Throwback Thursday – Stuff that matters – and stuff that doesn’t

Throwback Thursday – Stuff that matters – and stuff that doesn’t

There are virtues to ignoring the gear and just getting on with the ride. Thoughts from Steve Worland.

As a regular magazine bike tester I’ve probably spent far too much time over the last couple of decades trying to compose reader-friendly new ways of describing how bikes feel. But how much does it really matter?
Don’t expect to learn a lot from this. It’s a stream of consciousness that might be more confusing than revealing. But if it makes anyone realise that getting out on a bike, any bike, is better than worrying about whether the bike is good enough then I’ve achieved something useful.

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Never mind the geometry, just enjoy the ride

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Barney Marsh takes the word ‘career’ literally, veering wildly across the road of his life, as thoroughly in control as a goldfish on the dashboard of a motorhome. He’s been, with varying degrees of success, a scientist, teacher, shop assistant, binman and, for one memorable day, a hospital laundry worker. These days, he’s a dad, husband, guitarist, and writer, also with varying degrees of success. He sometimes takes photographs. Some of them are acceptable. Occasionally he rides bikes to cast the rest of his life into sharp relief. Or just to ride through puddles. Sometimes he writes about them. Bikes, not puddles. He is a writer of rongs, a stealer of souls and a polisher of turds. He isn’t nearly as clever or as funny as he thinks he is.

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