Big Red (Melinda Moore) has been missing for a week. If, as you are driving the backroads of the North Bay, you see any sign that a motorcycle may have crashed, please stop and take a look.
Single skid marks, scratches and scrapes on the asphault, broken bits of plastic on or near the road would be the most common signs of a crash.
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Last seen: 8:30 am on Monday Sept. 19 leaving her home on the 2500 Block of Saddlehorn in West Santa Rosa Near West Third and Fulton Road.
Riding a red 2002 Aprilia Tuono motorcycle, CA Lic. Plate #16Y6908. Wearing a black two-piece Dainese riding suit with red panels and AGV helmet. Melinda is 40 years old with long red hair. D.O.B. 3/18/1965
Media release
www.findbigred.com/document...lease.pdf
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Re: Missing rider
Mon, September 26, 2005 - 6:39 PMSo sorry to hear this. I hope she is okay.
couldn't get the link to work.
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Re: Missing rider
Tue, September 27, 2005 - 11:17 AMsad story. you cannot last 6 days without water. if she went down a ravine and was trapped/injured and has no water source...and was injured and losing blood. meh. this could happen to anyone.
i ride the same roads she does in Sonoma/Napa/Marin - Skaggs, Pope Valley, Tin Barn, etc. there are many, many drop-offs where you could easily go off the road and it'd never be apparent where you went off.
the same thing happened to a friend's riding buddy. he went off the road and they didn't find him until a week later. he was dead from exposure and his injuries. he was only a few hundred yards off the road, in a field. it wasn't even a ravine. he was just not visible and neither was his bike.
i do a lot of solo riding in remote areas. i'm thinking seriously about a GPS equipped PLB for those rides. until i get one, i'm leaving a ride plan with someone and checking in. -
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Re: Missing rider
Thu, September 29, 2005 - 12:50 PMUnfortunatley this story does not have a happy ending.
My warm thoughts, prayers and sympathies go out to all of her family and friends. May the gods fill her soul with white light she finally found the peace in her heart that she was so desperately searching for.
By DEREK J. MOORE THE PRESS DEMOCRAT
The search for a missing Santa Rosa motorcyclist came to a sad conclusion Wednesday with the discovery of Melinda Moore's body in a crevice on an 800-foot cliff near Fort Ross.
Authorities said the 40-year-old Moore had placed her helmet and riding gloves on a rock as a marker before gunning her red Aprilia Tuono motorcycle over the cliff's edge.
Halfway down, her body caught on a bushy outcropping. The motorcycle sailed on, smashing on the rocky beach.
"We're looking at this as an apparent suicide," Santa Rosa Police Sgt. Steve Bair said.
The discovery brought an abrupt end to a weeklong search that included hundreds of motorcyclists from across the Bay Area, private pilots, off-duty search and rescue personnel and a private investigator.
"Melinda's body and bike have been found. Our hearts and thoughts are with Melinda's family and friends," read the message on www.findbigred.com, a Web site created by her friends to share information and organize searchers.
Late Wednesday afternoon, a Santa Rosa police detective, a patrol officer and a chaplain arrived at Moore's Saddlehorn Court home to deliver the grim news to her fiance and about a dozen friends.
Mark Hindman, a motorcycle parts entrepreneur, had offered a $5,000 reward for information leading to Moore's whereabouts. He sobbed loudly when told his fiancee's body had been found.
Adam Wade, a friend from San Mateo, said, "To some extent it's a relief to know what happened. But it's obviously not the news anybody wanted to hear."
Moore, who had worked as a saleswoman at a Santa Rosa BMW dealership and was taking marketing classes at Santa Rosa Junior College, left the house last Monday, ostensibly bound for class.
Friends said she was depressed for a variety of reasons, including health issues and struggles at school. She also was absorbed in a lawsuit stemming from a motorcycle crash that broke both of her arms.
But that sadness seemed to be offset by a rich sense of humor. Moore was a member of the Bay Area Menstrual Cycle Club, an all-female riding group. A photo in her living room shows her wearing a T-shirt that reads, "Does my bike make my butt look fast?"
"Melinda was this huge Amazon woman, a bundle of energy," Wade said of the 5-foot-10 Moore, who was known as "Big Red" for her vibrant red locks.
Friends said Moore was there for other people in need and had counseled others out of taking their own lives. Nobody saw her final act coming.
Bair said an abalone diver stopped to pick up Moore's helmet and gloves after spotting them on a turnout of Highway 1 on Sept. 19, the same day she rode away from her home in Santa Rosa.
The Sebastopol man contacted authorities Wednesday after reading news reports of her disappearance. He led detectives to the site later in the day.
Bair said the spot where Moore died is known as "High Point" because the cliffs there are among the highest on the Sonoma County coast.
The area is about three miles south of Fort Ross on the twisty and scenic road, just the kind Moore liked to ride to clear her head. Bair said the cliff where she went over is on a turnout about 50 feet from the highway.
He said detectives spotted the body and motorcycle, which couldn't be seen from the road, after they hiked down a steep trail to the beach and looked back at the cliff.
The sheriff's helicopter was used to remove Moore's body using a long line and a litter. She was taken by van to the coroner's office in Santa Rosa.
She was still clad in her leather riding gear, Bair said. -
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Re: Missing rider
Fri, September 30, 2005 - 3:41 PMThere will be a remembrance of Melinda at Zeitgeist, 199 Valencia St. on Saturday evening, October 1st. Please feel free to attend and share your stories and strength.
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