Bike Mart Announces Generous Giveaway: “We Have 15 Bicycles This Year”

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By LatAm Reports Staff Writers

Tegucigalpa, Honduras.- As is already a tradition, Bike Mart will make several headdresses smile for fortune in the 2024 Cycling Tour of Diario EL HERALDO. This reference cycling store showed the desired gifts that will be drawn on Sunday, November 17 at the largest cycling event in the country.

What is costing you, which is symbolic, can you earn a bike that costs you $700 up. We have 15 bikes this year. This event brings together that of giving, winning, solidarity… it is an event that complements all the good,” announced Gennie Flores, owner manager, when he receives the Zona team to show the coveted ones that will tap into the thirteenth Vuelta.

Three of the 15 are mountain bikes from the Spanish Orbea, a very entrenched patent in the area.

It’s one of the most consumed models. It is one of the most symbolic bicycles of the brand. “It’s a good machine to start in this sport,” Gennie described with joy.

The Vuelta is a reference

The remaining 12 are from the Panamanian brand Rali: seven of route and five hybrids. In the first – all the geometry of the frame and the rudder is for a pavement tour, while the second ones serve – to mobilize, they have the goodness that they have a thick tire and work both in earth and paved street.

Once the competition is finished on the track, these will be given away at random among all participants. We have a 15% discount on spare parts for registered people who bring the bike to the store before November 11 (date of registration), Flores said.

The party is very close and the incentives to sign up are many. It’s an event that massifies the sport. Many started cycling watching the Vuelta.

“I missed the first one and, when I saw the cyclists pass by, I got excited and said, “The other year I’m going to do it,” said Gennie, representative of one of the arms that makes possible the most massive cycling feast in Honduras.

This article has been translated to english after originally appearing in El Heraldo