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Watch: You might want to join the Gods in wearing headgear after watching this

That's cute, try Bangladesh. It's a sin to ride a bicycle in Bangladesh roads and you will be punished through execution by either a bus or truck driver.

LOL
 
Yeah, but how many bicycles do Indians use?
not in cities.. small towns and villages, still used.
city sizes are so big, and India is so hot for most time, you will get sun stroke or completely burnt when you reach office.
 
That's cute, try Bangladesh. It's a sin to ride a bicycle in Bangladesh roads and you will be punished through execution by either a bus or truck driver.

LOL
 
India has 90 bicycles for every 1,000 people, compared with 149 in China.
And how many of those 90 bicycles are there just to rot? I have 2 bicycles rotting in my house.
 
40 to 70 % Indians use cycle for there transportation

Delhi’s hidden delight: A haven for high end cyclists


  • Shruti Saxena, one of the high end cyclists in Delhi. Image courtesy Shruti Saxena.

    Firefox and its international partner brand Trek (promoted by Lance Amstrong) pretty much kicked off the premium biking culture here and become a good alternative to a high end gym.

    “International quality cycles were missing in the bicycle sector as a whole. It was a space that had not been explored,” he said.

    “While we found that people, who have returned from abroad and seen cycling as a culture are ready to get into here as well with a good bike, we don’t paint a rosy picture either. Traffic conditions are different at certain times of the day, but once you get into it -specially early morning- Delhi is a magical city to cycle in,”Inder said.

    Giving Firefox and Trek competition are the many other high end brands that are available now like Cannon Dale, Giant and Bianchi. They have given the 45-year-old Supreme Cycles shop enough reason to open two new branches over the last two years stocking just international brands.

    “We do a minimum sale of 25 lakh rupees a month,” Gaurav Wadhwa , the 25-year-old owner and himself a cyclist, said.

    The eye opener comes when you decide to step out of the air conditioning on four wheels. Delhi actually has a cycling lane! It goes all along the BRT (the Bus Rapid Transport multi-lane road) from Moolchand to Ambedkar Nagar covering a distance of 5.8 km one way. The MG road that connects South Delhi to Gurgaon, has another one that’s barricaded all the way with exits on main points and regular traffic running along side as well as the metro shuttling past above.

    Central Delhi and many other wide tree covered inner roads may not have a bike lane, but they open up a journey through nature and the colonial architecture which have made the area a fixture on the ‘one good thing about Delhi’ lists. Barren landscapes like Suraj Kund, Mehrauli, Chattarpur, all just 20 minutes from the nearest main colony, make for some heart-pounding, unadulterated adventure, where fancy shockers and suspension are put to good use. So that should justify the 1,200-plus passionate cyclists in the city.

    But there is another side. The sight of a helmet and shorts clad cyclist on a fancy bike is still quite alien to many onlookers and motorists. The North Indian belt has never held back its humorously intrusive comments. Raman Chugh, the 37-year-old founder of the Delhi cyclists group, says other than a few people at red lights saying “wow” and asking him the price of his bike, it’s been a breeze.

    Guragon-based Nepalese businessman Manish Shreshta says he “doesn’t listen to music while cycling, unlike running” so his ears have heard the odd teasing remark. He just smiles or grunts back.

    Shruti Saxena who works with Fortis Health care and owns a Rs 35,000 rupee Canon Dale, avoids going solo in areas she’s not familiar with when she’s not on her twice-a-week early morning 25 km group ride.

    Of course, it’s not just about being fancy. It’s also about helping the environment. The Delhi government already has shown its colours by placing ‘green’ local cycle stands at various point near metro stations where you can rent a bike at just Rs 10 rupees for four hours. I did once. If I had been able to rely only on the brakes instead of my feet to bring the thing to a halt, my rear would have not ended up as bruised as it did. Take that as a justification to go high end.
 
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