Iowa
Towns of RAGBRAI 2026: What to know about the communities on the route
RAGBRAI 2025 riders share their excitement for the start of the ride
RAGBRAI 2025 is officially underway. We caught up with some riders as they prepared to leave Orange City on July 20, 2025.
From Boone to Dyersville to Dubuque, there’s lots to love on the RAGBRAI 2026 route.
The route for the 53rd edition of the Register’s Annual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa, announced on Saturday, Jan. 24, will extend 391.4 miles from Onawa to Dubuque. Along the July 19-25 journey, riders will stop in Harlan, Guthrie Center, Boone, Marshalltown, Independence, and Dyersville.
Here’s what to know about the starting, ending and overnight towns.
Onawa
Population: 2,906.
Previous times on RAGBRAI: Starting town: 1977, 1983, 1987, 1995, 2004 and 2018.
The county seat of Monona County, Onawa was named for a character in the 1855 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow epic poem “The Song of Hiawatha.”
Edy’s Pie, America’s first chocolate-covered ice cream bar, was created in 1920 in Onawa when a young customer of local ice cream parlor owner Christian Nelson had a hard time deciding whether to buy a chocolate bar or ice cream.
“‘I want ‘em both, but I only got a nickel,’” the boy said, according to the Iowa History Journal.
Nelson found he could make melted chocolate harden into a sturdy shell by adding cocoa butter to the mix before dipping a block of vanilla ice cream in it and putting it in a freezer. He also created a machine to dip the bars.
Nelson partnered with candy entrepreneur Russell Stover to distribute the product, branded as Eskimo Pie at the suggestion of Stover’s wife Clara. In 2021 the product was renamed Edy’s Pie to honor candy maker Joseph Edy.
On a less sweet note, from 1944 to 1946 during World War II, Onawa was home to a small prisoner of war camp for German soldiers.
Harlan
Population: 4,893.
Previous times on RAGBRAI: Overnight town: 1976, 1983, 1994, 2000, 2008 and 2013.
Harlan is named for James Harlan, a two-term U.S. senator from Iowa who served around the time of the Civil War and Reconstruction. He also was briefly U.S. secretary of the interior.
Milk & Honey, a local landmark, is a one-of-a-kind farm-to-table restaurant in a rural small town. Don’t miss its skillets, omelets and French toast.
Harlan was the hometown of DeWayne Louis “Tiny” Lund, a journeyman stock car driver who won the 1963 Daytona 500. Lund began his career at the local Shelby County Speedway, a one-third-mile dirt track.
Lund was given his ironic nickname because his 6-foot-5-inch 260-pound frame barely fit in the cars he raced. Lund won at Daytona while filling in for his friend Marvin Panch after pulling him from a fiery crash in a sports car race just days beforehand.
Lund was killed on Aug. 17, 1975, in a crash during the Talladega 500. The annual Tiny Lund Memorial Weekend at Shelby County Speedway celebrates his life and legacy.
Guthrie Center
Population: 1,593.
Previous times on RAGBRAI: Overnight town: 1974, 1983. Pass-through town: 1986, 2001, 2006, 2013.
Guthrie Center, on the far western edge of the Des Moines metro, served as an overnight town twice in RAGBRAI’s first 11 years. While RAGBRAI has passed through four times since then, it hasn’t repeated as an overnight town until this year.
The county’s first railroad, a narrow-gauge line, is now part of the Raccoon River Valley Trail that links with other central Iowa trails to form a 120-mile paved loop that reputedly is the longest in the nation.
Guthrie Center is the county seat of Guthrie County.
Boone
Population: 12,460
Previous times on RAGBRAI: Overnight town: 1975, 1988, 1998, 2011. Pass-through town: 1973, 1976, 2008, 2018.
Two iconic Iowa businesses opened their first stores in Boone. The Fareway supermarket chain, incorporated in Ames, began with a store in Boone in 1938 and was headquartered there until moving to the Des Moines suburb of Johnston in 2024.
Casey’s General Stores started with a single Boone location in 1968. Now based in Ankeny, it’s the third-largest convenience store chain in the nation.
Today both Casey’s and Fareway serve hungry RAGBRAI riders throughout Iowa.
Among Boone’s natives: Mamie Doud Eisenhower, wife of President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
A railroad town, it’s home to the Boone & Scenic Valley Railroad excursion trains and a railroad museum.
Marshalltown
Population: 27,591.
Previous times on RAGBRAI: Overnight town: 1974, 1994, 2004, 2012.
On July 19, 2018, an EF-3 tornado ripped through Marshalltown and damaged almost every building in the city. They’re now restored, including the historic courthouse, which took a heavy pounding from the storm, losing its spire.
