"Biker" for me usually means motorbiking, though I also have a couple of mountain-bikes... see Trail Bike
My current motorbikes are a Honda CBR600RR ABS 2017 and a Kawasaki Ninja Z250SL.
Previously I have owned: Kawasaki ZX4-RR (Ninja anniversary edition), Honda CRF300 Rally, Honda CBR600RR 2005, Honda CBR600FW, Honda VF750F, Yamaha FJ600, Suzuki GSX750EX, Yamaha FJ750, Yamaha XJ900, Kawasaki Z750 and I passed my riding test on my Kawasaki KH250.
See also my Motorbiking web links

Lake District Fells seen from Hartside
Life on the open road under the wide skies
Summer leathers so great to feel closer to the bike and the road without all those winter layers.
Goldilocks would have liked that ride: not too hot and not too cold.
Little wind and roads clearish; except for horse-drawn vehicles presumably dispersing from Appleby Fair. Like bikers, these guys also appreciate the romance of the Open Road.
Moorland sheep are particularly effective at vehicle speed control.
Great roads, views and new performance tyres performing well. Happy rider!
And there really is a place named Ruffside.
Going grocery shopping the long and pretty way round... via Whinlatter Pass (318 m.) and Lorton for a view of Bassenthwaite Lake. Shopping run out from Keswick. Of course the A66 down by the side of the lake is shorter, quicker but much less fun.

“The Struggle”, Kirkstone Pass (454 m.)
Ride round Helvellyn (949 m.) at the end of a day when the roads had been cleared by rain driving the tourists back to their lodgings. My route took in Thirlmere, Grasmere, then up the 18-20% sustained gradient of “The Struggle” to Kirkstone Pass (454 m.), and back along the north shore of Ullswater.
Photo montage of many of the people at the GBMCC AGM weekend. Happy smiles after a sunny ride and the thrill of the Lake District topography after the monotony of the M6, as well as celebrating getting together again as a club. This year - after a couple of deferrals - we were able to gather in Patterdale YHA for the long weekend. Great to see friends again, new riders and just under 50 bikes in the parking. Bikers arrived from far and wide, including Scotland, Wales, the Isle of Man and Northern Ireland as well as the more populous areas of the UK. This wasn’t everyone in the club by a long way: GBMCC has more than 500 members in 2022.
Thanks to the run leaders and to Graham who organised the weekend.
Hi-res version is on the GBMCC app & website (members only)
Coffee stop, Middleton-in-Teesdale
Four counties ride day with GBMCC to the North Pennines and Dales
Cumbria, Durham, Yorkshire, Lancashire then back to Cumbria. In just one run this route took in most of the best of riding in the UK. After the twisty lakeside road out from Patterdale, then up the multiple hairpins to Hartside Summit, the route took in single track roads, moorland open roads and narrow roads with dry stone walls on both sides and grass in the middle. Steep climbs and hairpins, deep valley bottoms compressing the bikes’ front forks, summits with a tendency to go airborne and straights to hit the revs limiter, at least on my 250. Views over to Cumbria, Morecombe Bay and down Teesdale to the North Sea coast.
Very physical but great sport for me wrangling my little Ninja Z250SL to stay in the same time-zone as the litre-plus bikes, and good of Scott, Paul, Nic, Cal and Ian to accept me to ride with and encourage me in this group of famously “progressive” riders.
More photos: Teesdale - Wensleydale - Littondale - Ribblesdale - Dales National Park
I'm riding light for a week on the mountain roads of the Alps. No laptop, although I do have my SLR camera but photos will have to wait till I'm back in Marseille..
I left Marseille for a long ride north via the Col de la Croix Haute (1179 m.) to Saint-Gervais under Mont Blanc. A bit of rain towards the end of the day which cleaned the Provence dust off my white leathers and boots but didn't soak me through.