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In the early days of bicycling he was associated with Dunlop tyres.
Bicycle monarchy (or bicycling monarchy) is a British term that refers to the more informal and modest personal styles of the royal families of countries in Scandinavia and the Low Countries, particularly the Netherlands.
His articles included first-person reports on such activities as bicycling in Bali, hiking to Mount Everest, whitewater rafting in Papua New Guinea, and natural history cruising in the Galapagos Islands.
In 1889, a new cyclorama painting Custer's Last Fight, was installed, but by 1890, the fashion for cycloramas had ended, and the new owner of the building, John Gardner (father-in-law of Isabella Stewart Gardner), converted it to a venue for popular entertainment, including a carousel, roller skating, boxing tournaments (including an 1894 fight of John L. Sullivan), horseback riding, bicycling, and so on.
Frank Louis Kramer (1880-1952), American cyclist and United States Bicycling Hall of Fame inductee
Galloping Goose Regional Trail - bicycling and pedestrian trail in British Columbia, Canada
An updated series was relaunched in 2001 as "Golden Guides by St. Martin's Press".
Hash House Bikers, an international group of non-competitive bicycling, social clubs
He played an important role in the establishment of an Elizabethan research centre in Aix-en-Provence and contributed to the Golden Guides series a volume on wines.
It is said that Jerne got his revolutionary scientific idea while bicycling across the Langebro bridge in Copenhagen on his way home from work.
Potter died of a heart attack in 1995 while bicycling in Falmouth.
Every four years, Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines serves as the start and finish point of the famous Paris–Brest–Paris bicycling endurance event.