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Welsh Cycling female membership grows 57% in two years

British Cycling attributes the boom to inspirational Becky James and Elinor Barker, and a programme of led social rides

Welsh Cycling has reported a 57 per cent increase in women’s membership in just two years, bringing total female members of British Cycling in Wales to 1,000.

What Welsh Cycling calls a “significant milestone” was achieved, it says, thanks to a combination of inspirational athletes like Becky James and Elinor Barker, and a programme of rides, through the Breeze and She Cycles Wales programmes, encouraging more women to get on their bikes.

This summer in Rio Welsh female cyclists brought home three medals, with Elinor Barker winning Gold in the Team Pursuit, and Becky James collecting two silver medals in the Keirin and Sprints, breaking the Olympic record in qualifying.

Lost Lanes Wales by Jack Thurston

Georgina Harper, National Development Manager at Welsh Cycling, said: “Reaching 1,000 female members in Wales is a significant milestone for Welsh Cycling. It demonstrates that given the opportunity women will take part in cycling and make a commitment to the sport, as a competitive or leisure cyclist.

“Having inspirational women like Becky and Elinor at the forefront of our sport helps to inspire more women to cycle. But it is the dedication and passion shown by our coaches, volunteers and Breeze Champions that are creating the opportunities for women to cycle in Wales.”

Wales in a Day 2017

Welsh Cycling began a Breeze rides pilot in 2014, offering 1,300 ride opportunities, followed by the roll out of the She Cycles Wales programme, offering non-competitive, sociable rides for women and girls. Welsh Cycling now has 125 trained Breeze Champions across Wales, with 4,500 ride places each year.

Women in Wales now make up five per cent of the organisation’s 20,000 female members in the UK. Of 1,000 of Wales' female members, 48 per cent hold racing licences, 50 per cent hold ‘ride’ or commuter-type memberships and 2 per cent hold fan membership packages.

 

Laura Laker is a freelance journalist with more than a decade’s experience covering cycling, walking and wheeling (and other means of transport). Beginning her career with road.cc, Laura has also written for national and specialist titles of all stripes. One part of the popular Streets Ahead podcast, she sometimes appears as a talking head on TV and radio, and in real life at conferences and festivals. She is also the author of Potholes and Pavements: a Bumpy Ride on Britain’s National Cycle Network.

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2 comments

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ct | 8 years ago
3 likes

Snap. A couple of years ago my club took it to do women only rides, with a number of the senior (not in the age sense) riders being ladies. Not Breeze, just all ability lady only rides...paced with the slowest once a month with ladies leading and supporting.

Chapeau

Still it is good news

Avatar
keirik | 8 years ago
2 likes

"But it is the dedication and passion shown by our coaches, volunteers and Breeze Champions that are creating the opportunities for women to cycle in Wales."

Looking at our club, I'd say its the dedication of members to get new lady members and nothing to do with Welsh Cycling

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