Nabeaquam
BoTM Winner
There is a small group that has a decent road ride up here every summer Tuesday at 6PM. They all have carbon jobs, but they all also have a classic steel bike. Once a year they ride the steel bikes. When I join I always have a 1930s-70s classic. They ask me how I can stand to ride my bikes, kinda inferring their junk compared to theirs. I get mad, stand pedal up a glacial moraine, up to the top, where it’s back country farm roads and blow all of these youngsters away. They always cheer. I turn around at 15 miles and they continue another 15 miles before turning back. I‘m usually loading my bike up when they all roll back. They’re all 20-30 years younger and I don’t want to slow them down so I bow out. I could do the distance but I start to slow down and know when it’s time to retreat. It’s a nice group that knows road riding rules, which makes it a safe ride.That BSA is a very deserved winning bike without a doubt, and I went for the Selbach which I thought might be close or even win given its worthiness; not to mention the other great entries.
Regarding voting, I always tell a couple US guys to check the entries and support the contest by voting whether they entered or not. I know at least one voted.
I live in a vintage bike riding "desert"; my car mechanic knows more about classic bikes than a shop I visit. I went to the bike shop yesterday for a QR skewer on my '81 Colnago and you'd have thought I was riding the Pope's gold plated one with the remarks I got. I think they forgot what cones, cups, etc. are, and one guy thought my freewheel was a cassette/freehub set-up. Zero "eroica" type rides in my area, and getting be zero knowledge too. They'd rather sell a new bike than service a good old one. Selling a $500 single speed coaster brake beach cruiser with cheap parts on it is their priority now, and of course the dreaded (to me) e-bike craze over here.