Nobody has more fun on a bike than . Just look at , filled with听epically听high jumps, skids through parking lots, and 360鈥檚 on ice. At 45, Voreis has been a professional mountain biker for more than half of his life. He鈥檚听spent听much of that time on the downhill racing circuit, where he earned a dual slalom national championship title听in 2002. But while many of his contemporaries have burned out or retired, Voreis is still going strong, riding his bike with the enthusiasm of a kid who just learned how to wheelie. 鈥淚鈥檓 still chasing the dream,鈥 Voreis says. 鈥淭he stuff I鈥檓 doing now, it鈥檚 the same stuff that I did when I was a kid.鈥澨
Aside from the occasional downhill race, Voreis doesn鈥檛 compete anymore. 鈥淚 only raced so I wouldn鈥檛 have to get a job, so I could spend more time skating and just riding my bike,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 thinking about winning a championship. It was about doing what I want on a bike and in life.鈥 He cut back on racing in 2005听and then spent years听roaming the country with his program, AllRide, where he introduced kids to mountain biking through demonstrations at public schools. He moved on from AllRide听in 2016 and now crisscrosses the country filming short and long videos for his sponsors. Throughout this process, Voreis has evolved from a bike racer to a bike character, using听 to build a brand that extends far beyond his former racing glory. And in every , he鈥檚 always on message: biking is fun.听
It鈥檚 borderline miraculous that Voreis is still able to ride his bike at all鈥攍et alone produce these high-octane videos鈥攂ecause he听is constantly getting hurt. When I talked听to him in August, he was听recovering in his Bend, Oregon, home from a kidney complication听he sustained while filming in Whistler, British Columbia鈥攈e essentially rode himself into rhabdomyolysis, a breakdown of muscle fibers that听can lead to听kidney failure, and ended up peeing blood in the hospital. He鈥檚 broken four helmets in separate accidents this year and smashed a few teeth while trying to ride up a tree backward. He鈥檚 had ten听different surgeries听over the past two decades听on his ankles alone. 鈥淭here have been times when I鈥檇 get hurt while racing, and they wouldn鈥檛 let me on the plane to go home because there was blood soaking through my sutures,鈥 Voreis says.
Watch those crashes鈥攊ncluding Voreis catching a back tire while trying to land听a wall ride听or rag-dolling while failing to huck over a big tabletop鈥攁nd you鈥檒l听wonder how he鈥檚 able to bounce back听at his age. But Voreis says recovery is actually easier now than when he was younger. That鈥檚 because he knows the fastest path to getting back on the bike: resting. 鈥淚t was hard to do nothing when I was younger, but I鈥檝e learned,鈥 Voreis says.听
Hot baths also help. Voreis says he takes at least five soaks a week, incorporating an ice bath into the routine if he鈥檚 really hurting. (Although many athletes include听an icy dip as part of听their recovery, the science behind this practice听is still inconclusive.)听He also goes through some听yoga poses听postride听and does high-rep shoulder and leg exercises with 25-pound dumbbells every few days. 鈥淚鈥檓 a firm believer in that sort of regular maintenance,鈥 Voreis says. 鈥淎nd really, crashing is stretching. You put yourself in so many positions crashing, you become limber after a while鈥攊f you don鈥檛 break anything.鈥澨
And Voreis doesn鈥檛 like to sweep his听crashes under the rug. Instead of uploading a sick trick on Instagram, he听shows the progressive trial and error it took to nail that tire tap or wall ride. A lot of times, that process听is downright painful. 鈥淚鈥檒l get mad if the crash wasn鈥檛 captured,鈥 Voreis says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e so desensitized in this world鈥攚e watch these videos, and it鈥檚 unreal how good people are. Kids look at it and think you can just sling your body through the air. But that鈥檚 not the case.鈥澨齎oreis also says听that听posting these mishaps听helps keep his ego in check, a task that, he admits, can be difficult. 鈥淚 want to show off and be seen, sure, but I like to trip and fall on that ego, too,鈥 he says.听(Another ego check: a听tattoo on Voreis鈥檚 right leg听reads 鈥淗igh Performance,鈥澨齱hile one on his left leg reads 鈥淟ow Expectations.鈥)听
For Voreis, the ability to keep experimenting into middle age is all about managing these听expectations. 鈥淚t鈥檚 good to have a goal,鈥 Voreis says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what makes you a better rider. But doing tricks can be a goal, too, and it鈥檚 a way to be creative. You gotta remember that there鈥檚 always somebody better than you on the bike, so you might as well have fun doing it.鈥