That’s brought me back to the 60’s when my Boy Scout troop bicycled 70 
miles to scout camp. In Texas. In the summer. I rode it on my single speed 
Rollfast cruiser that probably weighed as much as both of my Rivendells put 
together. “Ten Speeds” were too exotic for us. Nobody told us it wasn’t 
supposed to be as much fun as it was. 
On Tuesday, July 22, 2025 at 10:57:09 AM UTC-7 [email protected] wrote:

> My Dad helped me rig a canoe hand truck into a trailer rig for my Schwinn 
> clunker 2-speed kick-back in the early seventies. Wish I had photographs. I 
> also rode my late 70s Schwinn Paramount with tubulars off road back in the 
> day, down a trail along a railroad bed in my neighborhood and on USFS 
> roads. I learned to repair tubulars or sew-ups, and I still ride tubulars 
> on a regular basis. Thank goodness for tubular rim tape and sealants. 
>
> Russell Duncan
> Connecticut River Valley, Massachusetts
> -
> On Tuesday, July 22, 2025 at 11:11:05 AM UTC-6 ascpgh wrote:
>
>> I rode my Motobecane Mirage on trails, paths and streets all over my 
>> childhood area north of St. Louis. It was a bike so I rode it and it was 
>> after breakfast so I was dressed, in street clothes. 
>>
>> Andy Cheatham
>> Pittsburgh
>>
>> On Tuesday, July 22, 2025 at 12:32:30 AM UTC-4 Keith P. wrote:
>>
>>> Maybe pushing it for a post on this forum, but I bet others will get a 
>>> kick out of these Boy's Life magazine images I came across of some 
>>> beautiful steel made, rack kit'ed, bikes of the 60's:
>>>
>>> [image: Surf.jpeg]
>>> [image: Bikes.jpeg]
>>> [image: goodyear.jpeg]
>>>
>>> Good paint jobs. Good headlines.
>>> k.
>>>
>>

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