As It Happens

Canadian 'bike weirdo' breaks 2 world records on her penny farthing 

People who ride penny farthings are “bike weirdos,” says Lizanne Wilmot — and she’s the fastest weirdo of them all.

‘When you're on the penny farthing, you can't help but to smile the entire time'

A woman in a yellow cycling suit, bent forward, pedaling a penny farthing on a blue racetrack.
Lizanne Wilmot broke two world records on her penny farthing at the Tasmanian Christmas Carnival in Burnie, Australia, in December 2024. (Caroline Tan/TasCarnivals)

People who ride penny farthings are weirdos, says Lizanne Wilmot — and she's the fastest weirdo of them all.

On New Year's Eve, the Canadian-born cyclist broke the world record for fastest speed on a penny farthing when she hit 41.709 kilometres per hour at the Tasmanian Christmas Carnival in Burnie, Australia, claiming the women's title and beating the men's record, too. 

Two days prior, at the same event, she broke the women's world record for fastest one kilometre on a penny farthing at one minute and 52.750 seconds. 

Guinness World Records certified Wilmot's titles this month. 

Both rides were hell on her hamstrings, she says, but cruising to victory on her bespoke Victorian-style bicycle was pure joy.

"When you're on the penny farthing, you can't help but to smile the entire time," Wilmot told As It Happens guest host Megan Williams. 

A thriving penny farthing community 

Wilmot, a championship-winning track cyclist and spatial scientist from Brampton, Ont., has plenty of experience riding an ordinary bike. But once she took her first whirl on a penny farthing, she says she was hooked. 

"It's almost like I've de-evolved," she said. 

The old-timey bike, also known as a high-wheeler, has a massive front wheel, which the rider sits astride, putting them more than a metre above the ground. 

A woman, pictured from the front with her mouth wide open in scream as she rides a penny farthing on a racetrack.
Wilmot says riding a penny farthing is hard on the hamstrings, but a truly joyful experience. (Caroline Tan/TasCarnivals)

They largely fell out of favour in the 1880s with the advent of the modern bicycle. 

But the quaint style of cycling never disappeared entirely, and Wilmot says there's a thriving penny-farthing scene in Australia, where she's been living since she was 18.

"We're bike weirdos," she said. "All you have to do is show interest and you're instantly welcomed, which that's another thing that just makes being around the penny community that much better than being around a regular bike community."

A bespoke bike named Tiny

The other thing that makes a penny farthing better than a standard bike, she says, is the experience of riding it out in the world. 

"When you're riding a regular bike, you're kind of out there, you're going fast, you're not really taking things in," she said. 

"But when you are on a penny, you almost have to slow down and interact with more people, and it just brings you joy."

Wilmot rides a custom, 1.2-metre tall penny farthing, built by Australia's Dan Bolwell, a.k.a. "Penny Farthing Dan." 

She calls it Tiny because it's about 30 centimetres shorter than the average penny farthing.

A woman on a racetrack stands next to a penny farthing that's almost as tall as she is. She's holding the bike upright with one hand and throwing the other fist into the air in celebration.
Wilmot is now the fastest penny farthing cyclist on record. (Caroline Tan/TasCarnivals)

She was astride Tiny when she broke both world records. On Dec. 29, she rode one kilometre 30 seconds faster than the previous record holder, the U.K.'s Julie Woodward.

"I was head down, butt up, like just peddling the legs as fast as I could," she said. "I knew that I was going fast, but I didn't know I was breaking the record by that much."

On New Year's Eve, when she claimed the record for fastest speed on a penny farthing in the women's category, she also beat Guy Banham's men's record by 0.149 seconds, making her the fastest in the world.

She said it was "blowing a gale" that day at the track near Australia's Bass Strait.

"Having a bit of a tailwind, I was able to do that second run and just absolutely blow it out of the park," she said. 

Wilmot is already eyeing her next competitive challenge. But, in the meantime, she'll keep riding Tiny off the racetracks, fielding stares, questions and comments from curious passersby.

She's so used to it, she says, that she's developed scripted responses. 

"People are like, 'Oh yeah, you don't see that every day,'" she said. "And I'm like, 'Well, maybe you don't.'"

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sheena Goodyear

Journalist

Sheena Goodyear is a web journalist with CBC Radio's As It Happens in Toronto. She is equally comfortable tackling complex and emotionally difficult stories that hold truth to power, or spinning quirky yarns about the weird and wonderful things people get up to all over the world. She has a particular passion for science communication, and stories from LGBTQ communities. Originally from Newfoundland and Labrador, her work has appeared on CBC News, Sun Media, the Globe & Mail, the Toronto Star, VICE News and more. You can reach her at sheena.goodyear@cbc.ca

Interview produced by Katie Geleff and Cassie Argao

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