Unicycle articles (but wait there's more...)

I dont want to steal Jamey’s thunder but saw this in the paper and it was too good not to post here.

Congratulations!

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/sydney-news/love-on-bicycles-made-for-one/story-e6freuzi-1226489496849


WHEN the father of the bride is a concert and circus promoter it’s just not a wedding until the groom makes his way down the aisle on a unicycle.

So it went when actress Gigi Edgley, daughter of Michael Edgley, married her long-time love Jamey Mossengren in an “enchanted evening” themed ceremony in Hawaii.

“I never imagined how incredible it would be - I could barely breathe, it was so exciting,” the Tricky Business star tells the upcoming issue of Woman’s Day, on sale from Monday.

“We had a magical theme. Our flower girls were wearing angel wings.”

Clad in a Rhonda Hemmingway gown, the 34-year-old and her groom capped off the waterside nuptials with a reception befitting its location on the Hawaiian island of Maui.

You beat me to it! I was just about to post it but lucky I did a search first. The search function does work!

Anyone in Australia can read more about it and see more photos by picking up a copy of Woman’s Day that just came out today. Here is a photo from it:

Wow, Jamey, that looks beautiful. Big congratulations!

Next time, hook her up with a mini-giraffe so you can kiss her without hurting your back. :slight_smile:

Have a great honeymoon! Where in HI was the wedding? Honeymoon? If you’re on your honeymoon and you reply to this, you deserve her wrath. :astonished:

One-wheelin’: Albuquerque Journal article about Munifest Destiny 2012

Here’s an article in today’s Albuquerque Journal about Munifest Destiny 2012. It includes quotes from Morgan Cable and myself.

One-Wheelin’:
http://www.abqjournal.com/sports/2012/10/11/onewheelin.html

Note, it turns out that is just the abbreviated form of the article. Unfortunately, to see the full article plus photos, you’ll have to subscribe to the journal. Photos feature Tomas N, Morgan C, and Chris L.

I’m in the local paper (again), but this time it’s a big and good article (only german…maybe google translator?):
http://bergeinrad.blogspot.com/2012/10/im-in-paper.html

Gigi & Jamey’s Unicycle Wedding

Here is a follow up on our wedding story. FYI, 4 groomsmen & 1 groom rode down the isle and 20 of our guests could ride a unicycle! Plus the cake had the precious moment figurine on top of it with a girl and boy on one unicycle.

Gigi talking about it on Channel Nines “Morning” show:
http://video.au.msn.com/watch/video/gigi-edgley/xjgnzqw

A wedding teaser video on youtube:
http://youtu.be/DE8nfUGLuAc

And the article in Woman’s Day:

SBU and unicycling on “Tosh.0” on Comedy Central

http://tosh.comedycentral.com/video-clips/le-tour-de-cul-de-sac-0

Unicycle Man. From a non-unicyclers perspective.

http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/magazine/2013/0216/1224330032407.html

In this thread it is a good habit to copy the text of any article in full, rather than just a link. Links to media expire quite rapidly. Please do.

The body of this article follows:

The Irish Times - Saturday, February 16, 2013
Roisin Ingle

On . . . getting back on the bike

There’s a man round my way learning to ride the unicycle. He’s kind of hard to miss. The first time I observed him from the bus stop as he progressed unsteadily down the path. He rode a little, fell off, got back on again and repeated this unholy trinity until he wobbled out of sight. I learned something watching him that day. It’s pretty much impossible to look cool or dignified while falling off a unicycle.

I didn’t expect to see Unicycle Man again. He seemed an odd sight, like an escaped circus animal ambling around the capital’s north inner city trying to get his bearings. I thought the humiliation of falling and getting up again and falling (repeat to fade) in front of the general public might have put him off. I thought he’d be entirely justified in giving up this unicycle lark as a bad job. But then a week later, walking along with my daughters, I saw him again. Still falling off.

“Where is that man’s other wheel?” said one daughter. “Can I have a go of that?” said the other.

I decided Unicycle Man was good for the area. He cheered the place up a bit. When he teetered past us a brass band played a jaunty tune in my head.

John Foss is famous in the unicycling world. He says that learning to ride a unicycle is 60 per cent determination, 35 per cent persistence and five per cent sense of balance. Not knowing much by way of unicycling statistics, I’d have put “sense of balance” much higher, but it turns out anybody can unicycle, anybody who is willing to stick at it that is.

I’ve never been good when it comes to sticking at things. I’m great at the beginning. Practising guitar with gusto, or doing yoga in my kitchen at all hours or making calligraphic flourishes in a special notebook.

And then inevitably the enthusiasm wanes. The humour goes off me. A string on the guitar breaks and the instrument ends up taunting me from the corner. The yoga mat gathers dust instead of downward dogs under the stairs. I come across the battered calligraphy pens under the sideboard, no longer fit for flourishing anything other than the bin.