Taylor’s Maid Rite, a franchise of the loose-meat sandwich chain, is a local, family-owned landmark at 106 S Third Ave., where it’s been in business since 1928. Marshalltown also is home of the nationally known tool company that bears its name.
Drone video shows extent of tornado damage in Marshalltown
Drone video shows the extent of the damage around the square and coliseum after a tornado ripped through Marshalltown.
Brian Powers and Michael Zamora, The Register
Independence
Population: 6,064
Previous times on RAGBRAI: Overnight town: 1982, 2007, 2014. Pass-through town: 1989.
Independence is appropriate place for RAGBRAI to celebrate during America’s 250th year. It was founded in 1847 when the Iowa Legislature moved the Buchanan County seat to the then-new site. With Fourth of July approaching, the village’s residents chose to name it in honor of the Declaration of Independence, according to the Independence Area Chamber of Commerce.
Built in 1854, the Wapsipinicon Feed Mill is a local landmark on the Wapsipinicon River. The current mill dates from 1867 and operated until 1976, when the Buchanan County Historical Society turned it into a museum.
RAGBRAI this year honors water towers on its logo, and the Independence water tower is an appropriately painted with a blue tank and red and white stripes.
With its broad patio, Denali’s on the River, northwest of town on the Wapsipinicon, is a fun spot to enjoy a meal and watch the river flow by.
Dyersville
Population: 4,477
Previous times on RAGBRAI: Overnight town: 1989, 2007. Pass-through town: 1983, 1993, 2010.
RAGBRAI riders can get a taste of heaven in Dyersville, the eastern Iowa town made famous when the 1989 movie “Field of Dreams” was filmed on two farms just outside its boundaries.
One of the classic baseball film’s most memorable moments comes when James Earl Jones, playing writer Terence Mann, is befuddled by the ghost players on the baseball diamond that Kevin Costner’s farmer character Ray Kinsella has built amid tall cornstalks. He asks Kinsella, “Is this Heaven?” Kinsella replies, “No, it’s Iowa.”
In the decades since the movie was filmed, the site has become one of Iowa’s most popular tourist attractions. In 2021 Major League Baseball hosted its first game on a special field built next to the movie’s ballfield.
In 2010, the last time RAGBRAI passed through Dyersville, the route went right by the movie site. Major League Baseball will hold another game between the Minnesota Twins and Philadelphia Phillies at the site on Aug. 13, less than three weeks after RAGBRAI visits.
Dubuque
Population: 59,667.
Previous times on RAGBRAI: Ending town: 1974, 1983, 1993, 2010.
The first town founded in Iowa will be the last on RAGBRAI 53.
French trader Nicholas Perrot, one of first Europeans to reach the upper Mississippi River valley, established a trading post near modern-day Dubuque in the 1680s. About a century later, in 1785, French-Canadian explorer Julien Dubuque became the first permanent settler on the site of the town that would bear his name.
The city of Dubuque was incorporated in 1837, and attracted immigrants from Ireland and Germany. The archdiocese of Dubuque that served those immigrants remains the seat of the Roman Catholic church in Iowa.
Occupying a scenic site on the western banks of the Mississippi and spilling over onto the tall bluffs beyond, Dubuque’s attractions include historic architecture, a casino, the National Mississippi River Museum & Aquarium and a unique funicular railway that carries passengers from the downtown basin to a hilltop neighborhood.
Philip Joens has ridden parts of 20 RAGBRAIs. He has completed the river-to-river trek nine times. He covers retail and real estate for the Des Moines Register and can be reached at 515-284-8184 or at pjoens@registermedia.com.
Iowa
State approves road and bridge improvements in eastern Iowa
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (KCRG) – The Iowa Transportation Commission approved a $4.2 billion transportation improvement plan Tuesday.
The five-year plan lists investments to Iowa’s airports, highways, trails and railroads. About $3.9 billion is expected to be put toward road and bridge improvements.
In eastern Iowa, there are 14 projects planned for Johnson County, 15 in Linn County, 14 in Black Hawk County and 15 in Dubuque County.
One of the planned projects in Johnson County is $56,000,000 in improvements on I-380 from north of North Liberty to the Swisher/Shueyville area. There is also $11,700,000 to repave I-380 from north of Cedar Rapids through Exit 30 in Linn County.
Also in Linn County, $27,300,000 is allocated to a new bridge and repaving Highway 151 in Springville.
In Iowa County, there is more than $43,000,000 budgeted for replacing a bridge, traffic improvements and repaving along I-80 north of Williamsburg.
