Let’s hear it for the crap bike! The Supercycle! The Infinity! The clunky Schwinn, the rusty Nishiki, the rattly Norco!
These bikes are, for the most
part, total horseshit, manufactured out of cheap, heavy materials and bottom end
components, then slapped together by department store workers who know nothing
about bicycles. In car culture, you’d call them “beaters”—old, dented, scratched rides that get you from A to B, most of the time, and roll with the understanding that you won’t be spending much money or time on maintenance. When they expire, you just go on kijiji and find a new one.
Yet every cyclist needs a crap bike in the garage. (And the fact that
you can store your crap bike in the garage, as opposed to in your house, is just
one of the many virtues of the crap bike.) Crap bikes, for all their undeniable crappiness, are
essential. Flashy, expensive, nice bikes are fun to ride, sure, but crap bikes make
the cycling world go ‘round.
Despite their horseshitiness, or
perhaps because of it, crap bikes are worry free, even liberating. You don’t have to fret about someone stealing
your crap bike; there’s always a nicer bike around for prospective bike
thieves. You can ride your crap bike to the 7-Eleven and just lean it against
the window while you grab a Slurpee. It will be there when you get back. I do carry
a piddling, featherweight lock when I’m on my crap bike, more for show than
anything—none of this heavy kryptonite business you need for your nice bikes.
Crap bikes allow you to travel light and stress free.
Crap bikes have character too. High-end
bicycles are purebred show dogs—high performance, brag-worthy but
temperamental, high maintenance, and expensive to keep happy. Crap bikes,
meanwhile, are mongrels; what they lack in pedigree they make up for in
personality, dependability, and loyalty.
Awesome Crap Bikes often possess a
funky retro quality. My son’s Kuwahara crap bike, for instance, features an
elliptical chain ring (remember that fad from the mid ‘80s?), a “Rollerball
stem,” and a goofy wide saddle. He used to complain about its clunkiness now
gets how it works for him. All the nice bikes at his school have been picked
off the racks by thieves, but his Kuwahara remains unmolested—if still
elliptical. Now he even appreciates the street cred a crap bike can confer. The
crappier the ride, the cooler it is.
I’m not saying I want to ride my
crap bike in a Gran Fondo or across the country, but it’s time someone spoke up
for the rusted, warped, and neglected underbike, an essential part of cycling
life, and, in its way, as worthy of song as any ride out there.
The thing I like most about my crap bike is that although I like it, I don't like like it. If after a day at work I went to the bike rack and lo and behold my crap bike had been stolen, my heart would not be broken. I would figure out a bus route and make my way home with only a modicum of frustration. When my nice bike was stolen a few years back, I was heart broken for months. Ever since, a crap bike has been the bike for me. Once of these days, I'll find a bike to like like again, but I won't use it for commuting. For that task, the crap bike is the way to go!
ReplyDeleteCrap bikes are sooooooo not crap!
ReplyDelete