Unicycle Man is someone who knows how to stick at things. I run through Fairview Park these damp mornings and sometimes I see him there on the basketball court. Up and down the court he goes, falling off noticeably less than when I first saw him a few months ago. Falling but falling better as Beckett didn’t say, a living breathing lesson in tenacity. And he reminds me to think about the fact that here I am, still running, which is a surprise. Watching him, it occurs to me that for once in my life I have stuck at something.

I started running this time last year. In that 12 months I took part in three running events and by the third one I realised I never wanted to take part in a running event ever again. But in that 12 months I’ve also stopped being allergic to physical exercise. It no longer scares me the way it used to. I don’t mind the thought of people witnessing my ungainly steps. I’ve learned that places I used to categorise as being far, far away – like the shops down the road – are actually quite close and accessible quickly by foot. I’ve learned that my feet, as long as I have runners on, are quite reliable as a mode of transport. I go out at night and wobble around this town looking uncool and undignified but not caring anymore. Mostly I don’t like to run too far from my house so instead I’ll go up and down random paths, back tracking, sometimes running in circles just to complete the distance I’ve set myself. I’ve even been known to run several kilometres inside my house when the rain has put me off going out.

There’s another unicycling quote by juggler Charlie Dancey, who said: “It’s impossible to ride a unicycle, some of us have just figured out how to take a long time before we fall off.” I like this because I think life is mostly about figuring out how to take a long time before we fall off.

The last time I saw Unicycle Man I stopped running to stand and applaud him, as though the basketball court were a big top and I was a circus-goer eating candyfloss on a wooden bench. The sound of my clapping made him come off the unicycle, but still, even from a distance, I could see he looked pleased so I didn’t feel too bad. I ran on through the park wanting to say two things to Unicycle Man: (1) Thanks. And (2), can I have a go of that?

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Here’s a talk I gave last Friday at an event called FEAT, which stands for “Fascinating Expedition and Adventure Talks” (sort of a TED talks for adventure sports):

This might be old news, but check out the KH rider in this guinness world records pic!

Cool - hadn’t seen that! I assume it’s Lutz Eicholz.

Can you tell by the scratches on the Uni?

Mitch McGary Michigan freshman power forward was Chesterton Indiana’s #unicycle paperboy per CBS Lundquist/Raftery #MarchMadness

Coverage of my Charity Unicycling in local newspapers

http://www.burnleyexpress.net/news/health/burnley-man-s-500-mile-unicycle-ride-in-mum-s-memory-1-5526340

Copied below in case they wipe the website in the future :slight_smile:

[PS: The ‘quotes’ as usual are cobbled together from bits of things we talked about and in no way represent how dorky I sound :p]

Daredevil teenager makes a three and a half mile round trip to school each day on a UNICYCLE

  • Cameron Peacock, 14, from Stockton-on-Tees, learned to cycle on one wheel aged 11
  • His mother Claire, 42, says: 'He's in complete control, I'm so proud of him'
By Harriet Arkell [B]PUBLISHED:[/B] 11:26, 27 March 2013 | [B]UPDATED:[/B] 14:03, 27 March 2013

A schoolboy is raising eyebrows each morning by cycling through busy streets on a unicycle.

Cameron Peacock makes the three-and-a-half mile round trip to his school every day on just one wheel.

And despite using this unusual method of transport for the past two years, he still gets passers-by shouting at him: ‘Think you’ve lost a wheel, mate.’
SCROLL DOWN FOR VIDEO

Enlarge Daredevil: Cameron Peacock, 14, travels more than ten miles a week getting to lessons on his unicycle

The 14-year-old schoolboy, who lives in Roseworth, Stockton-on-Tees, says he likes to be different, and considers the strange looks he gets as he travels to his lessons every morning as part of the fun.
He said: 'I still get sarcastic comments from some people, who shout ‘You’ve lost half your bike’ or ‘Give us a wheelie’.
‘Lots of car drivers beep their horns when they see me, and most make a joke, but if it is an old person they tend to shout a bit.’
Cameron says he is used to motorists shouting at him as he cycles to school

Cameron, a pupil at Bishopsgarth School in Stockton-on-Tees, learnt his unusual skill at JUST (Juggling Unicycling Stockton-on-Tees), and says he likes to be different.
He said: 'I like to be unique and it keeps me fit and healthy.
'Obviously, riding a unicycle is more tricky than riding a conventional bike but it is not as difficult as people think: everyone can do it if they put their mind to it.

