20/11/2024
Lovely coffee morning with cycle2pilates members The Inn On The Lake
I have been blessed to teach you online since Covid and later, in the halls too. Thank you for supporting my business, I have loved every moment and we have shared some great memories together. I will always treasure our times and the website.
With much appreciation
Rebecca xx
29/10/2024
Morning everyone
I’m thinking Wednesday 20th for our coffee ☕️ morning 10:30am. The last hall class at walnut tree pavilion is that day at 09:15-10am (hall users please use up any remaining credits from now until then) and the last online classes Friday 22nd November xx
02/09/2024
Hi everyone
The Cycle2pilates studio classes are running as normal into September, the only change is the pilates start time on Wednesdays to 09:15.
The new pilates class at Walnut Tree Pavilion commences this Wednesday 4th September 09:15. I will be there from 9am setting up and to open the gate.
Online clients will be taught via zoom whilst I’m teaching live at the hall hoping all goes smoothly:)
Happy September and I look forward to seeing everyone in class
Rebecca x
Cycle2pilates.co.uk
14/08/2024
Hi
Those of you that attend the Britton grove community hall on Tuesday mornings, just to remind you next Tuesday 20th is the last session at old farm park.
There is no class Tuesday 27th bank holiday week and then we start walnut tree Pavillion Wednesday 4th September 09:15-10am.
This class is also via zoom at this new time 09:15 as I will be teaching online from the hall 🙂 x
05/08/2024
Yes 🙌 going for Gold
Gold medal 🥇
QUOTES FROM Katy Marchant, Sophie Capewell & Emma Finucane who make history in Paris 🥇 “I have no words! It’s a dream come true,” Katy Marchant said while her teammate Sophie Capewell shed tears of joy. “We’re over the moon! We’ve worked so incredibly hard towards this; There’s no other two people I’d rather be with on the start line.”
UCI MEDIA PRESS RELEASE -- WOMENS TEAM SPRINT GOLD AND WORLD RECORDS FOR GREAT BRITAIN TRIO
For the second week of the Olympic Games Paris 2024, attention shifted back to Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, home to the BMX Racing events just days earlier. The first session in the Vélodrome National on Monday was marked by a series of world records and victory for Great Britain in the women’s team sprint. New Zealand took silver and Germany the bronze.
“I have no words! It’s a dream come true,” Katy Marchant said while her teammate Sophie Capewell shed tears of joy. “We’re over the moon! We’ve worked so incredibly hard towards this; There’s no other two people I’d rather be with on the start line.”
“As you can tell I’m very emotional. It’s been such a long project,” Capewell added. “We basically sat down as a team and said this is something we need to work on if we want to qualify for the Games… but we haven’t just qualified, we’ve just won the whole bloody thing!”
“I’m honestly so proud,” Emma Finucane said. “We nailed that ride. I believed in us that we could do it but to execute it like that… I’ve never celebrated like that in my life. It’s so so special and we’ve worked so hard, so to everyone back home, I just want to say a huge thank you. The support has been unreal.”
The night started with a bang, as Great Britain’s Katy Marchant, Sophie Capewell and Emma Finucane set a new world record in the women’s team sprint (contested with three women per team instead of two, for the first time in the history of the Olympic Games) as early as the qualifying: 45’’472 (0.015 seconds faster than the Chinese reference from June 2024), at an average speed of 59.377 km/h.
It was only the beginning - the record was then beaten by Germany’s Emma Hinze, Lea Friedrich and Pauline Grabosch (45’’377) in the first round… But New Zealand - Ellesse Andrews, Shaane Fulton and Rebecca Petch - immediately went faster still (45’’348). And then Team GB went on to claim the record again: 45’’338, all in the first round!
The intensity kept on increasing with the finals. Germany got the better of the Netherlands (Kyra Lamberink, Hetty van de Wouw and Steffie van der Peet) in the battle for bronze. And Team GB beat the world record once more - 45’’186 (59.753km/h) - to take the gold medal against New Zealand.
0THER EVENTS
The first track session of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 also featured the qualifying for the men’s team pursuit and the men’s team sprint.
In the mens team sprint, the Dutch trio Roy van den Berg, Harrie Lavreysen and Jeffrey Hoogland showed their strength, beating their own Olympic record that had powered them to the gold medal at Tokyo 2020. Their time of 41’’279 (65.409km/h) was followed by Team GB’s 41’’862 and Australia’s 42’’072.
In the team pursuit, Australians set the best time, 3’42’’958, and will thus face Italy (fourth best time, 3’44’’351) in the first round, on Tuesday. The qualifying has defined these match-ups ahead of the finals: Great Britain vs Denmark, France vs Canada, and New Zealand vs Belgium.
SOURCE: https://www.uci.org/article/olympic-games-paris-2024-team-gb-sets-a-supersonic-tone/36SnbJfZYw4jHO6mPCW9Ia
19/07/2024
Hi everybody
Reminder next Tuesday we have coffee morning 11:15 at the Caldecotte lake pub I will bring the cakes 🍰 hopefully you can make it x
14/07/2024
believe and you can achieve England 🏴