Stockholm By Bike: The Nordic Biking Culture
I'm not yet done with Stockholm, or with Europe for that matter. Just because I've stayed in Stockholm for only three days, doesn't mean I didn't have enough time to shoot around the area and picture the local lifestyle.
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I have quite a few photos to share, and for those you know me relatively intimately, know that I have a very special feeling towards biking.
I'm a biker myself - not one of those who do marathons or anything, but one of those who uses biking as a lifestyle - biking to work (I did it in LA, SF, and DC) and biking around the city on weekends (doing it now in NYC)…[Can't you guess by the name of my blog?]
I have quite a few photos to share, and for those you know me relatively intimately, know that I have a very special feeling towards biking.
I'm a biker myself - not one of those who do marathons or anything, but one of those who uses biking as a lifestyle - biking to work (I did it in LA, SF, and DC) and biking around the city on weekends (doing it now in NYC)…[Can't you guess by the name of my blog?]
So, everywhere I go, I notice the 'biking scene' and in Europe - there's a very rich, very active biking scene. For example, both Berlin and Stockholm are very bike-friendly cities - majority of the residents bike around, to and from work, to and from cafes, to and from shopping…
I was absolutely taken by the biking in both cities so much that I couldn't stop taking photos of both the bikes in moving and locked-up positions and the people who rode them. I even took a city bike for a spin around Berlin and spent about 7 hours biking around Berlin, which allowed me to see the city up close and personal and visit various cool, artsy, fashionable districts and landmarks on a short time vs. taking metro and/or bus or seeing it by foot.
Here's a bit of the biking scene in Stockholm that I've captured last month:





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