze Star Medal for heroic efforts. It is an award he quietly dismisses, noting he was simply doing his job.


Seth returned to Fort Campbell right before Christmas, grateful to be out of Iraq and initially happy to be home. But as he settled in, all he’d tamped down over the years began to resurface in a world that couldn’t allow it. He pushed harder to ignore his demons, immersed himself in perpetual training, and drank, hard, to settle the mounting anger he couldn’t shake. It had all become a vicious cycle; and less than one year later, orders came through for his fourth combat deployment.


In January, 2011, with the war in Iraq ending, Seth, now a Platoon Sergeant, spent the year moving across the country to shut down various bases and outposts. That did not mean that Iraq’s deadly efforts had shut down. Advanced IEDs, car bombs, new projectiles and vengeful insurgents remained a strong and persistent presence as Seth worked to secure route safety for the truckloads of equipment and supplies leaving the country. Midway through his year, Seth returned home for the birth of their daughter; and while the experience warmed his heart, his return to Iraq quickly hardened it again. As Seth has always done through life, he set his sights on what had to be done; and with his characteristic grit and commitment, forged ahead. For a job well done, and while working in a position above his rank, Seth was meritoriously awarded his second Bronze Star Medal this tour. Although the deployment “wasn’t as bad” as the others, its completion was made even better by the likelihood he would not be back.  


In 2012, shortly after Seth returned home, he married Crystal, adopted her son, and did his best to build a life grounded in commitment and resilience. Military life is hard on a family, requiring frequent and long periods of absence and uprooting change. As their family grew, so did their desire for a more constant presence at home. Rather than take another move to Germany, in which he knew he would deploy again, Seth transitioned into the Army Reserves after ten years of active duty. For his time and leadership shown, Seth was awarded a Meritorious Service Medal. Leaving was perhaps one of the hardest decisions he’d ever made…and he had no idea just how hard life would become as a result.


Their family moved to Wisconsin and rented a home to be near Crystal’s family in Howards Grove. Seth was attached to the 335th Regiment, an Army Reserve Unit in Whitehall, Ohio, that provided training support to Reserve and National Guard units. He gladly made the long drive when required to spend time with the Family he knew and loved. Seth would go on to serve in the Reserves for the next twelve years…but in the meantime, he spiraled into the worst years of his life.


At just 28 years old, and after ten years of knowing nothing but Army routines, discipline and war, Seth found himself lost, without purpose or identity, and floundering in a civilian world. He moved from job to job, struggling to fit in, communicate and care about what now seemed insignificant. Years of difficult, ugly memories flooded in as stray thoughts, flashbacks and nightmares; and his anger grew outwardly making it hard to be around him. Depression seeped into Seth’s bones and made it hard to get out of bed. Hypervigilance and anxiety made it hard to be in public, and his irritability made it hard to have friends. Seth continued drinking to soothe struggles he couldn’t understand or address. As his marriage strained, he tried counseling and left frustrated and angry. Unsure of his next steps in life, Seth wondered if everyone would be better off if he took his own life. And then one day his Unit’s leadership asked him to take a one-year domestic deployment…and he pulled himself together for the chance to regain a purpose he could get behind. 


In February, 2018 Seth and his growing family relocated to Fort Hood, Texas. The Sergeant First Class was there to train mobilizing Reservists and Guardsmen in preparation for European and Middle East arenas. Crystal and Seth strengthened their marriage, established their children in schools and routines, and extended his deployment an additional two years. While staying in Texas, Seth found work as a Corrections Officer and picked up welding and wood working. Realizing the better move for their then six children was back to Wisconsin, in 2024 they relocated once more to the small rural town of Cleveland where he took a position within LDS, a dairy equipment company, as an installation technician. And, after 23 years in service, Seth made the difficult decision to end his military career.


As part of that retirement, he immediately accessed the VA for ongoing medical and mental health support, and has worked hard to control his drinking and temper. While he’s done a lot of self-reflection to understand his struggle, and has found reels of Veterans sharing their stories to be enlightening, there are still many days where Seth is surrounded by depressive darkness and anger. It is a burden he’s learned to live with to provide for his family; but as he reflected on what he needed for himself…well, that’s when he chose to pursue riding.  


