Saturday, March 21, 2009

1996 is vintage in bicycle years!

My "new" 1996 Trek 5000















The ratio is probably something akin to dog years. Bicycles, for the most part, have a relatively
short life span. They take a beating and are not often well-cared for, ie, left outside, thrown down, crashed, etc. Finding a 13 year old bike in great condition is somewhat rare, as in the case of the Trek I just got. It was ridden a few times, then put in a basement time capsule for 12 years.

One thing I've found about riding at my advanced age: one cannot turn one's head around as easily to check for oncoming traffic! I guess I used to be able to spin my head around as a teenager, put not anymore. If I try to turn my body for a better view, I get paranoid about falling over. Perhaps things will loosen up a bit as I get into better shape. In the meantime, I do a lot of stopping and starting when I have to turn corners or move into traffic. I just thought it would be a tad easier to assimilate back into this activity...not! I am however, not deterred. Riding is becoming quite addicting, something that is written about quite often in bicycle magazines and online forums. Could be worse. I could have taken up some other "addiction" with less benefits. The only downside: $$$. But, I'm learning how to ration out that as well.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Time for some inventory clearance on eBay.


The first of several bicycles going on eBay...an early nineties Trek 2300 Carbon/Aluminum road bike. They made this model out of both materials for some reason. It's kind of a collector's item but needs to go in order to "finance" a few other projects and the arrival of my everyday rider coming soon...a 1996 Trek 5000. The 5000 is a few years old but was not ridden for many years by its owner (less than 100 miles according to the listing). Since I can't afford a new Trek Madone yet (Lance and Levi's ride), this one will suffice.


Photos forthcoming of the "new" one when I gets here.

The 2300 was purchased as a frame only and I added all new components...that was the fun part. Selling it, packing it, and shipping it won't be quite the joy of building it.

But...its' all good.

Yours truly

Yours truly
So what's your story?
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