Daughter of Nepal’s Mountains : Laxmi Magar_Mountain Biker

Gaighat Cycle City Network Nepal, December, 13

Laxmi Magar is one and only Nepali Professional Mountain Biker in the present context. She is young mountain biker of 27 years old. She is also a Student of Fine Arts at Kathmandu University. Laxmi ” A Daughter of Nepal Mountains” who was born to race on the lap of high mountain, Laxmi has already been three times National championship from women elite category. She has recently raced Nepal famous high altitude race Yak Attack. She has inspired a lot of women of Nepal.

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Photo From Her Facebbook Wall: Laxmi Magar  National Champion of Nepal & also finished first at 14 th national MTB championship

 

Laxmi started Mountain biking in 2008 AD, recently she had received certificate to be a mountain bike guide, it support her cost of living and in her riding as well.

In an Interview with Norcal cycling She said.

 “I’ve raced with international women in Sri Lanka against Canadians, Americans and Europeans.  They all have very good mountain biking technical skills.  I want to improve, be better and they all inspired me to train harder.”

 

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Photo From her Facebook :  At MTB Himalaya (Mountain Biking Himalaya).

 

In the year 2016 she she has attempt Yak attack which is high altitude Stages race. She is looking for sponsorship for her coming future races. Laxmi has also got opportunity to ride with international Women team.

 

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Laxmi Magar and other rider receiving medal in the 14th National Championship

 

Currently Laxmi is riding a TREK bike on the sponsorship of Kathmandu Bike Station. Her biggest challenges on Biking is to find good sponsorship to cover races also for some medical treatment.

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We Hope laxmi will be inspiring other women to do better on cycling and good luck for her on future mountain biking.

 

 

World First Backward Cyclist Biresh Dahal _ Ridding backward for message of non-violence

Nepali cyclist from the eastern part of Nepal Mr. Biresh Dahal a permanent Resident Of Udayapur,Triyuga has undertaken an unusual mission in the name of world peace. Over the past decade, Biresh Dahal has ridden a bike backwards across three continents to spread his message of non-violence. Biresh is travelling with two companions, who unlike him, prefer to ride forwards. In London on the British leg of his journey.

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Mr. Biresh DAhal Riding back ward in Nepal during his international visit.

We started cycling around the world to promote Nepal around the World and to encourage people to turn way from violence, we hope people will understand the message seeing riding back, I first started cycling in the year 2000, at that time Nepal was in the middle of Mouist conflict, he said about 13000 people killed during the period, we carried the pain with us, we slept in a lot of unusual places in our journey, we stay in Masjit, Churches and Temple. And In some places ladies used to invite us to sleep with them. Some even ask us for money, in the same way one women said should like to have child as courage’s as like me.

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Sometime differences of opinion over which route to take, but we solve the problem asking peoples about route. I some countries like Singapore, we have not been allowed to cycle backwards, but as soon as the police were out of site I explain about my mission and in Saudi Arabia three police van surround us, People do not ride bike there but they ride motor bike there, The Nepalese embassy helped us there and we continue our journey. While riding backward I had problem in my back and also it affected my arms and eyes.

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I want to win the world and we want to have our name in the Guinness world record for a first person cycling backward. Now here we are in London and I have already visited 57 countries of the world, and we are happy with our struggle.

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Mr. Biresh DAhal Riding back ward in Nepal during his international visit.

Note : Photos Are taken from Biresh Dahal Facebook Wall.

Travelling is fun but Riding is memory

December,7

Many people wish to travel for making fun, but a cyclist ride for his memory. Cycling is such type of travel which provide us fun along with the beautiful memory. Regular cycling keep us healthy and smart. A cyclist can earn so many calories through cycling.

In the same way, Gaighat  Cycle City youth have been engaging in cycling for the green city as well as for their regular exercise purpose. Around 50 number of professional bikers from Gaighat used to  ride bike regularly. According to them they used to ride bike arround 50 Km regularly.

Talking with us, a member of GCCN Jitendra Roila said they are huge number of trail for cycling around Gaighat city. We have technical trail as well as normal trail, said Roila. he added we have kakani trail, rauta trail, chure trail, beltar trail and many other short trail. Mountain biking is possible in gaighat he said.

1870s: the high-wheel bicycle:Wikipedia

Main article: Penny-farthing

The high-bicycle was the logical extension of the boneshaker, the front wheel enlarging to enable higher speeds (limited by the inside leg measurement of the rider),[15][16][17][18] the rear wheel shrinking and the frame being made lighter. Frenchman Eugène Meyer is now regarded as the father of the high bicycle[19] by the ICHC in place of James Starley. Meyer invented the wire-spoke tension wheel in 1869 and produced a classic high bicycle design until the 1880s.

A penny-farthing or ordinary bicycle photographed in the Škoda museumin the Czech Republic

James Starley in Coventry added the tangent spokes and the mounting step to his famous bicycle named “Ariel.” He is regarded as the father of the British cycling industry. Ball bearings, solid rubber tires and hollow-section steel frames became standard, reducing weight and making the ride much smoother. Depending on the rider’s leg length, the front wheel could now have a diameter up to 60 in (1.5 m).

Starley’s “Royal Salvo” tricycle, as owned by Queen Victoria

This type of bicycle was retronymed the “ordinary” (since there were then no other kind)[20] and was later nicknamed “penny-farthing” in England (a penny representing the front wheel, and a coin smaller in size and value, the farthing, representing the rear). They were fast, but unsafe. The rider was high up in the air and traveling at a great speed. If he hit a bad spot in the road he could easily be thrown over the front wheel and be seriously injured (two broken wrists were common, in attempts to break a fall)[21] or even killed. “Taking a header” (also known as “coming a cropper”), was not at all uncommon. The rider’s legs were often caught underneath the handlebars, so falling free of the machine was often not possible. The dangerous nature of these bicycles (as well as Victorian mores) made cycling the preserve of adventurous young men. The risk averse, such as elderly gentlemen, preferred the more stable tricycles or quadracycles. In addition, women’s fashion of the day made the “ordinary” bicycle inaccessible. Queen Victoria owned Starley’s “Royal Salvo” tricycle, though there is no evidence she actually rode it.

Although French and English inventors modified the velocipede into the high-wheel bicycle, the French were still recovering from the Franco-Prussian war, so English entrepreneurs put the high-wheeler on the English market, and the machine became very popular there, Coventry, Oxford, Birmingham and Manchester being the centers of the English bicycle industry (and of the arms or sewing machineindustries, which had the necessary metalworking and engineering skills for bicycle manufacturing, as in Paris and St. Etienne, and in New England).[22] Soon bicycles found their way across the English Channel. By 1875, high-wheel bicycles were becoming popular in France, though ridership expanded slowly.

In the United States, Bostonians such as Frank Weston started importing bicycles in 1877 and 1878, and Albert Augustus Pope started production of his “Columbia” high-wheelers in 1878, and gained control of nearly all applicable patents, starting with Lallement’s 1866 patent. Pope lowered the royalty (licensing fee) previous patent owners charged, and took his competitors to court over the patents. The courts supported him, and competitors either paid royalties ($10 per bicycle), or he forced them out of business. There seems to have been no patent issue in France, where English bicycles still dominated the market. By 1884 high-wheelers and tricycles were relatively popular among a small group of upper-middle-class people in all three countries, the largest group being in England. Their use also spread to the rest of the world, chiefly because of the extent of the British Empire.

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