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Croft reduces track days for 2009 after court ruling

Croft racing circuit has axed 80% of its motorcycle track days after a devastating High Court ruling over noise.

The circuit has pulled the plug on 19 of 23 bike track days set for 2009 following an order to cut noisy events from 140 a year to just 40.

Circuit Manager Tracey Morley told said : “There has been an adjustment to our calendar and sadly events have had to be cancelled.”

She said race meetings had also been cancelled and that more details would be released next week.

The axed dates had been organised by track day firms No Limits and Hottrax. Both said customers had been offered alternative dates.

Hottrax’s said: “We had 11 dates at Croft and we’re now down to two. It’s our favourite circuit to work at so not good news for us.”

Croft lost an appeal in January against an order to pay three local residents up to £150,000 compensation over noise.

Richard Jones QC, representing Croft Promosport Ltd, told the Appeal Court the ruling exposed the company to an "uncertain number" of claims from other neighbours and had serious implications for its future.

Fantasy Road Racing - win a Yamaha R6




Now is the time to pick your team for the free to enter MCN Fantasy Road Race competition in association with MCE Insurance.

The rules are simple - you have a budget of £10 million to spend on 6 riders- 2 each from MotoGP, WSB and BSB.

You can enter a team for free right now and by registering you will be in with a chance of winning this year's top prize, a Yamaha R6 worth £7,799. Alongside the top prize for the overall winner, there will also be prizes for the winners of the eight rounds that make up the competition.

The deadline for entries is February 28th, so make sure you register your team before then.

British World Superbike riders Leon Haslam, Tommy Hill, Jonathan Rea and Tom Sykes are as competitive off track as they are on it and have all got their entry in to MCN’s Fantasy Road Race competition in early.

To test your racing knowledge and find out if it is better than the WSB Brits, enter your team for free online now.
Once you have registered join the BikeWise Private League (Pin number 400) and 'race' against your BikeWise friends

Fantasy Road Racing - win a Yamaha R6



Now is the time to pick your team for the free to enter MCN Fantasy Road Race competition in association with MCE Insurance.

The rules are simple - you have a budget of £10 million to spend on 6 riders- 2 each from MotoGP, WSB and BSB.

You can enter a team for free right now and by registering you will be in with a chance of winning this year's top prize, a Yamaha R6 worth £7,799. Alongside the top prize for the overall winner, there will also be prizes for the winners of the eight rounds that make up the competition.

The deadline for entries is February 28th, so make sure you register your team before then.

British World Superbike riders Leon Haslam, Tommy Hill, Jonathan Rea and Tom Sykes are as competitive off track as they are on it and have all got their entry in to MCN’s Fantasy Road Race competition in early.

To test your racing knowledge and find out if it is better than the WSB Brits, enter your team for free online now.
Once you have registered, join the BikeWise Private League (Pin number 400) and 'race' against your BikeWise friends

Now learners can split new test

Learners will be able to take the two parts of a new motorcycle test on different days following an announcement by roads minister Jim Fitzpatrick.

From April 27 new riders must pass a ‘manoeuvres’ examination at new test centres as well as an on-road riding section. Fitzpatrick’s announcement means they won’t have to cram both into a single appointment.

The Driving Standards Agency (DSA) had faced criticism for building too few of the new ‘multipurpose’ test centres and accused of asking learners to ride hundreds of miles to the nearest one.

Yesterday’s announcement also means candidates can do the on-road part at an existing test centre without having to travel to a new one.

Fitzpatrick said the move would “provide more delivery options, from a greater number of locations, enabling better utilisation of the current test centre estate and thereby offering improved geographic coverage”.

“It will offer an improved level of customer service for motorcycling candidates and reduce the travel-to-test distance for some candidates,” he said.

Rider groups welcomed the news but pointed out the manoeuvres part would still have to be done at one of the limited number of new test centres.

Chris Hodder, of the British Motorcyclists Federation, said: “There’s still going to be large parts of the country where people will have to travel a long way.”

Hodder also attacked DSA plans to charge £10.50 more for the new test, after already putting the price up by £20 in September to cover the extra cost.

The charge went from £60 to £80 at the end of September, when the new test was originally supposed to come in. The introduction of the test itself was deferred by six months due to a lack of test centres but the DSA did not do the same with the new fee intended to pay for it.

Now bookings for the new test taken from March 30 will cost £90.50.

Hodder said: “It’s a 50% increase within a year.”

