Cyclists around Britain – young and old, novices and professional alike – showed their caring side at the weekend as they helped the BBC’s annual Children In Need appeal raise more than £20 million to aid disadvantaged young people across the UK.
Here, we highlight just a handful of the many people who took to their bikes to help contribute towards that total.
Ten-year-old Joseph Wilson from Nottingham spent four months in a wheelchair following an operation, but when he saw an advert on TV for Children In Need, he decided to raise money for kids less fortunate than him.
Jonathan, born with twisted thigh bones, which led to an operation two years ago in which the bones were broken then put back in place, rode ten laps of Bridgford Park and raised £1,000 for Children In Need from family and neighbours.
In South Wales, pupils and staff at Abertillery Primary School helped the charity to the tune of more than £1,000 through a 24-hour bike-a-thon that began at 9am with kids from the reception and nursery classes lapping the playground on tricycles.
As the day progressed, older children negotiated an obstacle course on their bikes, before pupils from years five and six, and their mums and dads, pedalled on exercise bikes. Then, from 9pm through to 9am, staff at the school took over to complete the round-the-clock effort.
Radio presenter Phil Upton, from BBC WM, spent the day cycling around Birmingham and the Black Country with colleagues, visiting initiatives in the area that have benefitted from funding by Children In Need in the past.
And in Ipswich, a police motorcycle instructor who normally uses a two-wheeled push-bike to commute to his job switched to a unicycle for the day, less than a year after enduring surgery on his knee.
Meanwhile, trials rider Danny MacAskill is supporting Children In Need by auctioning the very bike he used in a YouTube film of him showcasing his talents on the streets of Edinburgh that shot him to fame earlier this year.
Since April this year, the film has garnered 12.5 million views on the video-sharing channels. The successful bidder should bear in mind though that there's no price on the Scottish rider's talents - that comes through practice and hard work.
While I always have lights on day and night and wear fluro, I have a friend that wears all black all the time and doesn't use lights ever. His...
A sad case, and one with no winners. The driver can thank her lucky stars that the cyclist wasn't more seriously injured and that the court was...
Bloody hell... How are you doing now?
And I liked endura too. Got a nice long sleeve mostly merino long sleeve a little while back, in orange.
No, the Ebay lights have been around for several years, this Lezyne light just appeared.
They shouldn't worry - the second part of the "tariff" refrain is "they can make it in US and they'll do very well".
"At the going down of the sun, it will get in our eyes and cause us to crash into things."
Been living in the area thirty years now and Brixton Cycles (and local riders wearing their famed Rastafarian colours jersey) has been an iconic...
Indeed - but again these are perhaps questions we should keep asking. Even if the immediate answer is "well we are where we are" or "how on earth...