I am keeping my address secret at this point to stop any other form members sending round the little white van.
Andy...um, but they time the van rolls 'round your way, we'll
all be *in* it! We do have to stop at Bridgwater along the way, however. There's a little shop there we all might enjoy. "And a grand time was had by all" will be the ride report on
that one!
Ooh! I love the idea of the bike-to-car analog, and it is one I have often pondered as I rode along myself. No worries coming up with mine:
My bikes are all the equivalent of WRC rally cars. Oh, some are biased more toward RallyCross, and others like the rando bike are akin to the Super1600 class. Something that handles a mix of pavement and dirt, anyway and will go anywhere. Still looking for that "Gruppe B"-equivalent bicycle...hmm. Maybe a Mercury?
Andy there were many a time in the last few years i was embarrased to be riding my top of the range carbon bike ,who was i trying to kid...the days of me going fast a well and truly gone but i'm not a sad bunny about it as a matter of fact i quiet enjoy going slow ,don't know what my bike's think about it though
No bad rides, jags, either fast or slow! So long as you get out on the bike, its all good no matter the speed. Also, it really helps to shake it up a bit with some variety. Your Look was so different from the Sherpa, and I get the impression it was almost like riding a new bike all over again when you switched between them. The old saying with cars (proven true in my experience) is it's more satisfying to drive a slow car fast than a fast car slow in traffic. Not too different with bikes, though you can still enjoy the light, lively feel of a racing bike at any speed -- even just tootling around.
All the best,
Dan. (who -- if he wins the Lottery [hard, 'cos he doesn't play] -- will build a backyard racetrack with shifter-carts and pretend he's Michael Schumacher on his way to an F-1 career)