Now learners can split new test

Learners will be able to take the two parts of a new motorcycle test on different days following an announcement by roads minister Jim Fitzpatrick.

From April 27 new riders must pass a ‘manoeuvres’ examination at new test centres as well as an on-road riding section. Fitzpatrick’s announcement means they won’t have to cram both into a single appointment.

The Driving Standards Agency (DSA) had faced criticism for building too few of the new ‘multipurpose’ test centres and accused of asking learners to ride hundreds of miles to the nearest one.

Yesterday’s announcement also means candidates can do the on-road part at an existing test centre without having to travel to a new one.

Fitzpatrick said the move would “provide more delivery options, from a greater number of locations, enabling better utilisation of the current test centre estate and thereby offering improved geographic coverage”.

“It will offer an improved level of customer service for motorcycling candidates and reduce the travel-to-test distance for some candidates,” he said.

Rider groups welcomed the news but pointed out the manoeuvres part would still have to be done at one of the limited number of new test centres.

Chris Hodder, of the British Motorcyclists Federation, said: “There’s still going to be large parts of the country where people will have to travel a long way.”

Hodder also attacked DSA plans to charge £10.50 more for the new test, after already putting the price up by £20 in September to cover the extra cost.

The charge went from £60 to £80 at the end of September, when the new test was originally supposed to come in. The introduction of the test itself was deferred by six months due to a lack of test centres but the DSA did not do the same with the new fee intended to pay for it.

Now bookings for the new test taken from March 30 will cost £90.50.

Hodder said: “It’s a 50% increase within a year.”

HM Plant Honda riders swap two wheels,for two wings....


HM Plant Honda riders John McGuinness, Steve Plater and Glen Richards, swapped two wheels for two wings to get airborne with some of the UK’s flying aces and experience life as a fighter pilot, with RAF Linton on Ouse’s squad flying Tucano training aircrafts.

Speed and machine performance, as well as strong physical and mental aptitudes are vital for both pilots and motorcycle racers, but the fastest man around the legendary Isle of Man TT mountain circuit, John McGuinness, experienced a whole new sensation of speed and physical pressures during the flight – highlighted by his lunch re-visiting him in the cockpit!

McGuinness said: “The whole day was an amazing experience, not just the flying but also being with the pilots and all the people around RAF Linton who took such an interest in us and the bikes.

"It’s a bit humbling really when you look at what they do. We took off from the base in York and it was just minutes before we were flying over my house in Morecambe - it took me almost three hours to drive from home that morning!

“I’m used to riding at speed and having total concentration on a bike, but this gives you a completely different view and certainly a new appreciation for a pilot’s skill.

"It was really interesting to learn about the technical side of the aircraft, and actually flying the plane myself was the icing on the cake. I even had a go in the sick bag!”

TT and North West 200 road racing team-mate, Steve Plater, is no stranger to life in the sky as he is currently in training for his private light aircraft licence and has previously flown in an RAF jet plane.

However, this proved no preparation for being strapped in to the Tucano aircraft, as Steve accidently set off a national RAF alert signal by activating the personal locator beacon in his life jacket - which usually signifies a downed aircrew!

Plater said: “The whole day was awesome. We experience physical and mental demands on our bodies as well as fast speeds, but the speed is in a relatively confined space on a circuit so it feels so different in the sky where you have no reference points as such.

"The forces on my body were unbelievable during the aerobatic manoeuvres we did and the whole experience is something you just can’t describe adequately.

"I’m learning to fly a plane at the moment so being able to bring the Tucano in to land myself was awesome.”

This was the first experience of its kind for Glen Richards, who took things in his usual laid back stride, although flickers of nerves couldn’t be hidden during the day.

Glen said: “I feel very privileged to be able to come and spend some time with the RAF boys at Linton and go up in the plane.

"I didn’t really know what to expect so I wasn’t nervous as such and although I enjoyed every minute of it. I was also pleased when we landed!

“I’ve never done anything like this before and it’s an experience that I’m not going to forget.

"The low level flying and views over the Pennines was amazing, and the weightlessness I felt during the aerobatics at the end of the flight was freaky, but the highlight of my day.”

Flight Lieutenants Rich Keeling, Jim Whitworth and Chris McCann, the three Tucano RAF training pilots took off from RAF Linton on Ouse in a victory formation, and flew at low level - 250 feet above ground - at approximately 300mph over the Pennines to Morecambe Bay, before turning towards and flying through the Lake District.

