Hello lads!
It's been a pipedream for years now, but the bicycle hobo lifestyle is finally about to become a reality!
This fall my fiancé and I are setting out on an epic bike adventure. Starting from our home in southern Finland we will ride through the Baltic states and eastern Europe to the south to escape the winter. Then we will meander west, eventually reaching the south of Spain, where we will evaluate our journey so far and see if we want to continue to Africa, Asia or just go back home. I'm hoping for it to turn into an around the world adventure to be honest :twisted:
I'm thinking the initial leg will take approximately 9 months to a year to complete depending on how much we get sidetracked or enjoy staying in different places. The point is to make as few plans as possible and expose ourselves to all kinds of randomness and adventures along the way and to go wherever we bloody like really.
Money's tight as always, so we will be doing it on a shoestring budget of approx. 190€/month/person, mostly stealth camping and couchsurfing where we can. I've got most of the gear already as I'm a wilderness guide by trade and a longtime bike & retrobike enthusiast, but my fiancé is currently lacking almost everything.
It's been problematic finding her a bike as she is adamant on having a ladies specific frame that doesn't weigh a ton. And it would have to be cheap as well. I've talked her out of hub gears and a coaster brake so now we're trying to find her a small-ish (she's 5'4) ladies retro mountain bike but it seems very hard to come by any quality specimen over here. Would you guys have any suggestions of what to look for? What do you think about this old Trek 830 I came across locally?
The criteria are;
step through frame (her)
Upright position (her)
Cantilever brakes
Bosses for rear rack, preferrably front as well
26'' wheels
Preferrably 1 1/8'' headtube if we end up buying a touring specific modern fork
Wide enough gearing (granny gear)
I'll be touring on an old Alpinestars Cromega D560 converted to monster tourer with a Surly big dummy fork up front. here she is, I will get a 3x up front, bar end shifters and a shorter stem though, and some Schwalbe Marathons as well. I thought about taking my trusty Clockwork that's been with me through so much but I've kind of come to the conclusion that I want a slightly bigger frame than the 19'' Clocky for some extra stability.
It's been a pipedream for years now, but the bicycle hobo lifestyle is finally about to become a reality!
This fall my fiancé and I are setting out on an epic bike adventure. Starting from our home in southern Finland we will ride through the Baltic states and eastern Europe to the south to escape the winter. Then we will meander west, eventually reaching the south of Spain, where we will evaluate our journey so far and see if we want to continue to Africa, Asia or just go back home. I'm hoping for it to turn into an around the world adventure to be honest :twisted:
I'm thinking the initial leg will take approximately 9 months to a year to complete depending on how much we get sidetracked or enjoy staying in different places. The point is to make as few plans as possible and expose ourselves to all kinds of randomness and adventures along the way and to go wherever we bloody like really.
Money's tight as always, so we will be doing it on a shoestring budget of approx. 190€/month/person, mostly stealth camping and couchsurfing where we can. I've got most of the gear already as I'm a wilderness guide by trade and a longtime bike & retrobike enthusiast, but my fiancé is currently lacking almost everything.
It's been problematic finding her a bike as she is adamant on having a ladies specific frame that doesn't weigh a ton. And it would have to be cheap as well. I've talked her out of hub gears and a coaster brake so now we're trying to find her a small-ish (she's 5'4) ladies retro mountain bike but it seems very hard to come by any quality specimen over here. Would you guys have any suggestions of what to look for? What do you think about this old Trek 830 I came across locally?
The criteria are;
step through frame (her)
Upright position (her)
Cantilever brakes
Bosses for rear rack, preferrably front as well
26'' wheels
Preferrably 1 1/8'' headtube if we end up buying a touring specific modern fork
Wide enough gearing (granny gear)
I'll be touring on an old Alpinestars Cromega D560 converted to monster tourer with a Surly big dummy fork up front. here she is, I will get a 3x up front, bar end shifters and a shorter stem though, and some Schwalbe Marathons as well. I thought about taking my trusty Clockwork that's been with me through so much but I've kind of come to the conclusion that I want a slightly bigger frame than the 19'' Clocky for some extra stability.