I suggest you check your spelling.

The following are excepts from [**Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English**][1] online:

>**pedal** [2]  
>*past tense and past participle* **pedalled**, *present participle* **pedalling** *British English*,  
>*past tense and past participle* **pedaled**, *present participle* **pedaling** *American English*  
>(intransitive and transitive)  
>
> 1. [always + adverb/preposition] to ride a bicycle  
>**pedal up/along/down etc**   
>*Andrew pedalled up the road towards the town centre*.
> 2. to turn or push the pedals on a bicycle or other machine with your feet:  
>She was **pedalling furiously** (=very fast).
>
>**peddle** (transitive) [3]  
>
> 1. to sell goods to people, especially goods that people disapprove of because they are illegal, harmful, or of not very high quality:  
>*They were accused of **peddling drugs**.*  
>*people who peddle cigarettes to young children*
> 2. to try to sell things to people, especially by going from place to place:  
>*Farmers come to Seoul to peddle rice*.
>*a door-to-door salesman **peddling his wares*** (=selling his goods)  
> 3. to try to persuade people to accept an opinion or idea which is wrong or false:
>*politicians peddling instant solutions to long-standing problems*


  [1]: http://www.ldoceonline.com/
  [2]: http://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/pedal_2
  [3]: http://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/peddle