On the return journey the formation split in to three individual aircraft and climbed to 5,000 feet in approximately 90 seconds, to practice some aerobatics to include a loop the loop, barrel roll and stall turn.

Flt Lt and basic fast jet pilot instructor, Rich Keeling, said: “A number of the RAF personnel on the Linton on Ouse base are interested in bikes and follow the British Superbike series.

"So when I found myself at Croft last year in Honda’s hospitality unit it seemed a great idea for the riders and pilots to share the experience of what each other does.”

HM Plant Honda riders swap two wheels,for two wings....


HM Plant Honda riders John McGuinness, Steve Plater and Glen Richards, swapped two wheels for two wings to get airborne with some of the UK’s flying aces and experience life as a fighter pilot, with RAF Linton on Ouse’s squad flying Tucano training aircrafts.

Speed and machine performance, as well as strong physical and mental aptitudes are vital for both pilots and motorcycle racers, but the fastest man around the legendary Isle of Man TT mountain circuit, John McGuinness, experienced a whole new sensation of speed and physical pressures during the flight – highlighted by his lunch re-visiting him in the cockpit!

McGuinness said: “The whole day was an amazing experience, not just the flying but also being with the pilots and all the people around RAF Linton who took such an interest in us and the bikes.

"It’s a bit humbling really when you look at what they do. We took off from the base in York and it was just minutes before we were flying over my house in Morecambe - it took me almost three hours to drive from home that morning!

“I’m used to riding at speed and having total concentration on a bike, but this gives you a completely different view and certainly a new appreciation for a pilot’s skill.

"It was really interesting to learn about the technical side of the aircraft, and actually flying the plane myself was the icing on the cake. I even had a go in the sick bag!”

TT and North West 200 road racing team-mate, Steve Plater, is no stranger to life in the sky as he is currently in training for his private light aircraft licence and has previously flown in an RAF jet plane.

However, this proved no preparation for being strapped in to the Tucano aircraft, as Steve accidently set off a national RAF alert signal by activating the personal locator beacon in his life jacket - which usually signifies a downed aircrew!

Plater said: “The whole day was awesome. We experience physical and mental demands on our bodies as well as fast speeds, but the speed is in a relatively confined space on a circuit so it feels so different in the sky where you have no reference points as such.

"The forces on my body were unbelievable during the aerobatic manoeuvres we did and the whole experience is something you just can’t describe adequately.

"I’m learning to fly a plane at the moment so being able to bring the Tucano in to land myself was awesome.”

This was the first experience of its kind for Glen Richards, who took things in his usual laid back stride, although flickers of nerves couldn’t be hidden during the day.

Glen said: “I feel very privileged to be able to come and spend some time with the RAF boys at Linton and go up in the plane.

"I didn’t really know what to expect so I wasn’t nervous as such and although I enjoyed every minute of it. I was also pleased when we landed!

“I’ve never done anything like this before and it’s an experience that I’m not going to forget.

"The low level flying and views over the Pennines was amazing, and the weightlessness I felt during the aerobatics at the end of the flight was freaky, but the highlight of my day.”

Flight Lieutenants Rich Keeling, Jim Whitworth and Chris McCann, the three Tucano RAF training pilots took off from RAF Linton on Ouse in a victory formation, and flew at low level - 250 feet above ground - at approximately 300mph over the Pennines to Morecambe Bay, before turning towards and flying through the Lake District.

On the return journey the formation split in to three individual aircraft and climbed to 5,000 feet in approximately 90 seconds, to practice some aerobatics to include a loop the loop, barrel roll and stall turn.

Flt Lt and basic fast jet pilot instructor, Rich Keeling, said: “A number of the RAF personnel on the Linton on Ouse base are interested in bikes and follow the British Superbike series.

"So when I found myself at Croft last year in Honda’s hospitality unit it seemed a great idea for the riders and pilots to share the experience of what each other does.”

New bikes for club members...

Check out some our our members new bikes at : The Bikes
Click on 'The Bikes' logo to see more.



Next Meeting - Sunday 15th February 2009

THANKS to everybody who came to the meeting on Sunday (18/01/09), it was a fantastic turnout and we had some great riding (even in the slippery conditions indoor)

A BIG... Thank You from Mick & I to all who helped to marshal on the day..

We were really busy with new starters and I know that some of the marshals cut short their lunch to help give some of the new starters a little individual track time ( at least it helped us run off some of the christmas excess, although I don't think we'll be doing the Great North Run !! yet...)

