The one that fits you the best.
There's a small advantage to approach a bicycle from the left side. The right side has the chain, and the chainrings. These are usually a bit dirty, so you tend to get stains on your clothes/legs if you touch them.
PUT TAPE ON THE PHONE AND PUT IT ON THE BIKE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You use your ARMS to LIFT the bike onto the rack
if its a one seat bike no, not unless you want to crash
Well, there's one bike called the autoshift, which looks a bit MTB-like and is supposed to do that, but a regular bike shouldn't
No bmx is supposed to have suspension
You can lean it to your side, step over the bike, pull the bike up from under you, and get on!:)
You are supposed to go the way the cars are going, if you live in America, they drive on the right side I think, you would face that way, if you lived in England, you would face the left way because I believe they drive that way. In other words, if the front of a car is facing north, the front of your bike should, too.
This depends on where you live. In most states it is illegal to ride your bike on the side walk, you are supposed to be in the bike lane. But all truth being told with insurance companies it is the drivers fault for failing to notice the person on the side walk.
It isn't in any album. it was originally supposed to be a b-side of one of their singles, but it leaked onto the internet and was never released officially.
The best freestyle finish is touching with one hand, turned almost onto your side.
Technically, no. You're only supposed to bike on the park drive, which is a 6-mile loop for cars that has a bike lane. You're not supposed to bike on the smaller pathways that wind through the park, but a lot of people do it anyway.
"Honking" is sometimes used for when a rider is standing up, tiliting the bike from side to side to get more power to the pedals.