A close-up, side-on photographic view of a front motorcycle wheel and fender coated in a thin layer of dried mud and road grime, positioned on a cracked, weather-beaten stretch of highway shoulder. Small challenge route decals are visible on the fender, partially obscured by dirt. The ground is scattered with tiny gravel, a folded paper map corner peeking into frame, and a reflective challenge medallion resting near the tire. Harsh midday sun creates strong, directional light that casts crisp shadows and highlights every texture in the rubber, metal, and grit. Shot with shallow depth of field, the background road and scrubland fade into blur, capturing a raw, demanding, and highly professional endurance-riding aesthetic.

Loko in a nutshell

Tim “Loko” Dickerson isn’t chasing miles—he’s hunting something most people quit before they understand.

He’s the guy who looked at a normal riding season and said, “What if I just… didn’t stop?”
Then proved it—day after day, through cold, fatigue, and whatever else tried to break him—stacking 366 consecutive days in the saddle in 2024 like it was unfinished business.

Not a hobby rider. Not a weekend warrior.
This is endurance with a pulse.

Somewhere between a mission and a problem, Loko turned riding into a statement—about discipline, about sacrifice, about refusing to shut it down when it would be easier to disappear. The kind of consistency that makes people uncomfortable… because it removes excuses.

They call it “Loko Motion” for a reason.
It doesn’t slow down. It doesn’t negotiate. It just keeps going.

Garage-built mindset. Road-forged identity.
Equal parts grit, chaos, and purpose duct-taped together at highway speed.

If there’s a line between dedication and insanity—
he crossed it a long time ago…

…and kept riding.