Photo's from the meeting are now online on the website (www.bikewise-minibikeclub.co.uk) under the Photo gallery page (2009 meetings). Thanks to John Attle for taking the photo's on the day....
There are also some new picture's in 'The Bikes' album on the photo gallery page, as I managed to get a few photo's of some of the new Xmas presents that were on display....

Now the important bit....
Next meeting - Sunday 15th February at Black & Deckers factory, Green Lane, Spennymoor...

Signing On - will be from 1000hrs for a 1030 start.

Same as last time - we'll have to bring everything on the day and take it all away with us at the end


Dress up warm, as it will be cold . Hopefully Donald will be able to get a hold of his 'old boiler' !! so that we can have some hot water for drinks

PLEASE can you reply to this email or acknowledge Facebook so that we know who will be there.
Look forward to seeing you all on Sunday 15th.
Bob & Mick

Merry Xmas...






















(Dale - having to sit this one out !!!)

Thanks to everybody who came to our Xmas indoor meeting at Black & Deckers...

Some really good smooth riding on a slippery track.

Thanks to all the families who brought food and presents, it made a really nice atmosphere to see 2008 out..

Special Thanks to the people who turn up just to marshall - Carl, Steve, Donald, Brian & Jonathan.

PPIK is on at Leeds on Sunday 28th December (go to this Links page for further details on PPIK)

Next BikeWise event - provisionally Sunday 18th January 2009 (will be confirmed soon)
Hope you alll have a Merry Xmas, THANKS for the support in 2008 & Best Wishes for 2009

Dave 'Santa' Coates ... 'stops' at Darlington Memorial Hospital





















Dave 'Santa' Coates got into the festive spirit (& suit !!), to 'stop' at Darlington Memorial Hospital and present a cheque from BikeWise to The Friends of Darlingtom Memorial who are constantly raising funds for new equipment at the hospital.

The donation is being put towards a new heart scanner which the hospital are hoping to purchase in 2009.

Pictured from L to R : Dave Coates (aka Santa), Jerry Murphy (Consultant Cardiologist at DMH), PC Gary Ward (Durham Police Motorcycles) & Alan Charlton (Chairman of The Friends of Darlington Memorial Hospital)

Next Meeting - Sunday 21st December....



'The Gang' - Xmas 2007

Yes... Sunday 21st, this Sunday, at Black & Deckers factory, Green Lane, Spennymoor...

Signing On - will be from 1000hrs for a 1030hrs start.
Like last year, we want to make it as 'festive' as possible so please make the effort and come along... bring your friends and let's have a good one.
We're trying to organize a tree, some sort of music player so that we can play some Xmas music and any sort of cakes or food /crisps for our Xmas lunch :-)..... will be a help.
Any tinsel or any other Xmas decorations you have lying around will be used ...

Dress up warm, as it will be cold and remember for the riders ... Tinsel on your bikes... Santa Hats / suits etc are all obligatory...

Look forward to seeing you all on Sunday.

Please check the expiry date on your Photocard Driving Licence

Thousands of motorists are at risk of being fined up to £1,000 because they are unwittingly driving without a valid licence.

They risk prosecution after failing to spot the extremely small print on their photocard licence which says it automatically expires after 10 years and has to be renewed - even though drivers are licensed to drive until the age of 70.

The fiasco has come to light a decade after the first batch of photo licences was issued in July 1998, just as the they start to expire.
Motoring organisations blamed the Government for the fiasco and said 'most' drivers believed their licences were for life.

A mock-up driving licence from 1998 when the photocards were launched shows the imminent expiry date as item '4b'

They said officials had failed to publicise sufficiently the fact that new-style licences - unlike the old paper ones - expire after a set period and have to be renewed.

To rub salt into wounds, drivers will have to a pay £17.50 to renew their card - a charge which critics have condemned as a 'stealth tax' and which will earn the Treasury an estimated £437million over 25 years.

Official DVLA figures reveal that while 16,136 expired this summer, so far only 11,566 drivers have renewed, leaving 4,570 outstanding.


With another 300,000 photocard licences due to expire over the coming year, experts fear the number of invalid licences will soar, putting thousands more drivers in breach of the law and at risk of a fine.


At the heart of the confusion is the small print on the tiny credit-card-size photo licence, which is used in conjunction with the paper version. Just below the driver name on the front of the photocard licence is a series of dates and details - each one numbered. Number 4b features a date in tiny writing, but no explicit explanation as to what it means.

