My youngest criticised my fixie the other day.
He recalled me saying that one of the joys of it was the absence of anything not absolutely necessary. Why, he asked, was mine laden with computer, bottle cages, full-size pump* and lights?
Rather than come up with a clever reply, I took one cage, the pump and the computer off. (Absense of a computer is liberating on such a machine, so well done youngest child.)
I need the lights now that it's November. I need one bottle cage. I'd rather have two, as my tools live in an old soup carton that I stuff in there, but son was offended by the aesthetic, so they go in my pockets.
I wish I could take off the rear brake, but I do use it in the hills and cover it like a security blanket when nervous.
Rear brake notwithstanding, how minimalist can a fixie be and still be useful as a daily hack?
* The full-size pump slots in under the crossbar and was supplied new with the bike (a Claud Butler criterium) in about 1991. It still works.
He recalled me saying that one of the joys of it was the absence of anything not absolutely necessary. Why, he asked, was mine laden with computer, bottle cages, full-size pump* and lights?
Rather than come up with a clever reply, I took one cage, the pump and the computer off. (Absense of a computer is liberating on such a machine, so well done youngest child.)
I need the lights now that it's November. I need one bottle cage. I'd rather have two, as my tools live in an old soup carton that I stuff in there, but son was offended by the aesthetic, so they go in my pockets.
I wish I could take off the rear brake, but I do use it in the hills and cover it like a security blanket when nervous.
Rear brake notwithstanding, how minimalist can a fixie be and still be useful as a daily hack?
* The full-size pump slots in under the crossbar and was supplied new with the bike (a Claud Butler criterium) in about 1991. It still works.