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Anna Farkac

Accountant

I bought the biggest, baddest hog I could find; the 2001 KTM LC4. The bike was much too big for me, but once I was flying through the streets and careening across the trails, I just couldn’t keep away.

Born and raised in the Oregon countryside, I have always been drawn to the simple life. Splitting my time between traveling the country and running freely through my father’s timber farm, I learned what it was all about; having as much crazy fun as possible! As a child, I was spending sunny afternoons climbing hundreds of feet in the air, helping my father pick pine cones, or falling asleep in a new state every night selling specialty tie-dye apparel. I quickly got to work enjoying all the adventure the soggy northwest has to offer, skiing before I could even walk and later snowboarding, longboarding, and surfing into adulthood. 

My teenage years were full of backpacking. I traveled most of the United States, Israel, Europe, as well as South America. I loved exploring so much of the world, eating fanciful foods, and meeting all types of characters, but something was missing. The simple, slow life was all well and good, but I was certain there was some je ne sais quoi absent from my time. I realized I wanted to live fast. I craved a speed that was completely foreign to me after all my time on just two legs. The answer was clear; I needed to become an accountant. I moved to Portland, enrolled in college, and graduated from Portland State University in 2020 with a Bachelor of Science in Accounting.

The breakneck world of financial advising was everything that I dreamed it would be and more. Dividends and spreadsheets became my bread and butter. Yet again, another problem arose. My family was much too pleased that I had settled into a reliable and responsible profession. I thought back to my childhood. I recalled never being allowed to ride motorcycles as a child because they were “too dangerous.” As an accountant, I had become all too familiar with danger. I needed a ride to match my newfound cutthroat lifestyle. Thusly, I bought the biggest, baddest hog I could find; the 2001 KTM LC4. The bike was much too big for me, but once I was flying through the streets and careening across the trails, I just couldn’t keep away. Quickly thereafter, I started riding for non-accounting purposes as well. With no one to teach me, I would come home hopelessly wounded, but I had never felt happier. 

While volunteering at a trials event, I heard tell of a certain Columbia gorge based moto apparel and soft luggage company, coincidentally in need of an accountant. I was quite pleased to find a position so perfectly suited to my life! Now you can find me trail hopping through the backcountry, all while making numbers move for Mosko Moto. Stoke!

Born and raised in the Oregon countryside, I have always been drawn to the simple life. Splitting my time between traveling the country and running freely through my father’s timber farm, I learned what it was all about; having as much crazy fun as possible! As a child, I was spending sunny afternoons climbing hundreds of feet in the air, helping my father pick pine cones, or falling asleep in a new state every night selling specialty tie-dye apparel. I quickly got to work enjoying all the adventure the soggy northwest has to offer, skiing before I could even walk and later snowboarding, longboarding, and surfing into adulthood. 

My teenage years were full of backpacking. I traveled most of the United States, Israel, Europe, as well as South America. I loved exploring so much of the world, eating fanciful foods, and meeting all types of characters, but something was missing. The simple, slow life was all well and good, but I was certain there was some je ne sais quoi absent from my time. I realized I wanted to live fast. I craved a speed that was completely foreign to me after all my time on just two legs. The answer was clear; I needed to become an accountant. I moved to Portland, enrolled in college, and graduated from Portland State University in 2020 with a Bachelor of Science in Accounting.

The breakneck world of financial advising was everything that I dreamed it would be and more. Dividends and spreadsheets became my bread and butter. Yet again, another problem arose. My family was much too pleased that I had settled into a reliable and responsible profession. I thought back to my childhood. I recalled never being allowed to ride motorcycles as a child because they were “too dangerous.” As an accountant, I had become all too familiar with danger. I needed a ride to match my newfound cutthroat lifestyle. Thusly, I bought the biggest, baddest hog I could find; the 2001 KTM LC4. The bike was much too big for me, but once I was flying through the streets and careening across the trails, I just couldn’t keep away. Quickly thereafter, I started riding for non-accounting purposes as well. With no one to teach me, I would come home hopelessly wounded, but I had never felt 
happier. 

While volunteering at a trials event, I heard tell of a certain Columbia gorge based moto apparel and soft luggage company, coincidentally in need of an accountant. I was quite pleased to find a position so perfectly suited to my life! Now you can find me trail hopping through the backcountry, all while making numbers move for Mosko Moto. Stoke!