The date's significance is only explained if the driver turns over the card and reads the key on the back which states that '4b' means 'licence valid to'.

Even more confusingly, an adjacent table on the rear of the card sets out how long the driver is registered to hold a licence - that is until his or her 70th birthday.

A total of 25million new-style licences have been issued but - motoring experts say - drivers were never sufficiently warned they would expire after 10 years.

Motorists who fail to renew their licences in time are allowed to continue driving. But the DVLA says they could be charged with 'failing to surrender their licence', an offence carrying a £1,000 fine.

AA president, Edmund King said: 'It is not generally known that photocard licences expire: there appears to be a lack of information that people will have to renew these licences. People think they have already paid them for once over and that is it. It will come as a surprise to motorists and a shock that they have to pay an extra £17.50.'

The AA called on the Government to use the annual £450million from traffic enforcement fines to offset the renewal charge.

Before photocard licences were introduced, old-style paper licences were valid until the age of 70.
Many motorists still believe this to be the case with the new ones.

Driving instructor Tony Carter, of Canterbury , said: 'It's outrageous; everybody thinks their driving licence is for life. Why - when you have already paid £50 for your photocard licence - should you pay the Government an extra £17.50 every 10 years? It's another stealth tax. Drivers will be very annoyed.'

Today the DVLA said the date of expiry was carried on the new-style licences, even though the AA says this is 'not clear'.

The Agency was unable to say whether motorists were told the licences would expire when they were first issued.

It said it was issuing postal reminders to drivers whose photograph was due to expire, to get the renewal message across. But a spokesman admitted this was the limit of the DVLA's publicity.

Experts say many drivers will slip through the net because DVLA records are inaccurate and many motorists have changed address, making it impossible to trace them.

A DVLA spokesman said: 'Previous experience has shown that wide-scale publicity is less effective and can generate enquiries and concerns from those not affected. Instead, DVLA focussed on targeted publicity to ensure that we got the message to the right person at the right time.'

The Driving Standards Agency is allowing L-test candidates with out-of-date photocard licences to sit their driving tests as long as they provide a valid passport. This concession will end in January next year, raising the prospect that some L-test candidates will be turned away.

The DVLA said no one had so far been charged with failing to surrender a licence.

Picture's online from Carrville (16th November)



Many Thanks to all who turned up and supported our latest event at Carrville Park & Ride.
What a fantastic day... The weather was great, riding was great.... Sorry to those who missed it because it was fantastic..
Special THANKS to all who helped with marshaling the event..
Bob
(Click on the image's below to view the photo's online)

Carrville - 16-11-08

Carrville - 16-11-08 (continued)

Easter Egg Run 2009


The BikeWise team can confirm that the Easter Egg Run for 2009 will take place on Sunday 12th April.
Further details will follow, but for now, put it in your diary, tell your friends & hope that we get better weather than last year.......

Easter Egg Run 2009

The BikeWise team can confirm that the Easter Egg Run for 2009 will take place on Sunday 12th April.
Further details will follow, but for now, put it in your diary, tell your friends & hope that we get better weather than last year.......