Motorcycling had always scared Seth; but he stared that fear in the face and enrolled in Road America’s rider course for the adrenaline release he needed. He was hooked from the start. With a full household and limited finances, Seth and Crystal saved to purchase a 20-year-old Sportster 883 off Facebook Marketplace. It wasn’t flashy, but it didn’t need to be. It simply needed to be something he could practice on; and then it became something he healed on. Riding became an immediate outlet and Crystal noticed the difference even a short, 15 minute ride made for him. After putting on over 2,500 miles his first summer, riding gave him something he hadn’t felt in a long time: freedom, peace and excitement. Sharing his life details with others isn’t something that comes easily to Seth, and learning to open up to others and build relationships has been part of his path forward. Seth then joined the Combat Veterans Motorcycle Association, Chapter (CVMA) 45-7, where he found the camaraderie he’d been missing since leaving active duty. Crystal joined their Auxiliary for the support she, too, needs as a spouse; and together they found a community who simply understand and want to continue serving others through riding.   


Unfortunately, Seth’s starter bike has fallen into disrepair and, on a tight family budget, repairs are unaffordable and likely to cost more than the bike is worth. The bigger bike he dreamt of, the one that lets him and his bride of 15 years ride together, remained well out of responsible reach…and the dread of no longer riding weighed heavy on his tenuous shoulders. Hogs For Heroes heard his struggle and effort and we felt the passion found in his new release. We believed our gift would make an immediate, healing difference in this man’s life, and that of his family’s, by keeping him on The Road he’s worked hard to find.   


We took Seth by complete surprise with our news and tasked him with finding the model that fits him best and captures his heart. Test rides on larger touring models quickly solidified his choice. Sitting on the showroom floor of Suburban Motors Harley-Davidson was the bike of his dreams: a blacked out 2024 Street Glide Special. And we made it his.  


Super cool to this bike, it is the second bike this year to be fully sponsored by the fundraising efforts of the over 5,000 members of the Tavern League of Wisconsin, and their eighth Bike and Veteran pairing since 2021. Seth will get his keys in a Double Presentation of Keys Ceremony on Sunday, May 17 at 12:30 pm at the Curve In Bar in Kewaskum, WI. We’ll be hanging out from 11-3, ready to connect with friends old and new! Come hungry, the Brat Hut will be open!

PRESENTATION OF KEYS TO:


THE SCAG MOWER WINNER AT 12:15

AND OUR TWO WI VETERAN RECIPIENTS AT 12:30

JOIN US!

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FUN and SUPPORT!
MARK YOUR CALENDARS NOW


FRIDAY IN FONDY! 6/5/26 10-3


PARKING LOT FUN TO SUPPORT OUR HEROES

AT:


ADASHUN JONES REAL ESTATE

1028 S. Main St., Fond du Lac, WI



Enjoy your Friday by loading up on brats and goodies all day long to support Veterans, police, fire and rescue personnel. Hogs For Heroes is lucky enough to be one of their beneficiaries this year! We'll be there, with a few Recipient bikes to show off, to tell you all about what we uniquely do for our injured Veterans, along with some great displays.



LAKE COUNTRY:


ANNUAL RIDE & MUSIC FESTIVAL FOR

HOGS FOR HEROES

6-7-26


What better way to spend a Sunday than behind your bars helping others! Our friends at Sloppy Joes & Smoke on The Water sister restaurants are crafting another spectacular event just for us. Put on some Lake Country miles with cool stops and return to relax in Okauchee Lake at Smoke on The Water with killer LIVE MUSIC from THE BOBBY FRISS BAND at their festival for us! Lot gates open at 3 to the public for some chill hang time, raffle fun and, following a warbird flyover, Bobby will take the stage at 4! Get ready to rock for a cause.


And for those paying attention, we will be taking over Bobby's stage to hand over another set of keys!


Ride registration opens at 9 at Sloppy Joes in Hubertus, KSU at 1030. Get the FB event details by clicking here.


RACINE

POKER RUN

FOR US!


6-13-26



Boaters and Bikers absolutely mix well together! We love us some fun, loving, welcoming peeps with big hearts...and this is the group!


