Facebook button Flickr button Youtube button

Archive for the ‘Events’ Category

Yunnanuni August 2011

Happy New Year! Hope you saw in 2011 with some unicycling action already. If not, why not join us for a unicycle tour in an exotic location this year?

Our next Adventure Unicyclist tour will be through the mountains of Tibet in South-West China. We will be riding from Shangri-La, through various mountain passes to the famous Tiger-Leaping-Gorge above the Yangzi River. It will have some spectacular scenery and should get those unicycle legs working hard!

Let us know if you want to come on tour, we have 20 places available.

Check it out: Yunnanuni

Monguni Video

Here is a video produced by Jason of Grasshopper Adventures showing the highlights of the Monguni Unicycle Tour:

Have fun in Mongolia!

Good luck to all the riders heading to Mongolia for the Monguni Unicycle Tour.  This is the first time this country has been traversed on one wheel…

http://monguni.adventureunicyclist.com

Ride safe and enjoy the ride!

Mongolia Unicycle Tour 2010

The long awaited Mongolia Unicycle Tour is finally going ahead. In August, up to 20 Unicyclists from around the world will be the first to ride through Mongolia.

Check  out the Monguni Unicycle Tour website for details:

http://monguni.adventureunicyclist.com/

Monguni

Induni 2009, The India Unicycle Tour

As many of you know, the next Adventure Unicyclist tour is in North Eastern India next year.  We are still taking registrations for Induni, but it closes on 1 Jan 2009, and we have a maximum limit of 24 riders.

If you are interested in coming, please get in touch with us now and I’ll give you more information about the tour.  More information and also rider profiles and unicycles are up on: www.induni.adventureunicyclist.com

Here is what Grasshopper Master, our tour leader has to say about Induni:

“Our tour takes us to the north east of India to a fantastically diverse region that
borders Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal and China, each of them never more than 100
miles away. This diversity is reflected in both the landscape, which ranges from the
steaming plains near Bangladesh, to the world’s 3rd highest mountain,
Kanchenjunga, but it is also evident in the people and religions we’ll see. Bengali tea
pickers, Bhutanese religious sculptors, Nepali corn vendors and Tibetan prayer flags
are all to be found at this confluence of cultures.
All this contrast makes for plenty of legwork, and starting in the plains, we’ll work our
way up through to the foothills until we’re close enough to the snow-capped peaks of
Sikkim that it’ll feel like we can just reach out and touch them. ”

Hope to see you in India next year!

Ken Looi