There's a route that crosses Western Australia that most people have never cycled. It follows the path of the historic Golden Pipeline — built over a century ago to carry water across the desert to the goldfields, keeping communities alive when they needed it most.
Every year, a group of extraordinary people ride that same route. For five days through heat, red dust, long days and nights under the stars. Not for a medal. Not for glory. But because somewhere at the end of that road, there are young families who need what the original pipeline always carried: a lifeline.
This is the Big Yellow Pipeline Challenge, and this Youth Week, it feels more important than ever.

Two Stories for the Price of One Ride
Here's what makes the Pipeline Challenge different from most fundraising events: it doesn't just change the lives of those it funds. It changes the lives of the people who ride it.
Laney is one of those people. Before she came to Youth Futures, she had never even attended her Year 6 school camp. Anxiety had kept her from a lot of things. When the Pipeline Challenge came up, she almost didn't sign up. She was going through one of the hardest weeks of her life — a painful breakup and losing two dogs in the same week. A week later, she was on a bike heading to Kalgoorlie.
"I ended up finishing it," she said, "and yeah, it just felt really like outside of my comfort zone... I feel like it really made me realise that I can handle a lot more than I think I can."
Today, Laney is studying a Bachelor of Science at university. She applied two weeks before classes started and just went for it. The Pipeline Challenge was her first "wow, I did that" moment. University was her second.
Liam rode it twice. He came to Youth Futures feeling like he was going nowhere — getting sent out of class, bummed out, not sure what his life was for. The Pipeline Challenge wasn't something he overthought. "I thought, you're not really losing anything. You're just helping other people." He loved camping and he loved riding, so it made perfect sense for him to sign up. He ended up calling it one of his favourite things he's ever done, gutted he couldn't do a third year.
These are the stories Youth Week was made for. Young people who weren't sure they had anything to offer, discovering — through 600 kilometres of hard pedalling — that they had more strength than they knew.

What the Funds Actually Do
Every single dollar raised through the Pipeline Challenge goes directly to The Nest — Youth Futures' program supporting young parents experiencing homelessness, housing instability, or family and domestic violence.
In 2025, the challenge raised $640,000 with funds raised and sponsorship going directly to the Nest.
Think about what that means in a real person's life. Think about Marli, who entered The Nest after leaving home to keep her child safe from family violence. Her child had significant medical needs. Marli navigated surgery, appointments, advocacy — all while dealing with isolation and the kind of stress most of us will never face. For years she waited on the Department of Housing Priority Waitlist. In February 2026, she finally received long-term public housing. She's now focused on childcare, her driver's license, study, and work.
The Nest team said it best: "We are so incredibly proud of the resilience, adaptability, and determination Marli has shown."
But here's the thing that should make you stop. In 2025, The Nest couldn't help everyone who asked. 56 young parents seeking outreach support, and 163 seeking accommodation, couldn't be reached — simply because there wasn't enough capacity. Behind each of those numbers is a parent doing their best, and a child whose earliest experiences depend on what happens next.
That's why the Pipeline Challenge matters. Not just for the families it reaches today, but for expanding what's possible tomorrow.

The Metaphor That Runs Through Everything
The original Golden Pipeline was an engineering marvel — built to solve a crisis, to connect people to something they desperately needed. It worked because a community believed it was worth building.
The Big Yellow Pipeline Challenge follows that same logic. It works because riders, donors, sponsors, and supporters choose to believe that young families deserve safety, stability, and a future. That young people like Laney and Liam deserve the chance to discover what they're capable of.
This Youth Week, as we celebrate Strength in Our Stories, the Pipeline Challenge reminds us that strength isn't always loud. Sometimes it's showing up nervous and doing it anyway. Sometimes it's getting on a bike when your heart is broken. Sometimes it's a community choosing to ride 600 kilometres so a young mum and her child can come home.

Want to Be Part of the Story?
The Big Yellow Pipeline Challenge is open to riders of all abilities. Whether you ride, donate, or simply share the story — you become part of something that carries real weight.
Find out more and register at pipelinechallenge.com.au
The Nest exists because people show up. Be one of them.