Interesting string. It has been a long time since I read through a string on this group. Many of you know me and know that I am not a fan of the Big Tent philosophy RUSA claims to have adopted. Accordingly, I have never been a fan of either the P-12 or Rouleur awards. I even have a little trouble with the R-12 award since it is the bare minimum distance required to be considered a "randonneur." But a week or two ago I finished planning out my 2026 riding calendar and one of my goals is to rack up a maximum number of RUSA trophy awards. I plan to aim for the P-12 and Rouleur awards in 2026 since avoiding them would make it impossible to earn 14 trophies.
During my research of available rides in 2026 I noticed a bottleneck when it came to finding RUSA route committee approved populaires with a distance between 125k and 149k. Apparently RBA's are good at creating simple 100k routes and routes being 150k or something a little less than 200k. But that sweet spot of somewhere between 125 and 149, not so much. I've got just one such ride built into my 2026 schedule. As I recall it will be offered in Ohio.
During my planning I questioned two things about the Rouleur award. One had to do with the three distinct populaire distance requirements. I would be surprised if even half the RUSA regions have populaires of all three distances approved by the RUSA Route Committee. So even if an RBA were asked to throw a pop on the RUSA calendar it probably would be a major undertaking. The commenters in this string seem to think it is easy to get an RBA to throw a ride on the RUSA calendar. If this were the case I would ask an RBA to throw a pop on the calender to be held the day before every weekend brevet I signed up for. That would make it easy to earn more and more Rando Scout awards. But no, it's not easy. And some RBA's would want you to host the event. I assume that would require a pre-ride. What a hassle. But another problem with the three distinct distances is why even have distinct distances at all? What is the reason for three distinct distances? I cannot imagine one. This is especially true since there is no chronological order required. If you do a 180k pop first, then why are you required to do the whimpy 100k pop to get credit? Quite frankly, earning the award with regard to the three individual pops should have no distance requirement except that they should be pops, i.e., 100k to 199k. Maybe the requirement could be a little more restrictive by stipulating that they have to be three DIFFERENT pops.
I have always had a problem with the Rouleur award because of the Dart Pop requirement. I actually like the concept of the Dart Pop. It reminds me of the years of training as a high level competitive cyclist and leading B+ rides for various local bike clubs after "retiring" from competitive cycling. But RUSA currently does not mandate to its RBA's that they offer at least one Dart Pop per year. Without such a mandate the Rouleur is not a legitimate award in my mind. And I don't think RUSA should continue to offer it without instituting the mandate. When someone "volunteers" to work for a nonprofit organization there need to be certain expectations. And offering at least one Dart Pop should be one of those expectations that must be fulfilled. Ideally they should have to offer a minimum of five dart pops a year. Such a requirement would more than likely go a long way to transitioning local bike club members to RUSA membership. Most local bike clubs have riders that make it a point to do at least one 100 mile ride a year. Those riders would be likely candidates to do the Dart Pops.
I noticed time and time again in this string that the ride requirements for the Rouleur award have to be RUSA events. And the lame reason given is the Perm Program would potentially get inundated if perms were allowed. I am pretty familiar with the Perm Program having gotten more than just a few perms approved through it. I would not be surprised if I was told that I am among the top ten most prolific perm authors in RUSA history. I am also aware that the vast majority of perms that have been approved over the years are either pops or 200k brevets. Most states already of a plethora of perm pops that could be ridden for Rouleur credit. This is especially true if the three pop requirement is changed so no specific distance ranges are rquired. Riders wanting to earn the Rouleur award will more than likely ride existing perms rather than try to build a new one, two, or three of their own.
There were a few comments in this string regarding "Rouleur Weeks." I am not a fan of them. They create too much emphasis on earning an award. Especially an award that has little to do with randonneuring. What would be nice, however, is if RBA's would pair a populaire event with a brevet event. For example, offer the pop on a Friday and the brevet on a Saturday. Or a pop on a Saturday and the brevet on a Sunday. The rides would have to be paired. Offering them at the same time on the same day would be unacceptable.