In Dubuque, $12,500,000 available to repave Highway 20 from Old Highway Road to Crescent Ridge.
The state also highlighted plans to add nearly 50 additional truck parking spots at interstate rest stops.
Copyright 2026 KCRG. All rights reserved.
Iowa
Iowa colleges say Forbes report misses full story
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (KCRG) — Forbes handed out grades to private colleges across the country, but some are saying the report card got it wrong.
“The C grade, quite frankly, is not reflective of our current strength,” said Todd Olson, Mount Mercy University president. “I approach the Forbes rating with interest, with respect, but not with a sense that it is the final correct answer on every school. I think that it’s one way of looking.”
Olson leads an institution in transition. Mount Mercy is merging with St. Ambrose University, a move Olson said has been in the works for three years.
Before the merger, Mount Mercy had a $43 million endowment, had operated at a deficit for two of the last 10 years and had cut staff and programming.
Merger aims to strengthen financial position
“We were setting up a responsible, but frankly, fairly challenging road ahead that was constrained in a variety of ways,” Olson said. “We had made moves to make sure we were on a track that was sustainable, but frankly, this track we’re on now with St. Ambrose enables us to be much more innovative and forward-looking.”
Olson said the financial aspect of the merger with St. Ambrose is complete and is expected to become final with U.S. Department of Education approval this fall.
With a combined endowment exceeding $300 million, Olson said the merger makes Mount Mercy stronger than Forbes’ C grade indicates.
“This is a very viable and, in fact, very promising option for many private universities to consider, and the fact is the economics of operating a private university are much easier as you build scale,” Olson said.
Olson said two factors facing all private institutions are lower birth rates and more people questioning the value of a college degree.
Top-rated school emphasizes affordability
Reflecting on its A+ grade, University of Dubuque President Travis Frampton credited alumni generosity, leadership’s vision and the university’s $430 million endowment.
Frampton also looked ahead to the future, saying private institutions need to continually prove their value to the community.
“For so long across the country, the public has been concerned about that with the high cost of higher education. I think presidents and administrations need to be mindful and listen to that public cry, and find ways of making costs more affordable,” Frampton said.
Frampton said the University of Dubuque could have put its proposed College of Osteopathic Medicine at its main campus, but instead, put the school on Main Street.
“By locating the medical school in downtown Dubuque, to me, that demonstrated how it would benefit the business community, generate growth, work on brain drain in Iowa,” Frampton said. “That helps diversify and get out of just sort of this tuition dependency and more in building a community through university.”
Frampton said Forbes awarding the University of Dubuque top marks for its financial situation affirmed his belief that diversifying an institution’s assets makes it stronger, citing the proposed medical school and expansions to its aviation program, moves that took the university years to develop.
“Your financial picture is not done in one snapshot,” Frampton said. “Previous administration, the board leadership, alumni giving to the university have all contributed significantly to our current position.”
Both presidents said a university is worth more than a single grade. It’s about trust built over years, proving why its tuition is worth it.
Coe College received a D grade from Forbes. The magazine did not give F grades and said 27% of private colleges in the U.S. also received a D.
You can find your private institution’s grade on the business magazine’s website.
Coe College told TV9 in a statement:
“We are aware of the Forbes article and recognize the challenges and headwinds that colleges and universities are facing nationwide and Coe is not immune to those challenges. The scope of the methodology behind the Forbes grading scale is narrow. Having the willingness and capability to realign approach is essential for colleges and universities as the rate of change across industries accelerates. At Coe, we have successfully embraced that evolution by putting workforce-aligned strategic initiatives into action.
As just one example, Coe is experiencing great momentum and student interest through the addition of an aviation studies and flight operations program which provides the training necessary to become a commercial pilot or pursue a professional aviation career. This program, among others, has brought interest in the college from new students and constituents.
We’re seeing similar momentum with the addition of an engineering physics program as well as other areas of study. We are at the beginning phase of offering our first online degree program with more to come in the future. Our athletic programs have expanded to include women’s wrestling which will compete for the first time during the 2026-2027 academic year.
In addition, the college has benefited from a number of large gifts from a nationwide donor base to support current operations and growth of our new programs.
The college is continually evaluating and evolving as we see the opportunity to do so to match our educational experience to industry demands. With these additions and assessments, the college is positioned for stability in the present and growth in the future.”
Watch TV9’s interview with University of Dubuque President Travis Frampton:
Watch TV9’s interview with Mount Mercy University President Todd Olson:
Copyright 2026 KCRG. All rights reserved.
