Wait! Bicycling is NOT the source of all 2-wheel wisdom?  I want my
money back.
GeorgeS

On May 17, 8:09 am, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery <thill....@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Just Ride was on my mind yesterday when I tried to help a woman decide on
> her first nice bike. She wants a sporty-ish bike for Burley-pulling and it
> would be nice if it had a rack. Easy enough. But she's also athletic and
> aspires to the racer archetype. I should add that she's the type of woman
> that most men would notice in any crowd, which means that various bike
> dudes have tried to "help" her with all sorts of advice. All the usual
> suspects were present: the necessity and efficiency of clipless pedals, the
> magical properties of carbon, and the (baffling-to-me) popularity of
> time-trial bikes, none of which are necessary, or even desirable, in a bike
> for daily errands and family rides. Anyway, she was clearly struggling with
> the perceived compromises between making a bike useful and making a bike
> fast (or at least light/expensive enough to impress the racer wannabe
> crowd). I thought to myself: this would be a lot easier if she could drop
> the racer notions and stop hanging out with guys who read Bicycling
> Magazine as a comprehensive source of cycling wisdom.
>
> On Thursday, May 10, 2012 1:15:32 AM UTC-5, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
> wrote:
>
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> > Maybe there should be a spoiler alert here - be advised that I will be
> > discussing various aspects of the new book, so navigate away from this page
> > if you prefer the content of the book to be a complete surprise.
>
> > I finished reading the book tonight, which if I can summarize in a line,
> > is about all the good things about bikes that appear only when you toss
> > racer prejudices and attitudes out the window and Just Ride. After the
> > first few chapters, I thought that maybe the editors really sanitized GP's
> > historically familiar against-the-grain opinions to be more blandly
> > vanilla, hopefully to be appealing to a broader audience. The general
> > content wasn't unpredictable to me, having read the Readers and Catalogs
> > and most everything else Riv going back to 2004 when I wanted a touring
> > bike and couldn't find any to buy except the Atlantis (that's how I first
> > found Riv in the internet universe). But I was somewhat surprised that
> > there was little to no discernible lug evangelism or quill stem absolutism
> > or singing the praises of friction shifters, and the Retro-Grouchiness was
> > held to a dull roar.
>
> > But as I got further along in the book, I started to think that maybe Mr
> > Petersen has simply mellowed about the trivial details over the years (I
> > know I have!). Or maybe more accurately, there's less to be peeved about in
> > the bike industry now than there was 10 years ago or even 5 years ago.
> > After all, smart, sturdy bikes with ample tire clearance and useful
> > braze-ons and some attention to classic, non-billboard aesthetics have
> > become, dare I say, normal. If racing bikes and gear are the status quo in
> > the world, then I must live in a lucky bubble in South Minneapolis where I
> > ride and fix bikes every day, as I see lots of reincarnated 1980s
> > sport-tourers, old steel MTBs, and new(ish) Surly Cross-checks and LHTs on
> > a daily basis, but feel like I see relatively few "road bikes" being ridden
> > by obvious faux-racers. To the extent that bike trends have steered toward
> > the benefit of the "Unracer" over the past decade or so, my opinion is that
> > Grant and Rivendell played a large part in it. This is not to say that all
> > smart bike designs and product offerings are shameless Riv-ripoffs, but
> > that Grant gave voice to a backlash movement and opened a long-neglected
> > market to a lot of smart, creative people who maybe couldn't or wouldn't
> > have done it without some pioneering coattails to ride on.

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