Come spend the day with the 5th Street Yacht Club's riders and friends as they move around Racine County to raise funds for us. And who doesn't love a CASH prize???


RICE LAKE:


SUNDAY 6-14-26:


15th ANNUAL FAMILY CAR & CRAFT SHOW


Bring the family for this afternoon of fun that has something for everyone!


The organizing family proudly claims #34 Paul Kruse as one of their own and this year has chosen to direct their proceeds to us. Such an awesome honor!




A RIDE FOR VETERANS IN WESTFIELD, WI... BENEFITTING US!


6-20-26:



Just look at the day of fun they have planned for you!


Cruise aroound then hang on the lake and take some lucky chances to score big!


Don't ride? Just come hang out under the tent, grab some great grub, and join in the mega-raffle fun to support our good cause. Great place! Great peeps!


Click here for FB event details!



THE IUOE LOCAL139 POKER RUN

6-27-2026


It's the 9th Annual Operating Engineers Poker Run benefitting Hogs For Heroes! We will be rolling out/back into the awesome Summit Ridge Bar & Grill in Wonewoc, WI.


It's OPEN TO EVERYONE and trust us-- this is one well-done ride that meanders beautiful roads with sweet, hidden gem stops. Back by popular demand: A separate UTV route to double our fun! Unbelievable swag and raffles!


And if you're into betting...you can bet we will be doing a bike gifting at rides end since last year the Local 139 raised enough to sponsor four Harley and Veteran pairings in 2026! It's a great day!


CHETEK AREA:


CRUISE IN FOR A COOL NIGHT

ON A THURSDAY!


7-16-2026


This Veteran-owned hotspot hosts this annual gathering of cool wheels for all to come and enjoy...and they do a 50-50 raffle just for us! Plus, live music and great food will make your ordinary Thursday even better!



HEY COLOMA:


GET YOUR RIDE ON!


7-16-2026


Join this fun loving, patriotic bar and their friends as they take on their first Poker Run to raise funds just for us!


Great central Wisconsin area with cool roads and awesome stops-- including lunch for the hungry rider and chances to win with raffles and door prizes at each stop!





OXFORD, WI:



THE OXFORD VFW RIDERS & POST 6003 RIDES AGAIN FOR US!


7-18-2026



This is their 6th Annual Ride For Hogs For Heroes! We will start and return to this incredibly welcoming VFW Post in Oxford, WI. They are set up wonderfully for family, friends and lots of fun! Their VFW Riders Group will lead the way for those on two and three wheels...and Post members will take our four-wheelin' UTV friends on a separate route after which we'll all meet up for more fun at rides end!


Stay tuned for all the important deets...but ink us in!


JANESVILLE:


7-25-26


CELEBRATE THE LOVE OF RIDING BY RIDING FOR US!



This ride honors the life of a Brother and Son by sharing the passion for the road he loved by riding together in support of others.


Plus, super unique... you can sleep in on a Saturday morning with kickstands up at noon!




8-22-26


WHERE IN THE WORLD IS KEKOSKEE, WI?


A RIDE FOR EVERYONE TO FIND!

Make your way around the area's beautiful rural roads to find some great joints-- on your own path and at your own pace! Come on two, three or four wheels... just come with your posse to show your support for our local heroes.



CASH prizes for top 3 hands!


9-6-26


DON'T YOU WANT TO HANG HERE ON A SUNDAY FUNDAY???



JOIN US AT:

JOHNNY B'S ROLLING SMOKE IN PARDEEVILLE


Make your way over for an afternoon hanging lake side, listening to live music and indulging in the last of summer's fun. Outstanding food and people make this a don't miss! Check back for all the details....

Watch for More Upcoming Events on Our News Page


NEW VETERAN-OWNED START UP APPAREL COMPANY DEDICATES A PORTION OF EACH SALE TO US!


They're just getting started and decided to support our mission with their handcrafted goods before they even went live. Their gear is designed for those who serve our communities and carry themselves with honor.


Plus, they've got a line of made-to-order mattresses.


Always Remember...

Freedom Isn't Free.

HOGS FOR HEROES, INC.| 608-228-0026 | info@hogsforheroeswi.org| www.hogsforheroeswi.org
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