As people broke away from the rally site for the Women’s March on Washington, those who headed up 4th Street marched right past a small ‘Bikers for Trump’ concert. A coupled dozen decided to crash, heading up an expanse of lawn on at Pennsylvania Avenue.

At one point, the women’s marchers appeared to outnumber the concert attendees, drowning out founder Chris Cox with chants of “three million votes!”—Hillary Clinton’s lead over Donald Trump in the popular vote.

When Cox took to repeating “Bikers for Trump” over the loud speaker, several in the crowd shouting back: “He’s orange! He’s gross! He lost the popular vote!”

But while one exchange was testy—a Trump fan yelled “we don’t care about you” to the marchers—the two groups co-mingled peacefully and the majority of the chanting women’s marchers left quickly. The ones who stuck around danced with their signs and rainbow flags aloft, a visual counter-narrative to the black and red Bikers For Trump signs held by leather clad attendees.

“After they put on Kid Rock, everyone started dancing together,” said Roger Hale. “We prefer everyone to get along.” He counts himself among the Bikers for Trump, as does his wife Rose, and came out to support the group.

But they also attended the march earlier in the day, partially in support of Roger’s daughter Lzzy Hale, the lead singer of Halestorm and a supporter of women’s rights. “Women showing empowerment—that’s a good thing, but somehow things got twisted and anti-Trump” among some of the crowd, Hale said.

Debra Livernois, a Trump campaign volunteer in Massachusetts, also went to both the concert and the march. “I wanted to attend to have a presence to support our president—all of our president,” she said, with a red, white, and blue rhinestone elephant pinned to a red shirt emblazoned with Trump’s face.

Livernois said she stood off to the side at the march, holding a pink “women for Trump” sign with the goal of talking to the attendees. “I just wish that they understood him better … they’re not educated about who he is and what he wants to do,” she said. “We all want the same things.”

Stephen Schumacher, a Trump supporter who attends Catholic University’s law school, went to the march in a MAGA hat and rollerblades before jamming with the Bikers For Trump. “It’s togetherness—that’s the whole spirit of this week,” he said, saying he and a friend in town from Michigan were both treated better than he expected at the Women’s March. “I was spat on outside the Deploraball. But I was actually talking to people on the other side, having a dialogue.”

Bikers for Trump, which pledged to form a “wall of meat” around protesters, also rallied during Friday’s inauguration. A country band played to another thin crowd.