I was born without the common sense required to generate fear. It is a version of the old "mind over matter" thing: if you got no mind, it doesn't matter.Grown men turn into mice when I put them on narrow ledges or ice at night. For me it's a non issue because I have no fear of heights.
I once lived in a land of ice and snow and moved away. Now all my winter tires on my bicycles look exactly like my summer tires. Central California will do that to your bicycle riding.I used to ride partially cleared streets on ol' Droppy (a scratched up rusty Good Vibrations) last century. Chances of that happening now are zero. Put bike and snow in the same sentence and this is what comes to mind.
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The rear wheel appears to be two wheels side by side complete with two hubs and all requisite spokes. Apparently used a long axle to get both hubs of each wheel side by side. Cool home made bike.
IIRC, some of the original fatbikes used in Alaska on the Iditarod Trail had wheels set up with side-by-side rims to accomodate fatter treads. One of the regular competitors BITD lived in my area at the time and he had a custom set up that way.The rear wheel appears to be two wheels side by side.
This reminds me of the mid 60s here in the UP. There were quite a few of us (at least 6 riders that I remember) who rode Triumph motorcycles daily all winter. We could afford either a VW Bug, junker car or a British motorcycle, but not a car and a motorcycle. We opted for the motorcycle. We either had jobs or jobs and university classes so we rode in horrid rounded bumpy smooth ice. My one friends rode 130 mile round trip, just for fun, where only the car tires had occasionally worn away the ice In a narrow grove. I don’t know how he did it, it was cold, no electric cheater heater jackets then, and there were lots of places that day where the tires hadn’t worn down the ice. It was treterous. He was the best rider of the group. Sadly he was killed by a hit and run driver on the freeway on his motorcycle about 20 years ago. They never found the killer. The police told his widow, right away, that in cases like this they seldom find the killer. Hopefully more people have cameras now. I was shocked to hear that this was a pretty common occurrence.I used to ride partially cleared streets on ol' Droppy (a scratched up rusty Good Vibrations) last century. Chances of that happening now are zero. Put bike and snow in the same sentence and this is what comes to mind.
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Wah!
I went to college at a ski school. That’s where you went if you wanted to ski but you didn’t have much money: Utah state.Canadian downhill, apparently these were kits, just add your own garage sale ski. No I do not ride it.View attachment 211122
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