TT Races 2009















The greatest road race festival in the world will roar back into life on May 30th, 2009!
After the excitement of the 2008 Isle of Man TT celebrations, when fans were treated to some of the most competitive racing the event has ever seen, all eyes are now on TT2009.
The HM Plant Honda team, who have supported BikeWise over the years, consists of four seasoned campaigners to include 14-times TT winner John McGuinness, six-times North West 200 winner Steve Plater and five-times Sidecar TT winner Nick Crowe, with passenger Mark Cox.
2009 marks Honda's 50th anniversary of participation in motorcycle racing - beginning with the 1959 Isle of Man TT races. Since then, globally, Honda has endeavoured to win in every racing category it has entered. With pure road-racing and the Isle of Man TT races being so close to heart, 2009 sees one of Honda's strongest ever rider line-ups for the road, as the marque attempts to celebrate its Golden Road-Racing Anniversary in style with yet more wins.
John said, "It's a pleasure to continue my time withHM Plant Honda - one of the most respected teams in the road-race scene and also, to be back with some of the mechanics that I've had TT success with in the past. I know that with the team behind me and even further developments and improvements to both the Fireblade and CBR600RR we'll be in good shape for both these important events."
John will take part in the Superbike, Supersport and Superstock races at the Isle of Man and Superbike and Supersport classes at the North West.
Joining John is Steve Plater, a regular winner of the North West 200, but a relative newcomer to the Isle of Man TT races. Despite only beginning his TT career in 2007, where he became the fastest newcomer of all-time, Steve scooped a Supersport win in 2008.
"For me in 2009, the North West 200 and Isle of Man TT races are so close to my heart and a massive part of my season," said Steve. "I've won a few races at the North West, but I'm still hungry for more. I took three wins from four races there this year, but I wanted a clean sweep - that's now the aim for 2009. At the TT, to be the fastest newcomer ever was a dream, but that meant I didn't know if I should go back - as how do you beat a year like that? I have decided to finish my 'three-year apprenticeship' of the Island though and this year I took the Supersport win, and in doing so took five seconds out of John on the Mountain. You don't do that lightly, so I'm also looking forward to the TT with HM Plant Honda."
Like John, Steve will also take part in the Superbike, Supersport and Superstock races at the Isle of Man and Superbike and Supersport classes at the NW200.
Competing in the sidecar event at the TT for HM PlantHonda are Nick Crowe and passenger Mark Cox. Nick originally began his TT career as a passenger in 1995, before his first race as driver in 2002. He has five TT wins to his credit. Mark started his riding career as a solo rider, but when he got the chance of standing in for an injured sidecar racer he's never looked back. Mark has experienced success at World Championship and F2 Championship level. Nick said, "To be associated with the HM Plant Honda team is an honour! I've got five TT wins and missed out in 2007 due to problems, but we learnt from our mistakes and came back this year to win both races. We'll both be aiming to do the same in 2009!" Mark added, "We did the double at the TT in 2008 after a disappointing 2007, so we've learned from that and want another double with HM Plant Honda in '09!"
HM Plant Honda Team Manager, Havier Beltran, said, "We've got an incredibly strong line-up for the roads in 2009 - a very important year for Honda - celebrating its 50th anniversary of road-racing, which began with Honda's first assault on the Isle of Man TT races. John is still the man to beat around the 37.73-mile Mountain circuit, while Steve has proved to be one of the most remarkable newcomers of recent years, surprising many TT regulars with his speed around the course and taking a Supersport win last year. Both riders also have enviable reputations around the legendary North West 200 course, with Steve and John taking wins around the nine-mile 'Triangle' circuit. Nick and Mark have shown their speed by taking two wins this year and we'll be backing them 100% so they can do the same in 2009. We're also very happy to be continuing our road-racing relationship with Dunlop for 2009."
Celebration activities at the 2009 TT event to mark Honda's 50th anniversary of racing are currently in planning and will be announced in the near future.

NW200 - Date set for 2009 Races















Coleraine and District Motor Club officials have confirmed that the 2009 International North West 200 will take place on Saturday 16th May with Race Week festivities commencing on Saturday 9th May. The date had been pencilled in on the motorbike racing calendar for several weeks and was officially verified at the M.C.U.I. (U.C.) AGM held on Saturday past (8th November).

Said NW200 Clerk of Course Mervyn Whyte MBE, "Whilst planning is already underway for next year's 80th anniversary event, I'm delighted that our provisional date has now been rubber stamped and we can really go to town on promoting our Race Week and Race Day programmes at a global level.

"May 16th is a perfect date and will suit all UK and Ireland competitors giving teams ample time to prepare for the North West, with BSB's Oulton Park taking place on Bank Holiday Monday - 4th May and post North West 200, BSB's Donnington Park Race not happening until Whit Bank Holiday, Monday 25th May 2009."

The Coleraine Club's organising committee have already met with Coleraine Council officials to put in place an exciting week of activities and events to help celebrate the North West 200's 80th birthday and the event's official launch will take place on 8th January 2009 at the Belfast Waterfront Hall.
http://www.northwest200.org/

BikeWise wins National Road Safety Award

BikeWise has won the Highways Magazine Excellence Award for 2008 in the category of Road Safety Scheme of the year.
Donald Waller & Paul Brown of Durham County Council submitted the nomination in respect of the joint work done by Durham County Council & Durham Police in relation to BikeWise...
This encompasses BikeWise Mini Bike Club, BikeWise Training as well as BikeWise show.
BikeWise has grown since it's inception in 1995 and now caters, all year round, for all things 'motorcycling' in County Durham and for ages 6yrs to 76yrs.......

(Iain Rodgers, Mick Alder & Bob Brown recieving the award on behalf of the BikeWise team)