In the first days of November, Alexis Cartier finally rolled up to his doorstep in Montreal, a little leaner, a little dustier and with ten thousand miles in his legs. He’d been gone since April, spending the last seven months racing, camping and pedalling his way across a continent.

“That was a cool ride,” he says, with the understatement of someone describing a weekend spin. “It was a bit more than I planned: about 10,000 miles, 16,000 kilometres, of bikepacking in seven months.”

Ten thousand miles. That’s about twice what the average cycling enthusiast logs in a year; roughly the distance from Montreal to Buenos Aires; or, in Cartier’s case, the distance from California to Kansas, to Colorado, to Wisconsin, to Arkansas, and finally back to Quebec.

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For Cartier, 34, this wasn’t some bucket-list bike tour or sabbatical adventure; it was his commute.

The Canadian racer spent 2025 contesting the Life Time Grand Prix, America’s premier off-road race series, which spans seven months, six events and the width of the United States. He entered as a Wild Card selection, one of a handful of athletes invited to take on the series without guaranteed spots, but rather than amassing air miles between start lines, Cartier chose to ride to every single one.

Canadian cyclist Alexis Cartier rode to every start line of the Life Time Grand Prix

(Image credit: John Gibson / gibsonpictures.com)

Unbound Gravel in Kansas, Cartier boarded his only flight of the season, returning to Canada to stay within U.S. visa limits and to race the Canadian Gravel Nationals, where he finished eighth.

Two months separated Unbound from the next Life Time Grand Prix stop in Colorado’s Rocky Mountains, so Cartier spent that midseason gap the best way he knows how: on the bike.

He rode out to the Great Divide, tackling a portion of the cross-continental trail with his girlfriend. He also swung by Bozeman, Montana, for the Belgian Waffle Ride, which was conveniently right off the Divide.

Beyond that “special” break, Cartier was mostly alone, tackling long miles before setting up his tent for the night.

“I carried a good tent because it’s my house,” he says. “It’s sturdy, a bit heavy, but I can get rained on or have wind and it stands up.”

Occasionally, when heat or fatigue demanded it, he checked into a hotel. “Maybe once or twice a week,” he says. “But honestly, I sleep better in the tent now. It’s my little bubble.”

Solitude became part of the rhythm. His screen time plummeted; he planned routes on his phone but otherwise read on an e-reader or simply sat outside his tent, watching the light fade.

“You live with the natural light,” he says. “When the sun goes down, you go to sleep. When the sun comes up, you ride.” And eat whenever you can.

“ I’ve been eating a lot, that’s for sure. I just eat all the time.”

Canadian cyclist Alexis Cartier rode to every start line of the Life Time Grand Prix

Cartier’s setup for Leadville: his gravel steed with a short-travel suspension fork

(Image credit: Alexis Cartier)

3T Ultra gravel bike, modified for the demands of full-time living. He outfitted it with Old Man Mountain racks and Arkel panniers, a nod to his past life as a designer for the Quebec-based bag maker.

“They’re fully waterproof and super solid,” he says. “It’s fun, too, because I’m riding some of my own designs.”

Fully loaded, the bike weighed close to 100 pounds. “Heavy, but really stable,” as Cartier puts it, carrying a tent, two sleeping bags, two inflatable pillows, a small stove, extra clothes, and spares.

“Yes, two bags and pillows: to get really cozy, nice and comfortable because it got freezing sometimes,” he says.

At most races, he lined up on the same machine he’d just ridden hundreds or thousands of miles to reach. But some events demanded improvisation. For Little Sugar, the mountain-bike race in Arkansas, Cartier rented a bike, something almost unheard of among professionals.

“I hadn’t raced mountain bikes in about fifteen years,” he says. “But it came back.”

At Leadville, one of the most punishing courses in the series, he raced on his gravel bike paired with a short-travel suspension fork and 650b x 2.4” tyres.

“I wouldn’t recommend it,” he laughs. “Those bikes aren’t made for suspension, but it worked. The geometry is a bit weird, but I could fit the tyres, and it was fine. Still really bumpy, though.”

That adaptability and the willingness to race with whatever equipment he had became central to his ride-to-the-race ethos. Training followed the same philosophy. Instead of structured sessions on a clean bike and smooth roads, Cartier did his intervals on a machine loaded with camping gear, racks and bags as he pedalled toward the next start line.

Canadian cyclist Alexis Cartier rode to every start line of the Life Time Grand Prix

Cartier at the series finale at Big Sugar Classic in Arkansas.

(Image credit: Life Time)

tornado alert, and I was in the corner of a hotel bathroom watching the radar. The tornado went about ten miles from the hotel.”

What surprised him most was the kindness he encountered.

“People are really friendly,” he says. “Maybe you’re treated differently when you have bags on your bike. You look like a traveller, not like you’re just working out.”

Canadian cyclist Alexis Cartier rode to every start line of the Life Time Grand Prix

“But honestly, I sleep better in the tent now. It’s my little bubble,” says Cartier.

(Image credit: John Gibson / gibsonpictures.com)

The Traka,” he says. “And I’m really looking into the Tour Divide.”

Still, there’s no denying the satisfaction of having finished what he started.

“I really liked my life riding everywhere,” Cartier says. “It’s so simple.”

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