Canada – Cycling

Canada presents a cycling landscape that is expanding yet unevenly distributed across its enormous territory. In cities such as Montréal, Vancouver, and Victoria, purpose-built infrastructure and bike-share programmes make riding a genuinely useful mode of daily transport. Elsewhere, cycling tends

Caymans – Cycling

For expats in the Cayman Islands, cycling occupies an interesting position — useful for some as a mode of getting around, and genuinely enjoyable for many more as a recreational pursuit, yet far from a firmly rooted part of everyday

Brazil – Cycling

Brazil presents cyclists with a complicated but genuinely improving picture. Cycling infrastructure is expanding at pace in major urban centres such as São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Fortaleza, and Curitiba, and a growing culture of two-wheeled travel is taking hold

Brunei – Cycling

For expats living in Brunei, cycling tends to be a leisure and fitness pursuit rather than a practical means of getting from A to B. The country’s roads are built with motorists firmly in mind, dedicated infrastructure for cyclists is

Belize – Cycling

Cycling in Belize serves as both a practical mode of everyday transport and a fulfilling recreational pursuit. Bicycles have been woven into the fabric of Belizean life for generations, with locals depending on them for getting to work, running errands,

Barbados – Cycling

For those living on or relocating to the island, cycling in Barbados occupies an appealing space between everyday transport and active recreation. Dedicated cycling infrastructure remains sparse and road conditions present real challenges, yet the island’s 1,600 km of roads,

Belgium – Cycling

Belgium is a country where the bicycle is a genuine fixture of everyday life rather than a pastime reserved for weekends. With millions of people riding regularly, an expanding web of dedicated cycle highways, and a deeply rooted cycling culture

Bahamas – Cycling

Cycling in the Bahamas is on the rise, though it remains largely a leisure and sporting pursuit rather than a practical mode of daily transport. Dedicated cycle infrastructure is scarce — Nassau being no exception — and road widths combined

Bahrain – Cycling

Cycling in Bahrain occupies a niche as a recreational and sporting pastime rather than a primary means of getting around. The island’s flat landscape and modest dimensions are well suited to two-wheeled travel, yet a road network designed around the

Argentina – Cycling

Argentina rewards cyclists with a combination of rapidly growing urban cycling infrastructure — especially in Buenos Aires — and breathtaking long-distance routes through the Andes, Patagonia, and the Pampas. Although cycling culture here has not yet reached the level seen