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Kind strangers impress Woodstock brothers during road trip

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Aaron Cooper looks over the Colombian landscape a few hours away from Ecuador. (Photo provided)

Aaron and Nathan Cooper returned with a clear takeaway from their two-month motorcycle trip through the U.S., Mexico, Central America and South America: People are good, even strangers.

In Colorado, a man donated a day of maintenance work on the brothers’ bikes. A guy near Mexico City bought them empanadas because he saw the crumpled bread on which they were spreading peanut butter. A family in Colombia locked up Nathan’s bike after he crashed while Aaron drove his hobbled brother to a hospital.

“There’s many times where we would have been dead in our tracks or at least slowed down if not for the help of genuinely kind strangers,” Aaron Cooper said.

The Woodstock brothers returned last month from what was to be a trip to Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, the southern tip of South America. Their journey ended early in Colombia, in the northwest part of continent, because of the broken leg Nathan suffered in a crash there.

Aaron Cooper, 30, had finished a 10-year career in the military and was taking classes at McHenry County College when he thought up the trip. Nathan, 25, had just completed a year of teaching English in Vietnam.

They share a sense of adventure and a love of travel, and set off in early September on their enduro motorcycles – racing motorcycles generally used for long trips over rugged terrain.

The trip had its share of challenges.

Long hours on the road were taxing. And while the brothers had booked stays at some nicer resorts, other nights were spent in shakier quarters – or none at all. More than once, the two caught rest on the side of the road.

“There was one day where we rode all day, 20-something hours,” Nathan Cooper said. “We pulled over – ‘Welp, it’s about an hour until the sun comes up. We can sleep for maybe 45 minutes. We’re not going to be falling asleep when it’s sunny.’”

At times, “I was waking up riding off-road,” he said.

But the goodness of people continued to shine. When Nathan’s bike broke down on the Baja California peninsula in Mexico, the two sought financial help, and received it. Donations came from people they knew around Woodstock and from their travels. Strangers who’d read about their trip kicked in, as well.

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