Sports-tourer? Country bike? I'd offer utility bike, too, but "utility"
seems to indicate "not fun". How about useful bike?

Thinking more about it, I suggest that "bicycle" be used like "car". No one
thinks that "car" refers solely to a racing car.


On Thu, May 30, 2013 at 11:11 AM, Anne Paulson <anne.paul...@gmail.com>wrote:

> Grant writes: "I think by virtue of sheer number inferiority, that riding
> "unracerly" whether or not you like the label, needs a label to be a thing,
> and without the label or being a thing, it will get etch-a-sketch out of
> sight and mind continually by the dominance of the other stuff."
>
> I agree about the label. Do we have also have a label that defines as what
> we are, rather than what we are not?
>
> From time to time when I am riding, someone asks me if I'm training for
> something. No, I say, this is the thing. I just ride because I like to ride
> my bike.
>
> A friend of mine is a new-ish rider. He has some sort of superlight bike,
> like almost all the riders around here, and then he was also riding some
> other bike to work, and it was stolen. So he emailed me and another friend
> about what he should get for a new commute bike. I suggested a few things,
> something with lights, fenders and a basket, for example. He ended up
> buying a used Seven ID8, which, he proudly said in his email, weighs 17
> pounds. Nice bike, I emailed back.
>
> But I privately wondered, how does that 17-pound bike work for commuting?
> If you feel like buying a gallon of milk and some potatoes on the way home,
> do you have somewhere to put them? If it is pouring on your way home, did
> you have somewhere to stash your rain jacket and do you have fenders so you
> don't get a stripe up your back and a bike covered with grit? If you feel
> like taking the long way home along the dirt trail on the levee, will your
> tires stand up to it?
>
> I needed some term to use with my friend, to say, you have your light
> racey bike, but this one should be-- unracery. Or whatever. But he, like
> most of the riders I know, thinks that lightness is the most important
> factor in choosing any bike.  If someone buys a new bike, the first
> question is ALWAYS "How much does it weigh?"
>
> --
> -- Anne Paulson
>
> My hovercraft is full of eels
>
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-- 

http://resumespecialties.com/index.html
patrickmo...@resumespecialties.com

Albuquerque, NM

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