Bicycling is Fun!

 

                        Photo of my bike, in my favorite cow pasture near Olema, CA

 

 

The Ideal Bicycle (in my opinion)

Why I think French touring bikes are great.

My new bike (in progress)

Maruishi Bikes

 

 

 

Almost everyone who falls in love with bicycling, does so during childhood. It is probably as close as a kid can get to flying, and with nothing more than the power of their two legs. For me, cycling became a more serious interest during the high school years. Once I decided to race, I had to “train” a lot. This meant going for long, often solitary rides in the wooded parts of the Bay Area. These extended medtations salvaged much of my sanity during those adolescent years. After a few year hiatus during college, I decided once again to get on the bike, out of the sheer love of bicycles and of riding them. I then realized that as a racer, I never enjoyed the racing as much as the riding itself.

 

The technology of racing bikes has always influenced recreational bikes (and vice versa), but never more so than now. People commonly think that, in order to have a fun ride, they need the latest technology and the lightest bike. Racing bikes are great—for racing. If you want a comfortable, practical bike that will last you many years, a racing bike is probably not for you. Racing bikes are designed with short term goals in mind. They are rarely used by professionals for more than one season. Nor are they made for comfort. This in part explains the popularity of mountain bikes in the mid 1980’s. While not as well-suited to the road, their big tires and upright position are much more comfortable than many of the road bikes which emulated “high-performance” racing bikes (small hard tires, low handlebars, difficult gears, etc.).

 

If lower-priced bikes should emulate anything, it ought to be the traditional French and English touring bikes that people in those countries have enjoyed riding in the countryside since the late 1800’s. Here’s Sandy Holdsworth, famed bicycle builder, out on a ride, probably in the 1940’s

 

LEAD Technologies Inc. V1.01

 

 

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