Great story, thank you Leah. Bike repair and maintenance is a forever 
learning process, but I don’t want to mess with spoke tension, truing 
wheels, or building wheels up from scratch. These are skills I deeply 
admire in other folks.
On Sunday, February 19, 2023 at 12:30:47 PM UTC-5 Jim Whorton wrote:

> Wonderful, and yes I can relate.
>
> On Sunday, February 19, 2023 at 9:30:45 AM UTC-5 Roberta wrote:
>
>> Sounds like a wonderful class. I wonder if you’ll start riding towards 
>> the potholes or if you hear a noise just think “I might be able to fix 
>> that!”  I’m going to look for a local class like that. 
>>
>> On Saturday, February 18, 2023 at 9:31:40 PM UTC-5 Bicycle Belle Ding 
>> Ding! wrote:
>>
>>> It’s winter here in Michigan and business at the local bike shop is 
>>> slow. The shop had a brilliant idea to host a class for a small number of 
>>> students to teach basic bicycle maintenance/mechanics. Students were to 
>>> bring their own bikes, which was wonderful because we would learn to work 
>>> on what we actually have. Our teacher was quietly brilliant, extremely 
>>> patient, and, well, dreamy. (I would love to set him up with my friend from 
>>> my women’s club ride and then be in their wedding. Unable to ascertain his 
>>> marital status without committing harassment, I am still in the throes of 
>>> scheming.)
>>>
>>> I digress! 
>>>
>>> He taught us how the shop gives each bike a once-over. It’s an M shape, 
>>> starting at the front wheel, going up to the bars, down to the pedal/chain 
>>> ring, up to the saddle and down to that rear wheel. From there we moved on 
>>> to wheel truing, derailleurs and shifters, and finally, brakes. 
>>>
>>> There were three of us in the class; one aluminum Trek with flat bars, a 
>>> steel Jamis that had been ridden hard on the trainer in covid, and my 
>>> raspberry Platypus. We all had V brakes. They had indexed shifting and I 
>>> had friction. When examining our bikes, we/he found several problems 
>>> (though not on the Platypus because I drag that bike in for every little 
>>> thing) that we then observed our teacher fix. I now know what a loose 
>>> headset sounds like (the Trek). Though, ironically, if you hit my front 
>>> wheel to elicit the sound, the German mirror will respond with an identical 
>>> sound. There are some skills that I still see best left to the experts - 
>>> wheel truing, for instance. I audibly gasped when he took after the spokes 
>>> of a wheel to mess them up for demonstration. I am leaving my new spoke 
>>> wrench in the packaging because no good can come from that thing.
>>>
>>> I am still not brave enough to do a lot with tools to my bike, but I’m 
>>> working on it. I like that some of the mystery was taken out of it all and 
>>> I can see how parts work. Do I dare disclose here some of what I thought 
>>> beforehand? Oh, fine. I thought a wheel out of true meant they had to bend 
>>> a rim back into place. I had NO idea spokes were the culprit, nor did I 
>>> know you could adjust them. 😬 And so on and so forth.
>>>
>>> Our mechanic was so encouraging and told us we should experiment at home 
>>> - don’t worry, he assured us, you won’t break anything. But I wonder if he 
>>> will feel the same when I show up with my collection of redundant 
>>> Rivendells; pieces and parts left over and collected after rolling around 
>>> on my garage floor. “I have been fixing my bike and now it won’t work.” 
>>>
>>> Anyway, it’s a small step of self-betterment and I’ll keep walking that 
>>> direction. I’m sure some of you out there can relate.
>>> Leah
>>>
>>

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