May 18, 2026

84-year-old Legionnaire cycling 250 miles for USA 250 Challenge

USA250 Challenge
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Photo by Denise Civiletti
Photo by Denise Civiletti

Nester Kramer of Riverhead, N.Y., is celebrating America’s 250th birthday through fitness. 

Three days a week, Nester Kramer climbs onto a stationary bike at Maximus Health and Fitness in Riverhead, N.Y., and pedals. At 84, the U.S. Air Force veteran is taking on The American Legion’s USA 250 Challenge by cycling 250 miles in celebration of America’s 250th birthday on July 4.  And he’s fundraising for his American Legion Post 273.

But for Kramer, the ride is about more than fitness and fundraising. It is also about service, friendship and making the most of the time he still has. “I can do it now,” Kramer said. “Next year, I may not be able to do it.”

That outlook practical, unsentimental and quietly determined is what drives him.

Kramer has lived in Riverhead since 1960 when the Air Force sent him to Westhampton Beach where he refueled jets. He served four years, 1960-1964, and has been a member of Post 273 for about five years. When he learned about The American Legion’s USA 250 Challenge, he saw it as a chance to do something meaningful for fellow veterans.

"I needed to do something to give back to the veterans,” he said.

Kramer rides 5 miles three days a week. So far, he said, the fundraiser has brought in about $180. Kramer said he plans to add $100 of his own when he completes the challenge.

He is putting in the miles at Maximus Fitness with steady support from Jude Petroski, 66, a close friend and neighbor who has been working out with him for about 10 years. Petroski said it took him about a year to persuade Kramer to come to the gym. At the time, he noticed Kramer was having trouble lifting his arm to reach into his mailbox. Regular exercise helped improve that, Petroski said, and the two men have been showing up together ever since.

“This is my neighbor, my best friend, and he drags me,” Kramer said with a laugh. “Keeps me young.”

The two men live a few houses apart, help each other with errands and repairs, and often go out for breakfast or lunch together. Petroski, who belongs to the Sons of The American Legion, said he now rides alongside Kramer on the bike a couple of days each week in support of the USA 250 Challenge.

Kramer said he had never used the stationary bike before deciding to take on the 250-mile effort. He started cautiously, unsure how his knees would respond.

He has arthritis in both shoulders and knees, had a hip replaced about 12 years ago and recently received an injection in his knee that has helped. He said he began with just one mile on the bike, then gradually built up. Now he rides at a pace that gives him a cardio workout without aggravating old aches and injuries.

For Kramer, though, the bike carries meaning beyond the challenge itself.

He and his wife, Ellen, once loved bicycling together on Saturday mornings. They would ride to breakfast, visit her mother and head downtown or to the boardwalk when the weather was good. Kramer recalled that Ellen was the faster rider.

“She’d get down and she’d wait for me,” he said. “She’d tease me about beating me.”

About 10 years ago, that changed. Ellen was seriously injured in a bicycle accident that left her unable to walk, Kramer said. Now she is in bed or in a wheelchair.

Kramer spoke matter-of-factly about the practical realities they now navigate — arranging rides, relying on town and county transportation services and trying to find a wheelchair-accessible vehicle that would give them more independence.

At the same time, he described his wife as a fighter.

As Kramer pedals mile after mile at the Main Street gym, the bicycle is not only a piece of exercise equipment. It is also a reminder of something he and Ellen once shared, and of how quickly life can change.

His own life has been defined by work and motion.

After his Air Force service, Kramer built a long career working for an oil company, where he installed boilers, handled heating jobs and did plumbing work for 41 years. He retired in 2008, but found retirement did not suit him for long. Six months later, he went to work at Peconic Bay Medical Center, where he worked another 12 years as a nighttime carrier serving doctors affiliated with the hospital. He retired from that job at age 80.

Even now, slowing down does not come naturally.

Kramer acknowledges the realities of age. He talks openly about falls, sore joints and the things that get harder. But he also keeps showing up. He keeps moving.

That determination has not gone unnoticed at Maximus Fitness.

What started as a personal goal has turned into a community effort. Kramer said the gym has helped sponsor and promote the challenge. When gym owners Alex and Cheryl Cameron heard about what Kramer was doing, they wanted other members to know about it and support the veteran’s effort.

“When I see someone who inspires me, I ask them to be the subject of a ‘member spotlight,’” Alex Cameron said. “We want people to get to know each other, instead of just passing each other in the gym with a quick nod or hello.”

But Cameron said he knew right away that Kramer’s challenge merited more than a member spotlight.

He decided to get the gym involved in the fundraising effort and had red T-shirts made bearing the words “Go Nester Go” on the back. The shirts were offered to members for $5 above cost, with the extra $5 going to American Legion Post 273. Many members have purchased and wear the shirts to show their support for Kramer, Cameron said.

Donations to support Kramer’s challenge and the Riverhead American Legion Post 273 can be made through Maximum Health and Fitness, 126 E Main St, Riverhead, NY 1190, or directly to American Legion Post 273, 89 Hubbard Ave, Riverhead, NY 11901

Gym staff are planning to celebrate when Kramer finishes, with supporters gathering as he rings the gym’s bell marking the completion of a personal challenge.

Kramer seems slightly bemused by the attention.

“What they did for me here was wonderful,” he said. “I didn’t ask for it.”

He just wanted to do the work.

Kramer is pedaling for veterans. He is pedaling with the encouragement of a friend and the support of his gym community. And he is pedaling with memories of a pastime he and his wife once enjoyed together.

And, as he puts it, he is doing it because, right now, he still can.

This story was originally published on April 15, 2026 by RiverheadLOCAL, a publication of 2026 East End Local Media Corp. in Riverhead NY. It is reproduced here with permission.

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