everest30
Dirt Disciple
Gary Fisher Grateful Thread
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Well, Gary Fisher started it so we all must be grateful for the founder of Mountain Biking.
I remember my first MTB, a Raleigh Maverick, it was a cross between what i was riding then, a tracker as we used to call them and a road bike with 10 gears. The Maverick was heavy and Raleigh had really lost the lead when it came to bikes. My tracker in comparison was a road frame with straight bars and single gear.
I lost the 'bug' for cycling.
I had always been a raod cyclist, as instilled from my father from an early age.
I still have the road bug, but prefer more tradtional bikes, as you can see from this posting.
My first real bike was a Major Nicholls, and I still have one to this day although very rare to find one of these now.
Getting back to the MTB, I bought a second hand Muddy Fox Pathfinder. I live in the real world and top of the range bikes were well out of the pocket for real people. We are talking Raleigh, Falcon etc. My brother (who worked in a cycle shop at the time) had bought a Claud Butler with Diore groupset. My Muddy fox was the managers own bike which he had replaced every component with XT and as such represented a bargain for me.
As old road cyclists we knew of many places we could go off road on our new found machines. In those days, there was no such thing as suspension, justy good riding techinique.
Many, many years later and I lost MTB completely. I'm not a mad fan of full suspension, all singing, all dancing machines as I remember the pioneer of them all, Gary Fisher, who took a standard frame andd beefed it up to take trial on the mountains.
Which brings me to my current bike, the Gary Fisher Grateful Dead. Not everyones cup of teas, I agree. It was only basically a paint job on a Hoo Koo E Koo, but nevertheless I am finding increasingly rare.
My brother told me to lend it to a bike museum and forget about riding it, because where would you find another one ?? But I love it....
If I could find another Muddy Fox Pathfinder, I would love that too (as mine was stolen)
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Well, Gary Fisher started it so we all must be grateful for the founder of Mountain Biking.
I remember my first MTB, a Raleigh Maverick, it was a cross between what i was riding then, a tracker as we used to call them and a road bike with 10 gears. The Maverick was heavy and Raleigh had really lost the lead when it came to bikes. My tracker in comparison was a road frame with straight bars and single gear.
I lost the 'bug' for cycling.
I had always been a raod cyclist, as instilled from my father from an early age.
I still have the road bug, but prefer more tradtional bikes, as you can see from this posting.
My first real bike was a Major Nicholls, and I still have one to this day although very rare to find one of these now.
Getting back to the MTB, I bought a second hand Muddy Fox Pathfinder. I live in the real world and top of the range bikes were well out of the pocket for real people. We are talking Raleigh, Falcon etc. My brother (who worked in a cycle shop at the time) had bought a Claud Butler with Diore groupset. My Muddy fox was the managers own bike which he had replaced every component with XT and as such represented a bargain for me.
As old road cyclists we knew of many places we could go off road on our new found machines. In those days, there was no such thing as suspension, justy good riding techinique.
Many, many years later and I lost MTB completely. I'm not a mad fan of full suspension, all singing, all dancing machines as I remember the pioneer of them all, Gary Fisher, who took a standard frame andd beefed it up to take trial on the mountains.
Which brings me to my current bike, the Gary Fisher Grateful Dead. Not everyones cup of teas, I agree. It was only basically a paint job on a Hoo Koo E Koo, but nevertheless I am finding increasingly rare.
My brother told me to lend it to a bike museum and forget about riding it, because where would you find another one ?? But I love it....
If I could find another Muddy Fox Pathfinder, I would love that too (as mine was stolen)