'It took me about two-and-a-half hours of practice before I was able to cycle five metres, and a week of practice before I could cycle constantly.
'I love doing trialling on my unicycles, which means I do tricks like jumping on ramps.
‘I don’t know exactly what I want to do in the future, but at the moment I would like to be the best I possibly can be at unicycling. I want to be number one in the UK.’
Cameron has eight unicycles and spends his free time doing stunts on them, as well as taking them on cross-country tracks.
His mother, Claire Peacock, 42, is used to her son’s preferred mode of transport, but says she worries about the reactions of others.
She said: 'I’m surprised he hasn’t ever caused a crash, as motorists stare at him open-mouthed.
'I was quite worried when Cameron first started riding his unicycle to school, but I worry less now, and am just very proud of him.
‘He had more accidents on his normal bike than he’s ever had on his unicycle, and he is in complete control of it.’

Off to school: Cameron Peacock has been going to lessons on his unicycle for two years

Mrs Peacock said Cameron was never into football like other boys, and got into unicycling at 11. He now spends all his pocket money on unicycles, and is the sixth best trial rider in the country.
Later this year Cameron, who lives with his mother, father Jeffrey, 46, a self-employed haulage contractor, and brother Matthew, 18, will be taking part in various competitions at the British Juggling Convention, and he hopes to be named the best trial unicyclist in the country.
Bishopsgarth School headteacher Sue Cain said: 'Cameron has shared his skills and talents with his year group in assemblies, and we have all been wowed by his expertise in using the unicycle.
‘We strive to see all of our students develop a wide range of skills and knowledge both in and out of the classroom, and Cameron has shown that we can all be the best we can be in our chosen field.’
VIDEO: WATCH CAMERON’S UNICYCLING SKILLS (footage from Voodoounicycles)

Stolen Unicycle -“Inside Toronto”

Unicycle of Toronto rider who raised funds for SickKids stolen
Unicycled
Staff photo/ANDREW PALAMARCHUK
Paul Abraham, 21, unicycled from Montreal to Toronto to raise money for SickKids Foundation. The unicycle he rode was stolen in downtown Toronto on June 25.
City Centre Mirror
ByAndrew Palamarchuk

After his bicycle was stolen six months ago, Paul Abraham settled on a unicycle thinking “no one is going to steal one wheel.”

On Tuesday, June 25, a man did just that.

Abraham, a Scarborough native, uses a unicycle to get around the city. In May, he rode from Montreal to Toronto to raise thousands of dollars for SickKids hospital.

Abraham, 22, was confronted by a man after getting a coffee at the Tim Hortons at Bay and Bloor streets around 5 a.m. Tuesday.

The floor was being mopped in the coffee shop so Abraham left his unicycle outside as a courtesy. When he returned, a white man with a blue mohawk and tattoos all over his arms pulled a knife on him and stole the unicycle.

“I was like two feet away from him, and if he would’ve lunged forward, he would’ve hit me,” Abraham said. “I was hoping he wouldn’t go crazy and stab me.”

The robber ran south on Bay with the unicycle. “He was wheeling it,” Abraham said. “He was running and trying to keep it in control.”

About an hour after the robbery, Abraham spotted the suspect without the unicycle on Charles Street near Yonge Street. “I was like, ‘Hey man, where’s my unicycle?’ and then he just started to run,” Abraham said. “I chased him for a full block before he went into a complex, and I didn’t chase him inside.”

Abraham said the robber appeared to be on drugs. “He looked like he was totally out of it.”

Abraham bought the unicycle for $850 after his beloved bicycle that was passed down to him from his grandfather was stolen.

An encounter with a SickKids patient in February inspired him to unicycle from Montreal to Toronto to raise money for the hospital.

Now Abraham is planning another ride for charity. In late August he wants to unicycle from Calgary to Toronto to raise money for research into Crohn’s disease and colitis. The 1,500 kilometre trip would break the Canadian record for the longest unicycle ride.

Though he has a spare unicycle, Abraham said it’s not as comfortable as the one that was stolen.

Abraham noted he’s been searching for the unicycle throughout downtown Toronto and is hopeful that it will be recovered.

“It just sucks that people are that malicious,” he said. “I’m hoping, I’m praying that they don’t take it to a scrap metal yard.”

It’s in finnish but here’s a rough (shortened) english version…

Magician-juggler Janne Mustonen has fulfilled his promised and is riding from Kouvola to Lappeenranta on a unicycle.

“The trip has gone well so far, I have the right equipment [a 20” freestyle uni :smiley: ] and rain doesn’t really bother me."

Mustonen put a challenge on his facebook page; if he gets 1000 likes, he’ll do the trip on a unicycle.

“The ultimate reason for this is that it’s fun to try something more special like this, something that no one else has ever tried before.”, he says.

Mustonen’s average pace is about 5 kph and he rests 15 minutes after an hour of riding. He also has a service car travelling with him where he sleeps overnight.