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103 Educators providing Mechanics courses

Prologue Performance Cycling

prologue performance cycling

4.8(40)

Harrogate

Prologue Performance Cycling Riding a bike isn’t a simple sport, it’s a science – especially if you plan on doing it fast. Our Philosophy At Prologue we share your drive to achieve, your preoccupation with chasing hours in the saddle and your insatiable curiosity for what’s new in road cycling. Our bike shop Prologue Performance Cycling is Harrogate’s stockist of high-performance road bikes. We provide expert purchase advice and sell all the essential accessories, components, nutrition and cycling clothing. Our cycling cafe The cycling café, in the heart of Harrogate, Yorkshire, shows live races or iconic footage from the past. We serve as a meeting space for road cyclists. Groups, clubs and friends can gather pre-, during or post-ride and enjoy lunch or coffee and cake sourced from some of North Yorkshire’s best producers. Our workshop Our workshop, run by talented mechanics, will service and repair your bike to the highest standard. They also provide expert advice on custom builds or tailor to your specification. Our bike fitting A bike fit greatly improves cycling efficiency. We offer a state-of-the-art bike fitting on any road bike – bought in store or elsewhere. Our physiotherapy and sports massage The treatment room for cycle-specific therapies offers access to experts in physiotherapy, sports massage and injury rehabilitation. Our coaching and testing Prologue Performance Cycling offers you bespoke coaching and scientific fitness testing from professionals currently working with Olympic gold medallists. Services vary from entry-level testing up to elite-athlete coaching. Our cycling events In-store, Prologue hosts workshops, talks and social evenings for cyclists. Out on the road, our organised rides bring together cyclists for weekly tours of the stunning cycling routes around North Yorkshire.

Nottingham Writers' Club

nottingham writers' club

The club was founded in 1927 from an existing group of Nottingham writers eager to expand their membership. Among the founding members were a number of published writers, one of them Arthur E Ashley who wrote under the pen name Francis Vivian – produced two sets of books for his Brother Ignatius, and Inspector Knollis series, over many years. In the 1930’s NWC began to publish a regular club magazine Scribe, and the journal continues to carry the name today. As it did at the start, Nottingham Writers’ Club still prints successes, winning club competition entries, and items of interest to writers. Only during an enforced break during the Second World War, when a number of members were in the armed forces and the scarcity of paper suspended the production of Scribe, was the life of the club interrupted. Among its most well-known former members are Helen Cresswell, and Alan Sillitoe, who became a Freeman of Nottingham in 2008. The role of club President has been filled by writers too, including Eric Malpass who was succeeded by Peter Walker (the author Nicholas Rhea, whose Constable books became the TV series ‘Heartbeat’) in 1994, who in turn handed over the role in 2007 to the Mansfield based writer Roy Bainton. Speakers have always been an essential part of the annual programme, and have had among them, Leslie Charteris (the author of the Saint books, which became a successful television series in the 1960’s). During the last ten years the club has hosted talks by local authors Stephen Booth and John Harvey – both crime writers; the multi-talented Simon Brett, and novelist and short-story writer Jean Saunders. During the club’s 75th Anniversary (in 2002) our main speaker for that year, Edwina Currie, gave her talk amid the press and television coverage surrounding the disclosure of her close relationship with ex-Prime Minister John Major, in her latest book. The club has met in many buildings across Nottingham; among them the Black Boy Hotel that bordered the Market Square, The Elite Café on Parliament Street and The Bell Inn on Angel Row. The Black Boy Hotel and The Elite Café are no longer standing. In 1987 the club began its long association with The Nottingham Mechanics, moving into the card room at Birbeck House in Trinity Square until relocating to the new home of Nottingham Mechanics on North Sherwood Street in 2003, where we continue to meet.

Centaur Biomechanics

centaur biomechanics

Russell MacKechnie-Guire holds a PhD in Equine Biomechanics, graduating from the Royal Veterinary College in 2019. Russell’s thesis was titled ‘The Relationship between Saddle and Rider Kinematics, Equine Locomotion, and Thoracolumbar Pressures in Sports Horses’. Russell is based at Centaur Biomechanics, a company which he founded in 2006. He has extensively researched the effect that tack (saddle, bridle and girth) and the rider has on equine health and performance. Russell holds a post at Hartpury University as a Reader in Equine Biomechanics. Russell’s current area of research is horse-saddle-rider interaction, spinal kinematics in horses when ridden over ground, the effect that rider asymmetry has on equine back movement, and from a rehabilitation perspective, the effect that training aids and pole work exercise has on back movement. In addition, Russell collaborates with researchers on various research projects associated with equine health, rehabilitation and performance. Russell is a consultant for the British Equestrian Federations World Class, Team GBR programme and is a member of Team GBR’s Scientific Advisory Group. Russell also sits on the Society of Master Saddlers Scientific Advisory Group, and is part of the executive committee for the International Task force on Laterality in Sports Horses. Russell is also a Pilates instructor, Intrinsic (Human) Biomechanics Trainer, a BHSI equestrian coach, and a keen competitor in dressage and show jumping.