Iowa
Iowa team sent to Texas to fight Screwworm
KERRVILLE, Texas (AP/KCRG) – A team from Iowa has been sent to Texas to help combat the spread of a pest that is threatening to devastate the U.S. cattle industry.
Three more cases of the New World screwworm have been confirmed, including one outside the main cluster in Texas, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced Monday.
During a news conference, USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins said a team from the National Veterinary Services Lab in Ames has been sent to Texas to monitor for cases. The lab is a key facility for animal disease testing and has been conducting tests in Ames but Rollins said the team could be more efficient and test samples quicker by being on location in Texas.
The screwworm is actually a fly larva that eats living flesh instead of dead material. Females lay their eggs in open wounds of warm-blooded animals like cattle, but wildlife, pets and occasionally even humans can be infested. The government has a program to breed sterile male flies and drop swarms of them from planes to mate with wild females, which kept screwworm contained at the southern end of Panama for decades.
So far, there are five confirmed cases: three calves and a goat in Texas and a dog from neighboring Lea County, New Mexico. The dog, which the USDA initially reported as a Texas case, lives in New Mexico and was reclassified as the first in that state. The animal’s travel history is being investigated.
The first two screwworm cases were discovered last week in calves a few miles apart in south Texas. A case was announced Monday in a calf in La Salle County, southwest of San Antonio, and in a goat in Gillespie County, west of Austin.
Scientists expect new cases could pop up in the coming days and weeks, but it doesn’t mean screwworm is spreading rapidly, said Edward Burgess, a University of Florida entomologist who studies the fly.
“When that first case is seen, everyone is being vigilant and their eyes are on it more intensely,” Burgess said. “And when you are looking for something, you are more likely to see it.”
The USDA and the U.S. cattle industry have been racing to prevent an infestation since screwworm was detected in Mexico late in 2024. Screwworm was eliminated in the U.S. in the 1960s, and gets its name from the maggots’ habit of burrowing — or screwing — into a wound, according to the USDA.
So far, its reappearance hasn’t greatly affected beef prices, which are already near record levels because there are fewer cows in the U.S. Although the parasite attacks live cattle, it does not infest meat or fruit. There are also a dozen government-approved medications to treat livestock.
Canada temporarily stopped importing cattle, horses or other livestock from Texas on Friday. The parasites prefer humid areas where temperatures are at least 77 F (25 C), making them more of a summer problem up north.
Burgess said the long-term solution — breeding sterile male flies — is months away. Since wild female flies mate just once, if that encounter is with a sterile male, outbreaks can eventually be halted as the flies die out.
The USDA is working to both increase sterile fly production in plants outside the U.S. and build a massive fly factory in Texas.
The goal is to have enough sterile flies to stop the pests from returning in 2027 after the winter kills off most of them, USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins said at a news conference at the U.S. Livestock Insects Research Laboratory in Kerrville, Texas. She said building the plants is a top government priority.
Scientists are also working on ways to sterilize only male flies to make the program even more effective.
Texas officials encouraged ranchers to keep a close eye on their herds and other wildlife and report anything suspicious to a hotline open 24 hours a day. They also established a website and map to post cases as they are reported.
“This is a highly treatable condition if you act on it immediately,” Republican Gov. Greg Abbott said.
However, Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller — who lost the Republican primary to a candidate backed by Abbott — said the federal response will take too long and risks crippling the cattle industry.
Instead, he says a poison bait could eliminate the screwworm problem in a few months, even if USDA and other experts say the bait hasn’t been proven effective and could poison other flies, animals and even humans.
“What the hell is a good fly?” Miller said in an interview.
___
Associated Press writer Scott McFetridge in Des Moines, Iowa, contributed to this report.
Copyright 2026 KCRG. All rights reserved.
-
Boston, MA14 seconds agoRed Sox’s Aroldis Chapman Wants to Stay, But Boston Holds the Cards
-
Denver, CO7 minutes agoTrammell Crow, PCCP secure Denver area’s largest industrial lease in years
-
Seattle, WA10 minutes agoSeattle Mayor Katie Wilson mayor ripped after unveiling fleet of tiny homes likened to porta-potty drug dens
-
San Diego, CA15 minutes agoSan Diego City Council will vote on fiscal year 2027 budget
-
Milwaukee, WI22 minutes ago
1 injured in shooting near two Milwaukee schools and a daycare center
-
Atlanta, GA25 minutes agoFirst time watching soccer? Here’s what to know before World Cup in ATL
-
Minneapolis, MN30 minutes agoMinneapolis standoff: Deputies fired at while serving arrest warrant
-
Indianapolis, IN37 minutes agoVery humid through Thursday night with more storms on the way